I've heard that magnets retain practically all of their magnetic strength indefinitely, so long as they are not heated beyond a certain critical temperature (?) Assuming that is so, how is it that those little magnets sticking on my refrigerator door, which have been there for years now, are not violating the law of conservation of energy?? It could be argued that those magnets are just sitting there, not actually doing any work per the strict definition of "work" (moving a mass) so the law is not violated. On the flip side, those magnets certainly have their own mass and they've been resisting the pull of gravity by not falling off the fridge door for all this time. Doesn't it have to take some effort (energy) to for those magnets to resist gravity indefinitely (?) And if the magnets' strength isn't being diminished, where does that energy come from? Am I nuts or what?