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  • | name = Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Abridged Version | image = Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Abridged Version 1319.bmp
    324 bytes (41 words) - 06:39, 2 January 2017
  • | name = Was ist Wissenschaft?: Praktische Wissenschaftslehre ...1-18 Was ist Wissenschaft?: Praktische Wissenschaftslehre]][[Category:Book|was ist wissenschaft praktische wissenschaftslehre]]
    441 bytes (44 words) - 06:56, 2 January 2017
  • ...ium but the end of the old. The new millennium starts with the year 2001. Was everybody wrong? You bet. Has “everybody” been wrong before? Yu
    980 bytes (146 words) - 10:09, 1 January 2017
  • ...ot until 1990 that the general formulation of the universal time postulate was developed by Moon, Spencer and Moon. Today we know that electromagnetic sig
    1 KB (170 words) - 10:15, 1 January 2017
  • | title = Was ist und was will die GFWP?
    189 bytes (24 words) - 11:37, 1 January 2017
  • ...l considered as working fluids for similar power generation systems. There was no choice but to think like a particle.
    2 KB (230 words) - 20:09, 1 January 2017
  • ...to being unit free. The consequence of that act was that fundamental unity was achieved and remained present in the development of theory that followed. T
    2 KB (306 words) - 11:01, 1 January 2017
  • ...alues of redshift or morphological types of objects and locations on lines was visible.
    935 bytes (120 words) - 19:58, 1 January 2017
  • ...verything was red-shifted in our telescopes, it was assumed that the earth was near the point where all mass exploded to start the known universe. Since the conclusion that red-shift was caused by stellar movement, other theories have emerged to explain the red
    1 KB (173 words) - 17:34, 10 February 2017
  • ...as received by this editor via Usenet on 28 August 1989, at a time when it was still quite unknown what the outcome of the experiment would be.
    530 bytes (71 words) - 10:24, 1 January 2017
  • ...king the conference stand out was the facility, the Nativo Lodge. Not only was it an excellent and beautifully appointed building, but its staff members,
    909 bytes (119 words) - 19:13, 1 January 2017
  • ...If an event could be predicted with certainty it was real. The difficulty was that EPR did not discuss the aspect of locality. I would suggest extending
    2 KB (220 words) - 10:24, 1 January 2017
  • ...ed in the 28th November, 1974, issue in "Ariadne's " column, and the other was sent to <em>Electrical Review</em>. Both deserve a considered reply, such a
    651 bytes (92 words) - 09:52, 1 January 2017
  • ...rough to sections regarding ionic bonding I decided to delve further. What was written in the book and what is accepted in Chemistry today is that ionic b
    981 bytes (147 words) - 10:08, 1 January 2017
  • ...the null result of the Michelson-Morley experiment. But the M-M experiment was in error and Lorentz Transformations were based on error.
    838 bytes (118 words) - 10:36, 1 January 2017
  • | title = Was Edwards Contradicted Experimentally? ...Beckmann's theory. In another "variant" of the experiment, no such effect was detected. It is shown that the experiment failed to satisfy some crucial co
    718 bytes (86 words) - 11:37, 1 January 2017
  • ...a book about a sacred mushroom that could make a person telepathic, but he was yet to achieve widespread acclaim. That would occur, virtually overnight, a
    925 bytes (143 words) - 19:24, 1 January 2017
  • ...orefront of those discoveries was Nikola Tesla, and one of his discoveries was radio communication with Extraterrestrials. I will be discussing the intell
    1 KB (199 words) - 19:32, 1 January 2017
  • ...ected EE programs in the world. From the beginning, a conscientious effort was made to base it on a foundation of science. It has been guided by the speci Arguably the most stunning and significant lecture in modern history was presented one spring evening, more than a century ago, at Columbia Universi
    2 KB (233 words) - 19:58, 1 January 2017
  • ...optical gravimeter was suggested for the forecast of major earthquakes. It was determined that the Moon phases have impact on long-period deflections with
    1 KB (158 words) - 19:42, 1 January 2017
  • Mark was born in 1957 in Penn Yan. He was a graduate of Marcus Whitman High School, Class of 1975. He attended Ithaca ...rking on a windmill as an electric generator, on which he had a patent. He was the author of the book, ?Star Drive?.
    1 KB (184 words) - 13:01, 30 December 2016
  • * 2009 - "[[Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Abridged Version]]" * 2007 - "[[Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Volume I, The Scientific Case for Geocentrism]]"
    1 KB (146 words) - 13:12, 30 December 2016
  • ...heory was also really just a misrepresentation of Newtonian physics. There was in fact ? no evidence then and there is still no evidence now for Einstein'
    2 KB (256 words) - 20:09, 1 January 2017
  • | title = Was the Gravitational Deflection of Light Observed? [[Category:Scientific Paper|was gravitational deflection light observed]]
    963 bytes (121 words) - 20:12, 1 January 2017
  • ...trolling a computer mouse at a distance. In another case a disabled person was controlling his wheelchair using his mere thoughts. This indicates the begi
    1 KB (160 words) - 09:55, 1 January 2017
  • ...peed of light from Jupiter's satellite was lower when an observer on earth was moving away from it, and higher on approach. The red-shift of spectral line ...1693-1762) determined that the speed of light from the star Gamma draconis was higher when an observer on earth moved towards its perpendicular incident,
    2 KB (299 words) - 11:06, 1 January 2017
  • ...It is suggested that the announcement of the eclipse observations in 1919 was not a triumph of science as it is often portrayed, but rather an obstacle t
    2 KB (276 words) - 19:18, 1 January 2017
  • ...relativity was proven right again. But in truth a completely new face of c was discovered, which Einstein?s theory had not been taken into account.
