Thomas Geoffrey Franzel
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Thomas Geoffrey Franzel | |
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Residence | Salem, OR, United States |
Known for | history of science, physics, time, space |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Businessman |
I attended MIT and got a BS in Economics in 1966, studied history and philosophy of science much later, (Indiana University, MA in History and Philosophy of Science, 1992, and Oregon State University, A.B.D. in History of Science, 1995) but have mostly just worked in business in the private sector. I also published a long two-part paper in Volume 1 of Physics Essays, and another paper on solar physics, about ten years later, also in Physics Essays, vol. 12, so I've been at this stuff for a long time. Philosophy of Science gave my most recent paper the bums rush, so I put the correspondence at the end of the paper as an Appendix, and am contributing it to NPA Conference 19, at Albuquerque.
Abstracts
- 2012 - "The Logic of a Newly Designed Optical Experiment May Resolve the One-Way Light Speed Issue" (Read in full)
- 1999 - "The Strange and Checkered Career of Carrington's Law: A Century and a Half of Solar Modeling"
- 1988 - "Distant Simultaneity and the Bilateral Symmetry of a Rotating Object: An Epistemic Alternative to Newton's Water Bucket Experiment as the Cornerstone in Philosophy of Space and Time, Part 1"
- 1988 - "Distant Simultaneity and the Bilateral Symmetry of a Rotating Object: An Epistemic Alternative to Newton's Water Bucket Experiment as the Cornerstone in Philosophy of Space and Time, Part 2"
Media
- 2012 - [1] (Video Lecture)