I have been commissioned to create jewelry for a local shop, and one request is for resin pendants. I am looking for some tutorials or guides as to what I will need, what to use as a mold, how to dye and how to add the pendant piece on the top. Any help is greatly appreciated!
Try looking at it another way. The light levels provided by the sun and moon have been more or less constant throughout the period of time it has taken for us to evolve. So creatures that develop sight with a certain sensitivity that operates well in both light conditions have an advantage over those that do not. That's why the universe seems so adapted to us - because we adapted to it!
In order for the moon to be perfect to supply us with light in the night, it would have to be full and present every night. Since it is not, it is sub-perfect. You're affirming the consequent, a logical fallacy. If the moon had a low albedo, then you wouldn't imagine that it was supposed to light up the night sky. You'd think about it the same way you think about the Milky Way right now. It's visible, but does not provide enough light to see by. such an intelligent orbit path It's not an intelligent orbit path, you'd say that about any orbit it had. edit: Stop avoiding my question. We aren't. We're addressing your premise, and you're crying about it, and telling us not to do it.
I've been having the same thing and people keep saying Acid Reflux But I don't know I'm going to a doctor, so should you soon.
Perfect in what way? The word perfect is rather vague. There is no objective standard of perfection. The moon, btw, is dirt. It's pretty much the same elements found here. Most moons in our solar system reflect light, so it's not that improbable that ours does, too. The color of the moon is just as random as any other hunk of dust in the solar system.
The moon is so perfect that it fails to provide a consistent source of light on a nightly basis. In fact, the moon provides no light at all. Without the moon there would still be light at night. Have you not seen stars? Have you never stepped out on a warm summer night and seen the stars blanketing the night sky, no moon present, and still there is light to see? I think you question is disingenuous.