Talk:Heat Empowerment/@comment-5060540-20130508211556/@comment-5265497-20130509022013

It's actual definition? I believe it's fair to say there is more than one definition for the word other than the definition that physics adorns it with. The commonplace use of the word is the one that really matters for simplicity and comprehensibility. I mean, when you say 'heat up your food, can't stand the heat, heat stroke or exhaustion, heat of [whatever high temperature object], we have 'modified' the definition of heat itself to the point that heat is merely associated with high thermal energy. To get even more deeper, heat is the total energy of molecular motion in matter while temperature is just the average of the motion so you could say a gigantic iceberg has more heat than a boiling pot of water.