Talk:Michael Faraday/Draft
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
I shake my fists at his cage when I have no cell reception in buildings. --Robert W King 11:15, 31 March 2008 (CDT)
Finished
As far as I'm concerned this article is finished. If you compare it with the WP article you will find that certain facts are missing in the present article:
- the clathrate hydrate of chlorine, bunsen burner and the system of oxidation numbers.
- Outhgill in Westmorland
- George Riebau, John Tatum, William Dance, John Payne, Jane Apreece, John 'Mad Jack' Fuller, Joseph Henry, Francesco Zantedeschi
- Diffusion of gases
- Nanoparticles
- Lighthouses, corrosion and environmental science
- and more ...
The reasons that I did not mention them are:
- Do not overload with trivia. (For instance Riebau and Apreece have a WP article that says nothing more than that they played a role in Faraday's life).
- Doubt whether fact is correct (nanoparticles, environmental science, very fashionable topics, but none of my sources other than WP mentions them). I have doubts about oxidation numbers, these date from the 20th century. If Faraday had a concept like it, it needs lost of qualification and explanation.
- Is Outhgill in Yorkshire? (I saw two editions of Brittanica, both state that Faraday sr. came from Yorkshire, but fact is too unimportant to check).
- Unimportant part of Faraday's work (this point is debatable). E.g., my sources do not mention his lighthouse work, or only in passing. Same for bunsen burner.
I won't bother to give a similar list of facts that are in the present article and not in WP. If somebody will be good enough to remove my non-native-English awkwardnesses (or errors), I'll appreciate that. --Paul Wormer 11:30, 18 April 2008 (CDT)
Categories:
- Article with Definition
- Nonstub Articles
- Advanced Articles
- Internal Articles
- Physics Nonstub Articles
- Physics Advanced Articles
- Physics Internal Articles
- History Nonstub Articles
- History Advanced Articles
- History Internal Articles
- Chemistry Nonstub Articles
- Chemistry Advanced Articles
- Chemistry Internal Articles
- History tag