So generators in, eg windmills, push magnets that cause electrons to move. I was reading something and it occurred to me, where do these electrons come from? It sounds like they must come form nearby atoms of metal. Doesn't that mean that there is a lifespan on even renewable energy? I get that materials wear down as well. But if the electrons have to come out of metal or matter as the generator turns and moved the magnet to push the electrons how does that make it 'renewable'. Just sounds like coal with less negative outputs
So I'm doing an IT degree presently.
I'm more than capable when it comes to tech, yet I possess absolutely zero mathematical skill or learning (I skipped every mathematics class from 13 years of age onwards and it was never compulsory to pass at my highschool) and I just got hit with this question in an assignment for a statistics class that they've enrolled me in.
Ben Garrison published this cartoon 2 years ago, right at the beginning of "two weeks to flatten the curve".
It all came true, how did he know?
What form of science is Ben Garrison using to predict the future? What college teaches Ben's style of thinking?