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Post by fretslider on Jan 12, 2018 7:14:14 GMT -5
Patent nonsense. An encyclopedia is a repository of human knowledge. Science doesn't do personal experience, it does hard evidence. You clearly can't cope with that. I know what an encyclopaedia is and also a personal experience, but as men an tol pointed out, everything that we do, is an experience. I opened the book in order to answer your question more clearly. Why quibble? Why do you insist on conflating the experience of picking up a book with understanding its contents? Photosynthesis BIOLOGY
Photosynthesis, the process by which green plants and certain other organisms transform light energy into chemical energy. During photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and energy-rich organic compounds.www.britannica.com/science/photosynthesisOut of interest, when did you last experience photosynthesis? And what does it feel like?
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 12, 2018 11:16:30 GMT -5
I know what an encyclopaedia is and also a personal experience, but as men an tol pointed out, everything that we do, is an experience. I opened the book in order to answer your question more clearly. Why quibble? Why do you insist on conflating the experience of picking up a book with understanding its contents? Photosynthesis BIOLOGY
Photosynthesis, the process by which green plants and certain other organisms transform light energy into chemical energy. During photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and energy-rich organic compounds.www.britannica.com/science/photosynthesisOut of interest, when did you last experience photosynthesis? And what does it feel like? I know that is the reason for the colour of each plant.
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 12, 2018 17:55:12 GMT -5
I know what an encyclopaedia is and also a personal experience, but as men an tol pointed out, everything that we do, is an experience. I opened the book in order to answer your question more clearly. Why quibble? Why do you insist on conflating the experience of picking up a book with understanding its contents? Photosynthesis BIOLOGY
Photosynthesis, the process by which green plants and certain other organisms transform light energy into chemical energy. During photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and energy-rich organic compounds.www.britannica.com/science/photosynthesisOut of interest, when did you last experience photosynthesis? And what does it feel like? It is just as well that photosynthesis takes place or there would be no oxygen for us to breathe and our bodies would be six feet under the earth, decomposing. You do have a point in regard to being able to understand what it is that we are reading. That happens to me when I am reading about quantum physics. Sometimes I am as wise at the end as I was at the beginning, but I love everything about it. Maybe someday I WILL understand. LOL.
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Post by fretslider on Jan 13, 2018 3:47:01 GMT -5
Why do you insist on conflating the experience of picking up a book with understanding its contents? Photosynthesis BIOLOGY
Photosynthesis, the process by which green plants and certain other organisms transform light energy into chemical energy. During photosynthesis in green plants, light energy is captured and used to convert water, carbon dioxide, and minerals into oxygen and energy-rich organic compounds.www.britannica.com/science/photosynthesisOut of interest, when did you last experience photosynthesis? And what does it feel like? I know that is the reason for the colour of each plant. Ok, what does the colour feel like?
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 14, 2018 8:59:32 GMT -5
I know that is the reason for the colour of each plant. Ok, what does the colour feel like? Believe it or not color does play an important part on how a person feels. Pink for instance is thought to affect a person so that they are less aggressive. Yellow brightens people so that the are not as depressed. Each colour has a different affect, some are even used to aid in healing the body.
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Post by fretslider on Jan 15, 2018 4:28:48 GMT -5
Ok, what does the colour feel like? Believe it or not color does play an important part on how a person feels. Pink for instance is thought to affect a person so that they are less aggressive. Yellow brightens people so that the are not as depressed. Each colour has a different affect, some are even used to aid in healing the body. Ok, what does the colour [of the plants] feel like? That is the question What is your answer?
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 15, 2018 20:44:35 GMT -5
Believe it or not color does play an important part on how a person feels. Pink for instance is thought to affect a person so that they are less aggressive. Yellow brightens people so that the are not as depressed. Each colour has a different affect, some are even used to aid in healing the body. Ok, what does the colour [of the plants] feel like? That is the question What is your answer? What do you think? Try holding your breath and you will see how horrible it feels,so breathing in the oxygen that the plants give off, must be pretty wonderful, especially as it keeps us alive. If the plant gives off perfume as well, then that is a bonus. A person reaps the benefits of whatever colour of clothing they happen to be wearing and even the food that they eat, the colours have different attributes that also benefit a person, so everything is good.
