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<strong>The Shocking Origin of the Word “Electric”</strong>

"_Gilbert employed the Latin electricus to describe the observation that when you rub amber against some substances like wool or a cat’s fur, it sticks to the amber. We now that this clinging—and the zaps that appear between the amber and the substance rubbed against it—is due to static, but at the time, Gilbert supposed amber to be magnetic._"

uselessetymology.com/2024/05/3

@linguistics

attribution: Benoît Prieur, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons. Page URL: tinyurl.com/374cd39t

@linguistics @bibliolater @spanini
William Gilbert, physician to Queen Elizabeth I, was pretty amazing. He wrote a book on the magnet describing how he discovered many facts about magnetism. He approached it with an experimental mindset rather than philosophical. This was pretty amazing for 1600.

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