• carl_dungeon@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Yeah yeah, I know. I was mostly just kidding. Everything is magic if you’re ignorant and we shouldn’t shit on people for not knowing something and props to them for asking and seeking knowledge and all that.

    But it’s really sad that very basic science like radio waves which are introduced in 5th or 6th grade could be so completely misunderstood.

    I remember my 6th grade science class having a lively 15 minute discussion about whether or not rockets can work in space since there’s no air…. We’re looking at videos of rockets working in space and then debating whether or not they do. 🙄

    • fishbone@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Not everyone went to the same school, and not everyone went to school, for any number of reasons. I first attended a health class in college.

    • pixelscript@lemm.ee
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      2 days ago

      I remember my 6th grade science class having a lively 15 minute discussion about whether or not rockets can work in space since there’s no air…. We’re looking at videos of rockets working in space and then debating whether or not they do. 🙄

      This feels a tad different than the person in the screenshot. Screenshot person fundamentally misunderstood how radio waves worked. Meanwhile, 6th grade you absolutely understood how rockets worked, at least to the level of understanding that they need air to work. Because you were right the whole time, those kinds of rockets can’t work in space without air. The slightly absurd solution that you wouldn’t readily know without a deeper understanding of how the rocket is built is that a rocket literally brings its own air with it!

      • carl_dungeon@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Yeah- you make good points. I think what I was upset about was that we started with a given (they obviously work in space) and then half the class argued they didn’t for a while.

        A better question would have been “how can they work since space has no air in space?” which leads to great q & a I think.