Regenerative power: Difference between revisions
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As we experience a non-linear, accelerating dynamic of climate collapse, regenerative power concerns not only the energy dynamics of electrical systems, but also the rate of humans' ability to restore ecosystems. | As we experience a non-linear, accelerating dynamic of climate collapse, regenerative power concerns not only the energy dynamics of electrical systems, but also the rate of humans' ability to restore ecosystems. | ||
= Hempfuel Microgrids = | |||
See: [[Hempfuel Microgrids]] | |||
= Islamophobia = | |||
See: [[Islamophobia]] | |||
<blockquote>"'''In Mohameddanism there is no regenerative power'''; it is 'of the letter, which killeth,' - unelastic, sterile, barren.... (To) ''progress'' it must prove an obstacle from its very character... It has no power of adaptation, expansion, development." - ''Reverend Lees'', 1882<ref>Reverend James Cameron Lees, 1882, quoted in Professor Joseph A. Massad's ''Islam in Liberalism'', Published in 2015 by the University of Chicago Press</ref></blockquote> | |||
= Cited = | = Cited = |
Latest revision as of 12:54, 10 August 2023
With energy as the ability to do work, in physical terms regenerative power concerns the rate of that work.[1]
As we experience a non-linear, accelerating dynamic of climate collapse, regenerative power concerns not only the energy dynamics of electrical systems, but also the rate of humans' ability to restore ecosystems.
Hempfuel Microgrids
See: Hempfuel Microgrids
Islamophobia
See: Islamophobia
"In Mohameddanism there is no regenerative power; it is 'of the letter, which killeth,' - unelastic, sterile, barren.... (To) progress it must prove an obstacle from its very character... It has no power of adaptation, expansion, development." - Reverend Lees, 1882[2]
Cited
- ↑ https://byjus.com/physics/work-energy-power/#:~:text=Work%2C%20Energy%20and%20Power%20are,done%20per%20unit%20of%20time.
- ↑ Reverend James Cameron Lees, 1882, quoted in Professor Joseph A. Massad's Islam in Liberalism, Published in 2015 by the University of Chicago Press