فهرست باورهای نادرست رایج (Persian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "فهرست باورهای نادرست رایج" in Persian language version.

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abc.net.au

about.com

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  • "Cropper". Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. 2003. Archived from the original on 2 November 2011. Retrieved June 17, 2011.

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  • Dicks, D.R. (1970). Early Greek Astronomy to Aristotle. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-8014-0561-7.
  • Serventi, Silvano; Françoise Sabban (2002). Pasta: The Story of a Universal Food. Trans. Antony Shugaar. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-231-12442-3{{cite book}}: نگهداری CS1: پست اسکریپت (link)
  • Harmetz, Aljean (1992). Round Up the Usual Suspects: The Making of Casablanca — Bogart, Bergman, and World War II. Hyperion. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-56282-761-8.
  • "Two other beliefs about [the golden ratio] are often mentioned in magazines and books: that the ancient Greeks believed it was the proportion of the rectangle the eye finds most pleasing and that they accordingly incorporated the rectangle in many of their buildings, including the famous Parthenon. These two equally persistent beliefs are likewise assuredly false and, in any case, are completely without any evidence." Devlin, Keith (2008). The Unfinished Game: Pascal, Fermat, and the Seventeenth-Century Letter that Made the World Modern. Basic Books. p. 35.
  • Ostrander, G. K.; Cheng, KC; Wolf, JC; Wolfe, MJ (2004). "Shark Cartilage, Cancer and the Growing Threat of Pseudoscience". Cancer Research. 64 (23): 8485–91. doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-04-2260. PMID 15574750.
  • Schulte P, Alegret L, Arenillas I, Arz JA, Barton PJ, Bown PR, Bralower TJ, Christeson GL, Claeys P, Cockell CS, Collins GS, Deutsch A, Goldin TJ, Goto K, Grajales-Nishimura JM, Grieve RA, Gulick SP, Johnson KR, Kiessling W, Koeberl C, Kring DA, MacLeod KG, Matsui T, Melosh J, Montanari A, Morgan JV, Neal CR, Nichols DJ, Norris RD, Pierazzo E, Ravizza G, Rebolledo-Vieyra M, Reimold WU, Robin E, Salge T, Speijer RP, Sweet AR, Urrutia-Fucugauchi J, Vajda V, Whalen MT, Willumsen PS (5 March 2010). "The Chicxulub Asteroid Impact and Mass Extinction at the Cretaceous-Paleogene Boundary". Science. 327 (5970): 1214–1218. Bibcode:2010Sci...327.1214S. doi:10.1126/science.1177265. PMID 20203042.{{cite journal}}: نگهداری یادکرد:نام‌های متعدد:فهرست نویسندگان (link)
  • Fullerton-Smith, Jill (2007). The Truth About Food. Bloomsbury. pp. 115–117. ISBN 978-0-7475-8685-2. Most parents assume that children plus sugary foods equals raucous and uncontrollable behaviour.[…] according to nutrition experts, the belief that children experience a "sugar high" is a myth.
  • Messina, Virginia; Reed Mangles; Mark Messina (2004). The dietitian's guide to vegetarian diets. Sudbury, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7637-3241-7.
  • Rakic, P (2002). "Adult neurogenesis in mammals: an identity crisis". The Journal of neuroscience. 22 (3): 614–8. PMID 11826088.
  • Beyerstein, Barry L. (1999). "Whence Cometh the Myth that We Only Use 10% of our Brains?". In Sergio Della Sala (ed.). Mind Myths: Exploring Popular Assumptions About the Mind and Brain. Wiley. pp. 3–24. ISBN 978-0-471-98303-3.
  • Stein, Ralph (1967). The Automobile Book. Paul Hamlyn Ltd.

archive.today

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  • Radford, Benjamin (March–April 1999). "The Ten-Percent Myth". Skeptical Inquirer. Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal. ISSN 0194-6730. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved April 15, 2009. It's the old myth heard time and again about how people use only ten percent of their brains

defence.gov.au

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einstein-website.de

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  • Crabtree, Steve (July 6, 1999). "New Poll Gauges Americans' General Knowledge Levels". Gallup News Service. Archived from the original on 27 March 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2011. Fifty-five percent say it commemorates the signing of the Declaration of Independence (this is a common misconception, and close to being accurate; July 4th is actually the date in 1776 when the Continental Congress approved the Declaration, which was officially signed on August 2nd.) Another 32% give a more general answer, saying that July 4th celebrates Independence Day.

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  • "National Pasta Association". Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2014. article FAQs section "Who "invented" pasta?"; "The story that it was Marco Polo who imported noodles to Italy and thereby gave birth to the country's pasta culture is the most pervasive myth in the history of Italian food." (Dickie 2008, p. 48).