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Post by kronks on Jan 15, 2018 23:59:04 GMT -5
Believe it or not color does play an important part on how a person feels. Pink for instance is thought to affect a person so that they are less aggressive. Yellow brightens people so that the are not as depressed. Each colour has a different affect, some are even used to aid in healing the body. Ok, what does the colour [of the plants] feel like? That is the question What is your answer? The big question is why are plants green? Or more to the point which is chlorophyll green when other coloured chemicals can get energy from the Sun?
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Post by fretslider on Jan 16, 2018 4:42:35 GMT -5
Ok, what does the colour [of the plants] feel like? That is the question What is your answer? What do you think? Try holding your breath and you will see how horrible it feels,so breathing in the oxygen that the plants give off, must be pretty wonderful, especially as it keeps us alive. If the plant gives off perfume as well, then that is a bonus. A person reaps the benefits of whatever colour of clothing they happen to be wearing and even the food that they eat, the colours have different attributes that also benefit a person, so everything is good. A fine bit of waffling there and no sense made at all. It must be a gift from the gods!
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Post by fretslider on Jan 16, 2018 4:56:45 GMT -5
Ok, what does the colour [of the plants] feel like? That is the question What is your answer? The big question is why are plants green? Or more to the point which is chlorophyll green when other coloured chemicals can get energy from the Sun? Oh dear. As we all know, the purpose of photosynthesis is to convert the energy in photons into the chemical bonds of sugars. Now here's where it gets tricky. Chlorophyll is specialised for absorbing a particular colour of light and converting the light energy into the appropriate amount of chemical energy for making a chemical bond. Chlorophyll absorbs blue and red light; it hardly absorbs any green light at all, so the green gets reflected back to your eyes. Why plants are green... solved.
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 16, 2018 6:41:23 GMT -5
What do you think? Try holding your breath and you will see how horrible it feels,so breathing in the oxygen that the plants give off, must be pretty wonderful, especially as it keeps us alive. If the plant gives off perfume as well, then that is a bonus. A person reaps the benefits of whatever colour clothing they happen to be wearing and even the food that they eat, the colours have different attributes that also benefit a person, so everything is good. A fine bit of waffling there and no sense made at all. It must be a gift from the gods! You are the one that is being silly in asking these questions.
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 16, 2018 6:53:22 GMT -5
The big question is why are plants green? Or more to the point which is chlorophyll green when other coloured chemicals can get energy from the Sun? Oh dear. As we all know, the purpose of photosynthesis is to convert the energy in photons into the chemical bonds of sugars. Now here's where it gets tricky. Chlorophyll is specialised for absorbing a particular colour of light and converting the light energy into the appropriate amount of chemical energy for making a chemical bond. Chlorophyll absorbs blue and red light; it hardly absorbs any green light at all, so the green gets reflected back to your eyes. Why plants are green... solved. How wonderful.!!! You may see it as waffling, but what I said was valid as colours do affect us and we need oxygen given out by the plants.
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Post by fretslider on Jan 16, 2018 8:09:27 GMT -5
A fine bit of waffling there and no sense made at all. It must be a gift from the gods! You are the one that is being silly in asking these questions. The 'silly' questions as you call them are in total regard to the nonsense you peddle about experience.
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Post by fretslider on Jan 16, 2018 8:10:52 GMT -5
Oh dear. As we all know, the purpose of photosynthesis is to convert the energy in photons into the chemical bonds of sugars. Now here's where it gets tricky. Chlorophyll is specialised for absorbing a particular colour of light and converting the light energy into the appropriate amount of chemical energy for making a chemical bond. Chlorophyll absorbs blue and red light; it hardly absorbs any green light at all, so the green gets reflected back to your eyes. Why plants are green... solved. How wonderful.!!! You may see it as waffling, but what I said was valid as colours do affect us and we need oxygen given out by the plants. This was a reply to kronks' question. I'm glad you find science wonderful. Unlike religion, it is real.
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Post by Scottish Lassie on Jan 16, 2018 17:33:31 GMT -5
You are the one that is being silly in asking these questions. The 'silly' questions as you call them are in total regard to the nonsense you peddle about experience. It is not nonsence, it is just something that you apparently know nothing about.
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