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Frankenstein II.

From Wikipedia!

Some other section[edit]

Frankenstein is cool.

49.4388Coordinates: 49.4388

Red link in da house!

More red links[edit]

A red link + Quotes' in" the' title" and red link

Cerebrum[edit]

The cerebrum[help 1] is a large part of the brain containing the cerebral cortex (of the two cerebral hemispheres), as well as several subcortical structures, including the hippocampus, basal ganglia, and olfactory bulb. In the human brain, the cerebrum is the uppermost region of the central nervous system. The telencephalon is the embryonic structure from which the cerebrum develops prenatally. In mammals, the dorsal telencephalon, or pallium, develops into the cerebral cortex, and the ventral telencephalon, or subpallium, becomes the basal ganglia. The cerebrum is also divided into approximately symmetric left and right cerebral hemispheres.

With the assistance of the cerebellum, the cerebrum controls all voluntary actions in the body.

Location of the human cerebrum (red).

The cerebrum is the largest part of the brain. Depending upon the position of the animal it lies either in front or on top of the brainstem. In humans, the cerebrum is the largest and best-developed of the five major divisions of the brain.

Other scientists[edit]

Ibn al-Haytham[edit]

Ibn al-Haytham (also known by the Latinization Alhazen or Alhacen,[1] full name Abū ʿAlī al-Ḥasan ibn al-Ḥasan ibn al-Haytham أبو علي، الحسن بن الحسن بن الهيثم Template:C. Template:Sc) was a Muslim[2][3][4] scientist, mathematician, astronomer, and philosopher.[5] Ibn al-Haytham made significant contributions to the principles of optics, astronomy, mathematics and visual perception.[6] He has been dubbed the "father of optics".[by whom?] He was the first to explain that vision occurs when light bounces on an object and then is directed to one's eyes.[7] He spent most of his life close to the court of the Fatimid Caliphate in Cairo and earned his living authoring various treatises and tutoring members of the nobilities.[8]

Ibn al-Haytham is widely considered to be one of the first theoretical physicists,[dubious] and an early proponent of the concept that a hypothesis must be proved by experiments based on confirmable procedures or mathematical evidence—hence understanding the scientific method five centuries before Renaissance scientists.[9][10][11][12][13][14]

More links[edit]

  • Links partially italicized: Hindenburg disaster
  • Link to edit action using edit template: edit
  • Link to edit action using fullurl template edit2

Pronunciation aids[edit]

Konjac (English: /ˈknjæk/ KOHN-yak)

Media[edit]

Sound

Musical notation[edit]

 \relative c'' { \clef treble \time 4/4 \set Staff.midiInstrument = #"violin" \tempo "Andantino" 4=92 g4\p-- c8.( e16-.) g8-.[ a-.] g8.->( e16) | g8-.( a-.) b8.-> c16 g8( e) c-.( d-.) | ees4->\< ees8--( b'--) ees,4-- ees8--( b'--)\! | ees,4->\mf( bes) }

Math[edit]

Let q = (qx, qy, qz) and p = (px, py, pz) denote the position vector and momentum vector of a particle of an ideal gas, respectively. Let F denote the net force on that particle. Then the time-averaged potential energy of the particle is:

where the first equality is Newton's second law, and the second line uses Hamilton's equations and the equipartition theorem. Summing over a system of N particles yields

Conversions[edit]

  • 60 and 170 kg (130 and 370 lb)
  • 18 °C (64 °F)
  • 3.21 kilograms (7.1 lb)

Images[edit]

Example alt text

Multiple images:

Yellow cartouche
Caution
Red cartouche
Ejection
Two cards used by football referees

Imagemap:

1896 Democratic campaign poster with nominees William J. Bryan of Nebraska for President and Arthur Sewall of Maine for Vice PresidentWilliam J. BryanArthur Sewall

Panoramas:

Panorama of city with mixture of five- to ten-story buildings
Helsinki has many buildings.

Audio[edit]

Spoken Wikipedia[edit]

Video[edit]

From Wikipedia:The perfect article[edit]

A perfect Wikipedia article...

