Science Information

The As Have it


ALTERNATE AND PARALLEL UNIVERSES: - The modern science of physics has opened many pathways or doorways to the infinite possibilities of 'creation'. Evolution is not the only operational factor in our life and its purpose. Martin Rees is a world recognized astronomer and more. He has recently proposed that there have been many universes and their other components which have been created. The news reports have said that it was a matter of trial and error, until it became right. If so, who can say it is RIGHT at this moment? The theory of the mystics that is covered in 'Harmonic Convergence' relates to this possibility. There are universes outside the known universe according to science as it now stands.

Some describe the process as being like a balloon that one twists a piece off, which becomes a new balloon. Scalar fields of topographies with varying event horizons make the areas of science fiction most appropriate for conveying what is the state of the art in astrophysics. Event horizons or varying time elements also occur at the edge of 'black holes' and in different parts of the universe. The mere existence of 'Black Holes' is not possible to explain the reality of, by old paradigm thinking. Yet, they were known to the mystics and chaos scientists of 13,000 years ago. Energy comes out of them as well. There is more actual energy in the vacuum than everywhere else it seems.

ANCIENT INVENTIONS: - In Alexandria and in the Cave of Hathor there appear to be reasons to believe we had electricity. There is no doubt that fraudulent traders were using electrum plating techniques to make gold plate on other metals to sell as pure gold. Some think the cave drawings show electrical wiring conduits, and I think it might be phosphorous slush in hoses to make the light by which the cave was painted by artists. There are professors who would have us believe the reason there is no carbon deposits from oil or wax burning lamps has to do with blind artisans. Thales had a small steam engine, the lighthouse at Alexandria and their tri-level sea-going ships, slot machines and other things lead the authors of Ancient Inventions to say they could build anything we could build until the mid-20th century. They detail the skill of port construction and many other things. There is much more than they talk about for us to re-learn or know, and many whole disciplines or things we've not yet re-discovered.

ANTHROPOLOGY: - There are so many examples of forced 'direct inference' theorization rather than 'observation and conclusion' to fit all facts in every area of science. Anthropologists in Polynesia kept telling the native people that they came from S. E. Asia despite the native assertions that they came from South America or even the Nootka/Haida nation of the Pacific Northwest. Thor Heyerdahl proved the natives were correct. The lack of willingness to accept that humans were inventive and ingenious enough to create rafts is nearly funny. There is botanical proof that Hawaii's vegetation is not all indigenous and came from the Caroline Islands of 1500 miles away. A cable TV documentary showed how the rites of the Caroline Islanders involve a bailing kind of movement and they established that as long ago as 150,000 BC these islanders traveled to Hawaii on huge rafts with outriggers. The jungles' vines and logs would make a raft in even the earliest times of hominid development.

The anthropologists as a whole are more open-minded despite having made many judgement errors that conventional thinking and the funding process have contributed to in a big way. We are constantly finding the facts and opinions of what academia calls mavericks are able to enlighten the past in all disciplines of anthropology and archaeology. Gimbutas and Campbell have followed a long line of independent thought from Humboldt and Hawkes through Petrie and Marshack. In the end they have brought mythology to the foreground through the use of techniques like the space photos and now we have solid state chemistry and genetics to blaze new trails. There is still a lot of small-minded provincial 'pissing-contests' between the differing disciplines but there are a lot of exciting things being achieved. The cases of researchers spending up to twenty years working and living with natives, who tell them what they want to hear because they are gracious and kind, are numerous. (6) The value systems of our researchers who want to position themselves and the Euro-Centric financial backers as more civilized are rife in the annals of what some say is far from a science.

