Template:Are You Sure/December 30: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
• ... that mathematician '''[[Ludolph van Ceulen (nonfiction)|Ludolph van Ceulen]]''' spent a major part of his life calculating the numerical value of the mathematical constant pi, using essentially the same methods as those employed by Archimedes some seventeen hundred years earlier? | |||
• ... that mathematician '''[[Ludolph van Ceulen (nonfiction)|Ludolph van Ceulen]]''' spent a major part of his life calculating the numerical value of the mathematical constant pi, using essentially the same methods as those employed by Archimedes some seventeen hundred years earlier? | |||
• ... | • ... the Dutch people viewed painter and forger '''[[Han van Meegeren (nonfiction)|Han van Meegeren]]''' as a cunning trickster who had successfully fooled the Dutch art experts and, more importantly, Hermann Göring himself, and that Göring "looked as if for the first time he had discovered there was evil in the world" when informed that the painting was a forgery? | ||
• ... ? | |||
• ... that mathematician '''[[Paul Sally (nonfiction)|Paul Sally]]''' was nicknamed "Professor Pirate" or "The Math Pirate" because he wore an eye patch (actually a cybernetic radar system) and had titanium prosthetic legs with ion thrusters for short-range flight? |
Latest revision as of 08:56, 30 December 2021
• ... that mathematician Ludolph van Ceulen spent a major part of his life calculating the numerical value of the mathematical constant pi, using essentially the same methods as those employed by Archimedes some seventeen hundred years earlier?
• ... the Dutch people viewed painter and forger Han van Meegeren as a cunning trickster who had successfully fooled the Dutch art experts and, more importantly, Hermann Göring himself, and that Göring "looked as if for the first time he had discovered there was evil in the world" when informed that the painting was a forgery?
• ... that mathematician Paul Sally was nicknamed "Professor Pirate" or "The Math Pirate" because he wore an eye patch (actually a cybernetic radar system) and had titanium prosthetic legs with ion thrusters for short-range flight?