  • Is on a notable topic.
    • Fills a gap not provided by existing or related articles.
  • Has an appropriate structure.

From Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/Layout[edit]

Order of article elements[edit]

A simple article should have at least a lead section and references. As editors add complexity where required, the elements (such as sections and templates) that are used typically appear in the following order, although they would not all appear in the same article at the same time:

  1. Before the lead section
    1. Hatnotes
    2. Deletion/Protection tags (CSD, PROD, AFD, PP notices)
  2. Appendices[15]
    1. Works or publications (for biographies only)
  3. Foo
    1. {{featured article}} and {{good article}} (where appropriate for article status)
    2. Defaultsort
    3. Categories[16]

Body sections[edit]

The same article, with the central left highlighted: it contains just text in sections.
Body sections appear after the lead and table of contents (click on image for larger view).

Articles longer than a stub are generally divided into sections...

Headings and sections[edit]

Headings introduce sections and subsections, clarify articles by breaking up text, organize content, and populate the table of contents.

Headings follow a six-level hierarchy, starting at 1 and ending at 6. The level of the heading is defined by the number of equal signs on either side of the title. Heading 1 (=Heading 1=) is automatically generated as the title of the article, and is never appropriate within the body of articles. Sections start at the second level (==Heading 2==), with subsections at the third level (===Heading 3===), and additional levels of subsections at the fourth level (====Heading 4====), fifth level, and sixth level. Sections should be consecutive, such that they do not skip levels from sections to sub-subsections; the exact methodology is part of the Accessibility guideline.[17]

Names and orders for section headings[edit]

Wikipedia has no general standards or guidelines for what section headings are expected in the bodies of articles or what order they should take, because the diversity of presentation in various Wikipedia subjects is too great. The usual practice is to name and order sections based on the precedent of some article which seems similar. There was no early standard proposed, and there is no general outline to follow. Contributors are advised to follow their instincts in proposing an order for sections in the body then seek community consensus in establishing a final order.

The order of sections in the body of a Wikipedia article may be recommended by a relevant WikiProject, or may not exist at all for some topics. Some WikiProjects have developed their own topical style advice pages which include section naming and ordering recommendations. Here are some examples from Category:WikiProject style advice:

If a section is named inappropriately you may also use the {{Rename section}} template.

Section templates and summary style[edit]

When a section is a summary of another article that provides a full exposition of the section, a link to that article should appear immediately under the section heading. You can use the {{Main}} template to generate a "Main article" link.

If one or more articles provide further information or additional details (rather than a full exposition, see above), references to such articles may be placed immediately after the section heading for that section, provided this does not duplicate a wikilink in the text. These additional references should be grouped along with the {{Main}} template (if there is one), or at the foot of the section that introduces the material for which these templates provide additional information. You can use one of the following templates to generate these links:

  • {{Details}} –  this generates a "For more details on this topic, see" link
  • {{Further}} –  this generates a "Further information" link
  • {{See also}} –  this generates a "See also" link

For example, to generate a "See also" link to the article on Wikipedia:How to edit a page, type {{See also|Wikipedia:How to edit a page}}, which will generate:

Standard appendices and footers[edit]

Headings[edit]

When appendix sections are used, they should appear at the bottom of an article, with ==level 2 headings==,[18] followed by the various footers.

Works or publications[edit]

Contents: A bulleted list, usually ordered chronologically, of the works created by the subject of the article.

