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Pisa

The following day we went by train to Pisa.  Pisa is on the Arno down stream from Florence and in the middle ages was an important strategic port. 

 

The Arno at Pisa

 

Pisa is the birthplace of Galileo Galilei (b 1564) who studied medicine at the University of Pisa and subsequently held the Chair of Mathematics here. This is probably Pisa's greatest claim to fame as most historians trace the scientific revolution back to Galileo's doorstep.

It is often said that he used the Cathedral's belltower, the famous Leaning Tower, to demonstrate uniform acceleration due to gravity by dropping two balls of different mass to show that they reached the ground at the same time.  But this may be apocryphal. 

However it is documented that while in the Cathedral he noticed that chandeliers of the same length swing with the same period no matter how widely they swing. You can see the same thing in any children's' playground. On swings of the same length adults and children swing at the same speed and except at very high speeds, where air resistance becomes a factor, each swing takes the same time no matter how far you swing.  Using this simple observation Galileo was able to deduce the gravitational law and realise that in a vacuum all matter must fall towards the centre of the earth uniformly, contrary to everyday experience in which a feather or a balloon takes longer to fall than a golf ball. 

Suddenly a lot of other things that seemed like commonsense, like the Sun going around the Earth, were called into question. 

Unfortunately, many of these misunderstandings had become religious truths.  So when Galileo showed that Jupiter has moons, and because Venus has phases like our Moon it must be orbiting the Sun, an Earth centred Universe can't be true, Pope Urban VIII called in the Inquisition. In 1633 Galileo was charged with heresy and having been shown the instruments of torture recanted and agreed to house arrest.  He was right to take them seriously, thirty three years earlier the Inquisition had burned Giordano Bruno alive at the stake in Rome's Campo de' Fiori for this same heresy, in addition to a list of others like denying the Trinity.

But it was to no avail, the scientific cat was out of the bag.

From the station we crossed the Arno and headed to the cathedral where along with all the other tourists we pretended to hold up the Leaning Tower - a terrible anti-climax as it's so small. So we had lunch in an outdoor restaurant just when the sky opened and we all had to dash indoors. When the storm was over and we had eaten we went to look at the other sights the town has to offer and discovered there is not a lot.  Another coffee in the shop with free WiFi  was called for before catching the train home to Florence.

 

Holding up the tower

 

But this was when Pisa became interesting. There was a train strike and the train schedules and platform indicators were wrong and changed randomly.  After swapping platforms several times as indicators changed, we eventually identified the train back to Firenze and confirmed it from the indicator in the train itself.  Then somehow we became the rail gurus, in various languages, to other would be passengers similarly bemused.  Eventually the train departed, about an hour late, and fortunately it actually went to Florence.

 

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Travel

Balkans

 

 

In September 2019 we left Turkey by air, to continue our trip north along the Adriatic, in the Balkans, to Austria, with a brief side trip to Bratislava in Slovakia. 

'The Balkans' is a geo-political construct named after the Balkan Peninsula between the Adriatic and the Black Sea.

According to most geographers the 'Balkans' encompasses the modern countries of Albania; Bosnia and Herzegovina; Bulgaria; Croatia; Greece; Kosovo; Montenegro; North Macedonia; Serbia; and Slovenia. Some also include Romania. 

Read more: Balkans

Fiction, Recollections & News

Australia in the 1930s

 

 

These recollections are by Ross Smith, written when he was only 86 years old; the same young man who subsequently went to war in New Britain; as related elsewhere on this website [read more...].  We learn about the development of the skills that later saved his life and those of others in his platoon.  We also get a sense of what it was to be poor in pre-war Australia; and the continuity of that experience from the earlier convict and pioneering days from which our Australia grew.                   *

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Opinions and Philosophy

Bertrand Russell

 

 

 

Bertrand Russell (Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell, OM, FRS (18 May 1872 – 2 February 1970)) has been a major influence on my life.  I asked for and was given a copy of his collected Basic Writings of Bertrand Russell for my 21st birthday and although I never agreed entirely with every one of his opinions I have always respected them.

In 1950 Russell won the Nobel Prize in literature but remained a controversial figure.  He was responsible for the Russell–Einstein Manifesto in 1955. The signatories included Albert Einstein, just before his death, and ten other eminent intellectuals and scientists. They warned of the dangers of nuclear weapons and called on governments to find alternative ways of resolving conflict.   Russell went on to become the first president of the campaign for nuclear disarmament (CND) and subsequently organised opposition to the Vietnam War. He could be seen in 50's news-reels at the head of CND demonstrations with his long divorced second wife Dora, for which he was jailed again at the age of 89.  

In 1958 Gerald Holtom, created a logo for the movement by stylising, superimposing and circling the semaphore letters ND.

Some four years earlier I'd gained my semaphore badge in the Cubs, so like many children of my vintage, I already knew that:  = N(uclear)   = D(isarmament)

The logo soon became ubiquitous, graphitied onto walls and pavements, and widely used as a peace symbol in the 60s and 70s, particularly in hippie communes and crudely painted on VW camper-vans.

 

 (otherwise known as the phallic Mercedes).

 

Read more: Bertrand Russell

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