Hmm, I'm reading: The Most Powerful Idea in the World
Which is all about the revolution due to the steam engine. I think figuring out Celestial Navigation might be my next great read.
Trying to get a job flying UAS. You never know when being able to navigate by the stars will come in handy over the ocean.
Hi Acadia,
Thank you, but first things first. Like Hienlien's rabbit recipe--"first, catch a rabbit"
I woke up at 3:30 EST this A.M and took the Bee-Line to Cocoa beach with my Sky Maps For Beginners with the intent of identifying 1 thing on the chart.
FAIL!
Galaxy 1 Beasly 0
Think first-solo pilot hopelessly lost.
If you really want to give your mind a thorough scrubbing, read through the history of trigonometry. Start with Apollonius of Perga's "Conic Sections" (and, uhm, get a guide), which was pretty much the genesis of meaningfully "post-arithmetic" math. The amount of brainpower that went in to astronomy up to the Renaissance is staggering and humbling. Strike that. HUMILIATING.
I second that.
There's a book out there that is the complete and utter history of math. From notching tallies to string theory, and its really really good. It'll make you feel like a blithering idiot (or at least it made me feel that way). The outside the box thinking that went into some of this stuff was uncanny.
Fwiw, I read that "following contrails" is a good strategy as well.
That said, say your are in a small twin, over the ocean at night.
You have no internal lights (should not happen given proper prep--spare batteries, redundant light sources--but this time it fails).
You have control of the A.C but have lost positional awareness.
Which way?
:dunno:
Gonna get that fixed.