Jesus Bayton

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Even today, children are taught “Nature abhors a vacuum,” while the teachers don’t really understand where that phrase came from. It was an extension of the Aristotelian philosophy: vacuums don’t exist. If someone would attempt to create a vacuum, nature would do anything in its power to prevent it from happening. It was Galileo’s secretary, Evangelista Torricelli, who proved that this wasn’t true—by
Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea
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