"See also" section[edit]

For example:

Links to sister projects[edit]

More precisely, box-type templates such as {{Commons category}} shown at right have to be put at the beginning of the last section

Navigation templates[edit]

Contents: Navigation templates and footer navboxes, such as succession boxes and geography boxes (for example, {{Geographic location}}). Most navboxes do not appear in printed versions of Wikipedia articles.[19]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^ The Latin forms of his name, remain in popular use, but are out of use in scholarly contexts. Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist.
  2. ^ Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist..
  3. ^ Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist..
  4. ^ Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist..
  5. ^ Three sources support these claims: Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist.; Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist. ("Ibn al-Ḥaytam was an eminent eleventh-century Arab optician, geometer, arithmetician, algebraist, astronomer, and engineer."); and Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist. ("Ibn al-Haytham (d. 1039), known in the West as Alhazan, was a leading Arab mathematician, astronomer, and physicist. His optical compendium, Kitab al-Manazir, is the greatest medieval work on optics.")
  6. ^ Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist.: "The three most recognizable Islamic contributors to meteorology were: the Alexandrian mathematician/ astronomer Ibn al-Haytham (Alhazen 965-1039), the Arab-speaking Persian physician Ibn Sina (Avicenna 980-1037), and the Spanish Moorish physician/jurist Ibn Rushd (Averroes; 1126-1198)."
  7. ^ Adamson, Peter (7 July 2016). Philosophy in the Islamic World: A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps. Oxford University Press. p. 77. ISBN 978-0-19-957749-1. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  8. ^ According to Al-Qifti. Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist..
  9. ^ Script error: The function "harvard_citation_no_bracket" does not exist..
  10. ^ Haq, Syed (2009). "Science in Islam". Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages. ISSN 1703-7603. Retrieved 2014-10-22.
  11. ^ G. J. Toomer. Review on JSTOR, Toomer's 1964 review of Matthias Schramm (1963) Ibn Al-Haythams Weg Zur Physik Toomer p.464: "Schramm sums up [Ibn Al-Haytham's] achievement in the development of scientific method."
  12. ^ International Year of Light - Ibn Al-Haytham and the Legacy of Arabic Optics.
  13. ^ Al-Khalili, Jim. "The 'first true scientist'", BBC News, 4 January 2009. Retrieved on 24 September 2013. 
  14. ^ Gorini, Rosanna (October 2003). "Al-Haytham the man of experience. First steps in the science of vision" (PDF). Journal of the International Society for the History of Islamic Medicine. 2 (4): 53–55. Retrieved 2008-09-25. {{cite journal}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  15. ^ This sequence has been in place since at least 2003 (when "See also" was called "Related topics"). See, for example, Wikipedia:Perennial proposals#Changes to standard appendices. The original rationale for this ordering is that, with the exception of Works, sections which contain material outside Wikipedia (including Further reading and External links) should come after sections that contain Wikipedia material (including See also) to help keep the distinction clear. The sections containing notes and references often contain both kinds of material and, consequently, appear after the See also section (if any) and before the Further reading section (if any). Whatever the validity of the original rationale, there is now the additional factor that readers have come to expect the appendices to appear in this order.
  16. ^ While categories are entered on the editing page ahead of stub templates, they appear on the visual page in a separate box after the stub templates. One of the reasons this happens is that every stub template generates a stub category, and those stub categories appear after the "main" categories. Another is that certain bots and scripts are set up to expect the categories, stubs and interlanguage links to appear in that order, and will reposition them if they don't. Therefore, any manual attempt to change the order is futile unless the bots and scripts are also altered.
  17. ^ For example, skipping heading levels, such as jumping from ==Heading 2== to ====Heading 4==== without ===Heading 3=== in the middle, violates Wikipedia:Accessibility as it reduces usability for readers on screen readers who use heading levels to navigate pages.
  18. ^ Syntax:
    ==See also==
    * [[Wikipedia:How to edit a page]]
    * [[Wikipedia:Manual of Style]]
    

    Which produces:

    Per WP:PSEUDOHEADING fake headings should not be used in articles.

  19. ^ The rationale for not printing navigation boxes is that these templates contain wikilinks that are of no use to print readers.[1] There are two problems with this rationale: First, other wikilink content does print, for example See also and succession boxes. Second, some navigation boxes contain useful information regarding the relationship of the article to the subjects of related articles.


Cite error:
  1. ^ The word cerebrum is pronounced /ˈsɛrɪbrəm/ or /sɪˈrbrəm/ (both are common). It comes from Latin, where it means "brain". In English it refers to the major part of the brain.