When a native group being held under academic scrutiny and subject to logical linear mindsets actually is able to educate the 'experts' about their culture it is the exception. Often such things are not funded because the data doesn't 'fit' the prevailing literature. Carlos Castaneda was an anthropologist from UCLA who made a major breakthrough on his own. Even his debunkers have to admit he has brought a great deal of insight to the field as a whole. Dr. Wayne Dyer owes a great deal of the thought involved in his 'You'll See it, When You Believe It!' to the work of Carlos Castaneda and his Toltec mentor Don Juan. It is possible that all of our research into human behavior has more to learn than we think we already know. That might mean we are wrong about many key things. One of the most obvious things that our cultural bias foists upon the data is the relative importance we place on intellect rather than spirit.

A wise man knows he is a fool, a fool thinks he is a wise man.


MORE RESOURCES:

guardian.co.uk

Wild and woolly science
Los Angeles Times, CA - Nov 20, 2008
Too late for Michael Crichton, scientists reported this week that they have recovered a good deal of the woolly mammoth's DNA from tufts of hair. ...
Regenerating a Mammoth for $10 Million New York Times
From woolly mammoth hair, the beast's genetic map is born Christian Science Monitor
Virginia Tech out to crack genetic code of turkeys WSLS.com
The Associated Press - DailyTech
all 425 news articles


Times Online

Blanket of Soil May Hide Vast Martian Glaciers
New York Times, United States - 8 hours ago
“It’s sort of like discovering Greenland,” said John W. Holt of the University of Texas, lead author of a study in Science describing the findings. ...
'Missing' water on Mars may be hidden in vast glaciers Los Angeles Times
Giant deposits of ice found by Mars orbiter Houston Chronicle
Detective Work Reveals Mars's Watery Past SkyandTelescope.com
Livemint - FOXNews
all 176 news articles


BBC News

Space Station at 10: Much Teamwork, Less Science
Discovery Channel - Nov 20, 2008
Nov. 20, 2008 -- When Russia launched the first component of what would become the International Space Station 10 years ago, NASA expected to finish ...
Video: Astronaut Who Lost Tool Bag Admits Mistake AssociatedPress
Guest Viewpoint: Astronaut from Windsor is inspirational Press & Sun-Bulletin
Tool Bag Is Lost During Spacewalk New York Times
FOXNews - Morehead News
all 4,371 news articles


Science + Fiction Announces Partnership
MarketWatch - 15 hours ago
LOS ANGELES, Nov 21, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Science + Fiction, the branded programming studio, is pleased to announce a partnership with MSN. ...


'Sid the Science Kid' might be a victim of the budget crisis
Los Angeles Times, CA - 12 hours ago
... a decision to use $4 million in voter-approved tobacco tax money to put "Sid the Science Kid" on public broadcast stations across the United States. ...


Deccan Herald

Purdue president gets national science post
Chicago Tribune, United States - 12 hours ago
AP WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - The US Senate has confirmed Purdue President France Cordova's appointment to the National Science Board. President George W. Bush ...
Córdova gets national science post Journal and Courier
Reaching for the moon Deccan Herald
all 9 news articles


ABC News

New Project Aims to Unite Science and Hollywood
ABC News - 16 hours ago
The new effort, called the Science and Entertainment Exchange, is a project of the US National Academy of Sciences, and will be run by science writer ...


Rock science proving to be good fit in Chandler
Arizona Republic, AZ - 4 hours ago
by Luci Scott - Nov. 21, 2008 04:16 PM Orbital Sciences, Chandler's group of rocket scientists, celebrated a formal groundbreaking for its expansion in ...


Vancouver Sun

Graffiti study bolsters 'broken windows' theory
Los Angeles Times, CA - 17 hours ago
The results appear in the journal Science. Community policing strategies based on the "broken windows" theory have taken root in cities across the US and ...
Graffiti encourages more crime than you expect Reuters
'Broken windows' theory boosted Financial Times
Graffiti triggers crime, littering, study shows MSNBC
Vancouver Sun - Globe and Mail
all 120 news articles


New Applications for Cognitive Training
MarketWatch - 10 hours ago
Posit Science technology incorporated in its Brain Fitness Program(TM) and Insight(TM) products has been shown to improve cognitive function in healthy ...

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