I work for the The Division of Energy Services. It's a desk job which kind of wears on me, but it is awfully interesting. I don't understand energy nearly as much as everyone that works here, I probably know less than most people I know. I'm going to try to understand it a little better through this. Maybe you'll have some advice.
This is the Wikipedia article on it
Here is the Wikipedia article on Energy
This was helpful because it reminded me that Energy is not what i always think of it as. I usually think of Energy as electricity, and by most standards it is. The term is used pretty loosly it seems. This clarifies that energy is really a physics term that "describes the amount of work that can be performed by a force." I think it's a good broad term since when we talk about "energy savings" and "energy efficiency" we're not only just talking about electricity we're talking about work, time, money, and resources.
So apparnetly there are different forms of energy "kinetic, potential, thermal, gravitational, sound, light, elastic, and electromagnetic energy" and "any form of energy can be transformed into another form, but the total energy always remains the same."
So the kind of Energy i'm interested in, i think, is electricity (here is the wikipedia link
. What makes our lights work, our computers glare and our televisions flicker.
So apparently electricity was kind of a mystery until the 1600's. People knew there was lightnening and they knew that electric fish shocked them but they didn't have much of a science behind it. (more to come...i have to get running)