Fifteenth law of worker entropy: Difference between revisions

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{{Fifteenth law of worker entropy}}
{{Fifteenth law of worker entropy}}


The theory has a complicated genesis. Most accounts record that it was first proposed by pioneering British financial naturalist [[J. M. F. Biggs]], who invented it on the spot to defend an otherwise plainly preposterous assertion he had been backed into making during an otherwise enjoyable [[closing dinner]] in Vienna in 1924.  
The theory has a complicated genesis. Most accounts record that it was first proposed by pioneering British financial naturalist [[J. M. F. Biggs]], who invented it on the spot to defend a plainly preposterous assertion he had been backed into making during an otherwise enjoyable [[closing dinner]] in Vienna in 1924.  


Being somewhat the worse for wear at the time, Biggs — who would later find immortality when he discovered the [[Biggs Hoson]] — then forgot about it for twenty years.  
Being somewhat the worse for wear at the time, Biggs — who would later find immortality when he discovered the [[Biggs Hoson]] — then forgot about it for twenty years.