Re: Upside down magnetic fields & plants

Andreas Christian Nagele ( jackse@wizard.atnet.at )
Fri, 23 Apr 1999 12:20:34 +0200

On Fri, Apr 23, 1999 at 01:26:21AM -0500, Jerry W. Decker wrote:
> "The North pole of a magnet is NOT the North-SEEKING pole, nor is the
> South pole the South-SEEKING pole." (isn't the pointer in a compass
> just a piece of magnetized metal?)
>
> "In fact, the North-SEEKING pole of a magnet is ACTUALLY the South pole!
> The South-SEEKING pole of a magnet is the North pole. The rule to
> remember is OPPOSITES ATTRACT and SIMILARS REPEL."
>
> Note, they didn't use an off the shelf compass, they used a normal
> magnet and let it decide.

To me this looks like a simple definition problem, of
a researcher that was unbiased by science-conventions.

Whereas Rawls defines North and South in respect to an imagined
magnet in the core of the earth, the rest of the world defines
north and South in respect to a probe (magnet) in the field of the
earth.
So a "Northpole" in Rawls documents is what we today label as "Southpole".
This we need to keep in mind, if we look at Rawls work.

To better understand Rawls position, I propose to append "geographic"
to all of Rawls poles.

What amazed me is, that in a textbook "Basics of electronic engeneering"
there was no hint how a N or S-pole is definded.