J. M. F. Biggs: Difference between revisions

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Later that same year, when experimenting on a “Boats” [[repackaging]] in his laboratory in Cabot Square, he used [[Biggs constant]] to generate a live example of this particle, which he called the “[[Biggs hoson]]”. Though impressed with tremendous gravity when it appeared, the particle quickly decayed into an object of infinitesimal mass but tremendous, enduring levity.  
Later that same year, when experimenting on a “Boats” [[repackaging]] in his laboratory in Cabot Square, he used [[Biggs constant]] to generate a live example of this particle, which he called the “[[Biggs hoson]]”. Though impressed with tremendous gravity when it appeared, the particle quickly decayed into an object of infinitesimal mass but tremendous, enduring levity.  
Biggs is also credited with playing a part in the discovery of [[legal quantum indeterminacy]], though his role is not without controversy.


In recognition of his efforts, Biggs was awarded [[Inhouse legal team of the year|inhouse legal personality of the year]], 1998.
In recognition of his efforts, Biggs was awarded [[Inhouse legal team of the year|inhouse legal personality of the year]], 1998.
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*[[Biggs constant]]
*[[Biggs constant]]
*[[Legal quantum indeterminacy}}
*{{author|Ichabod Mourant}}
*{{author|Ichabod Mourant}}

Revision as of 17:10, 8 October 2022

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J. M. F. “Jack” Biggs, 3rd Viscount of Canning Town (1933-2007) was a British financial naturalist. Deeply influenced by pioneering Channel Islands botanist Ichabod Mourant, Biggs came to national prominence when he derived the “Biggs constant” from a set of equations discovered amongst Mourant’s papers when the great man died in 1958. Biggs used the equations to calculate the smallest possible size for a forensically significant jurisprudential particle.

Later that same year, when experimenting on a “Boats” repackaging in his laboratory in Cabot Square, he used Biggs constant to generate a live example of this particle, which he called the “Biggs hoson”. Though impressed with tremendous gravity when it appeared, the particle quickly decayed into an object of infinitesimal mass but tremendous, enduring levity.

Biggs is also credited with playing a part in the discovery of legal quantum indeterminacy, though his role is not without controversy.

In recognition of his efforts, Biggs was awarded inhouse legal personality of the year, 1998.

See also