I asked a professor of nanotechnology what they use to measure the
unthinkable small distances of nanospace? He said it was the nanometre.
This didn't help me very much. A nanometre is a billionth of a metre. I
understood the idea but couldn't visualise what it meant. I said, "What
is it roughly?" He thought for a moment and said, "A nanometre is
roughly the distance that a man's beard grows in one second". I had
never thought about what beards do in a second but they must do
something. It takes them all day to grow about a milllimetre. They don't
leap out of your face at eight o'clock in the morning. Beards are slow,
languid things and our language reflects this. We do not say "as quick
as a beard" or "as fast as a bristle". We now have a way of grasping of
how slow they are - about a nanometre a second.
- Ken Robinson, Out of Our Minds: Learning to Be Creative
- Ken Robinson, Out of Our Minds: Learning to Be Creative
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