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  • "In fact, the pressure in the air blown out of the lungs is equal to that of the surrounding air..." Babinsky http://iopscience.iop.org/0031-9120/38/6/001/pdf/pe3_6_001.pdf
  • "Blowing over a piece of paper does not demonstrate Bernoulli’s equation. While it is true that a curved paper lifts when flow is applied on one side, this is not because air is moving at different speeds on the two sides... It is false to make a connection between the flow on the two sides of the paper using Bernoulli’s equation. " Holger Babinsky How Do Wings Work Physics Education 38(6) http://iopscience.iop.org/0031-9120/38/6/001/pdf/pe3_6_001.pdf
  • "The well-known demonstration of the phenomenon of lift by means of lifting a page cantilevered in one’s hand by blowing horizontally along it is probably more a demonstration of the forces inherent in the Coanda effect than a demonstration of Bernoulli’s law; for, here, an air jet issues from the mouth and attaches to a curved (and, in this case pliable) surface. The upper edge is a complicated vortex-laden mixing layer and the distant flow is quiescent, so that Bernoulli’s law is hardly applicable." David Auerbach Why Aircreft Fly European Journal of Physics Vol 21 p 289 http://iopscience.iop.org/0143-0807/21/4/302/pdf/0143-0807_21_4_302.pdf
  • "...if a streamline is curved, there must be a pressure gradient across the streamline, with the pressure increasing in the direction away from the centre of curvature." Babinsky http://iopscience.iop.org/0031-9120/38/6/001/pdf/pe3_6_001.pdf

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  • "Part of the process of becoming a mathematics writer is, it appears, learning that you cannot refer to the golden ratio without following the first mention by a phrase that goes something like 'which the ancient Greeks and others believed to have divine and mystical properties. ' Almost as compulsive is the urge to add a second factoid along the lines of 'Leonardo Da Vinci believed that the human form displays the golden ratio. ' There is not a shred of evidence to back up either claim, and every reason to assume they are both false. Yet both claims, along with various others in a similar vein, live on." Keith Devlin (May 2007). "The Myth That Will Not Go Away". Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved April 10, 2013.

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  • "The curved surface of the tongue creates unequal air pressure and a lifting action. … Lift is caused by air moving over a curved surface." AERONAUTICS An Educator’s Guide with Activities in Science, Mathematics, and Technology Education by NASA pg 26 http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/58152main_Aeronautics.Educator.pdf
  • «نسخه آرشیو شده». بایگانی‌شده از اصلی در ۹ ژوئیه ۲۰۰۹. دریافت‌شده در ۲۱ ژانویه ۲۰۱۳.

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  • "If the lift in figure A were caused by "Bernoulli principle," then the paper in figure B should droop further when air is blown beneath it. However, as shown, it raises when the upward pressure gradient in downward-curving flow adds to atmospheric pressure at the paper lower surface." Gale M. Craig PHYSICAL PRINCIPLES OF WINGED FLIGHT http://www.regenpress.com/aerodynamics.pdf بایگانی‌شده در ۷ مارس ۲۰۲۱ توسط Wayback Machine

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  • "...air does not have a reduced lateral pressure (or static pressure...) simply because it is caused to move, the static pressure of free air does not decrease as the speed of the air increases, it misunderstanding Bernoulli's principle to suggest that this is what it tells us, and the behavior of the curved paper is explained by other reasoning than Bernoulli's principle." Peter Eastwell Bernoulli? Perhaps, but What About Viscosity? The Science Education Review, 6(1) 2007 http://www.scienceeducationreview.com/open_access/eastwell-bernoulli.pdf بایگانی‌شده در ۲۸ نوامبر ۲۰۰۹ توسط Wayback Machine
  • "An explanation based on Bernoulli’s principle is not applicable to this situation, because this principle has nothing to say about the interaction of air masses having different speeds... Also, while Bernoulli’s principle allows us to compare fluid speeds and pressures along a single streamline and... along two different streamlines that originate under identical fluid conditions, using Bernoulli’s principle to compare the air above and below the curved paper in Figure 1 is nonsensical; in this case, there aren’t any streamlines at all below the paper!" Peter Eastwell Bernoulli? Perhaps, but What About Viscosity? The Science Education Review 6(1) 2007 http://www.scienceeducationreview.com/open_access/eastwell-bernoulli.pdf بایگانی‌شده در ۲۸ نوامبر ۲۰۰۹ توسط Wayback Machine

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  • "When the plant is in the bud stage, it tends to track the movement of the sun across the horizon. Once the flower opens into the radiance of yellow petals, it faces east." National Sunflower Association http://www.sunflowernsa.com/all-about/faq/#11

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  • "Crap". American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. Houghton Mifflin. 2001. Archived from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved June 17, 2011.

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