There is no natural phenomenon that is comparable with the sudden and apparently accidentally timed development of science, except perhaps the condensation of a super-saturated gas or the explosion of some unpredictable explosives. Will the fate of science show some similarity to one of these phenomena?. Wigner, Eugene P. (1902-1995), in an essay ``The Limits of Science'' intended to estimate them, originally in Procs. of the _Amer. Philosophical Soc._ v. 94, #5 (1950). Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by age 18. - Albert Einstein "You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother." - Albert Einstein It is one Thing, to show a Man that he is in an Error, and another, to put him in possession of Truth." - John Locke