3 Apr
2020
3 Apr
'20
6:46 a.m.
The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations suggests James Jeans (1877-1946), English astronomer, physicist, and mathematician: "If we assume that the last breath of, say, Julius Caesar has by now become thoroughly scattered through the atmosphere, then the chances are that each of us inhales one molecule of it with every breath we take." An Introduction to the Kinetic Theory of Gases (1940).