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The Weather Experience Perception Effect

Comments re article 101447 Coldest 67 degrees ever

By Billy Joe Fudge

Well, Linda, the Great Wooded South University Research Department, over a couple of decades from 1965 to 1985, tackled the perplexing physical phenomenon known as the Weather Experience Perception Effect.

After generating more pages of information and data than the "Muller Investigation", GWSU arrived at a very simple formula to express the many thousands of complex, complicated, conceptual conclusions.

Please do not let the brevity of the formula diminish your consideration for the genius of the GWSU's Research Department. I believe it was either Albert Einstein or Junior Walker or Beanpole Willis who said, "If you can't say it simply, you don't know it well enough".

Weather Experience Perception Effect is directly affected by the following conditions: 10% temperature, moisture, wind speed, and barometric pressure, and 90% personal, physical and psychological prepossession.




This story was posted on 2018-12-31 21:43:33
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