    941 bytes (125 words) - 20:03, 1 January 2017
  • ...inverse-square law and the law of reflection. The case for the former law was persuasive, and the latter looks hopeful, but requires experimental refinem
    1 KB (155 words) - 11:02, 1 January 2017
  • | title = Was Newton Right After All? ...using light as a synchronizing signal. He has said that the kind of signal was immaterial. Subsequent interpreters have stated that sound signals could ju
    1 KB (159 words) - 20:12, 1 January 2017
  • ...d up his audience by praising his hero. He reminded them that Nikola Tesla was the turn-of-the-century genius who fathered alternating current technologie
    2 KB (250 words) - 19:58, 1 January 2017
  • Albert Einstein was a scientist who is most famous for his theory of relativity. His image and ...in was not the genius he is claimed to be is the fact that his first paper was most likely heavily co-authored by his then wife at the time.
    696 bytes (115 words) - 18:09, 10 February 2017
  • ...nd absorption. Apparently, light was not a wave but a particle. The photon was born. Later Einstein recognized photons to be indistinguishable, and partic
    2 KB (266 words) - 19:56, 1 January 2017
  • | name = Was Einstein Wrong? | image = Was Einstein Wrong? 351.bmp
    2 KB (216 words) - 06:56, 2 January 2017
  • ...sold some of his ideas to small manufacturers. His biggest idea, however, was so revolutionary that it embarrassed the nation's top scientists because th
    890 bytes (136 words) - 06:38, 2 January 2017
  • * 2008 - "[[Was ist und was will die GFWP?]]"
    590 bytes (73 words) - 13:09, 30 December 2016
  • ...s much like that of when there was only one seismograph, in that something was being learned but far from the potential.<br />
    1 KB (205 words) - 10:25, 1 January 2017
  • ...d by re-introducing the ?cosmological constant?. The cosmological constant was an idea of Einstein's that he ultimately rejected as, he said, ?the greates
    2 KB (232 words) - 20:00, 1 January 2017
  • | name = Elektrischer Strom und Oberfl?chenladungen: was Wilhelm Weber schon vor mehr als 150 Jahren wusste | image = Elektrischer Strom und Oberfl?chenladungen: was Wilhelm Weber schon vor mehr als 150 Jahren wusste 1646.jpg
    697 bytes (89 words) - 06:36, 2 January 2017
  • ...hen using an imploding, water-vortex generating apparatus. A bluish corona was observed around the apparatus.
    576 bytes (65 words) - 11:26, 1 January 2017
  • ...d tailoring of the total apparent resistance. Apparent negative resistance was also&nbsp;observed in carbon fiber cement-matrix composites and in bare car
    2 KB (243 words) - 19:19, 1 January 2017
  • ...he expanding Earth theory. This theory started around the late 1800?s and was heavily introduced to the geological community by Professor S. Warren Care
    1 KB (166 words) - 20:08, 1 January 2017
  • ...were obtained in violation of my&nbsp;"Extended Electrodynamics". In 2008 was published a much&nbsp;better version of the theory.
    668 bytes (85 words) - 19:37, 1 January 2017
  • ...sted across the Potomac River. He left home at 15 and joined the Army, but was quickly discharged for being under age. At 18 he joined the Navy and served
    992 bytes (153 words) - 10:17, 1 January 2017
  • ...ctrical condenser to exhibit motion toward its positive pole." T. T. Brown was intensely interested in demonstrating electrogravitational phenomena. His l
    992 bytes (130 words) - 20:01, 1 January 2017
  • ...1974-1975 at the National War College in Washington, DC. Later the theory was adapted as a practical general problem-solving model to use in a PERT-like
    1 KB (203 words) - 10:01, 1 January 2017
  • ...in the Universe. But it did not behave like a discrete particle. Something was wrong and Einstein knew it. <b>Answering Einstein.</b> This article shows ...examines the evidence for the truth of Nature revealing that his intuition was right. You, the reader, will find many treasured concepts are not true.
    2 KB (274 words) - 10:18, 1 January 2017
  • ...California ? Los Angeles, July 28-30, 1992. A small and informal gathering was designed to report and focus on the phenomenon of ball lightning.
    573 bytes (69 words) - 10:04, 1 January 2017
  • ...he University was never going to admit it was their mistake. Fitzpatrick was working for Pan American Airlines and also building a house, all by himse
    1 KB (184 words) - 12:35, 30 December 2016
  • ...ter than the speed of light. But he was not able to calculate just what it was. We will do so here. We commence with the following observation: To constru
    1 KB (162 words) - 19:25, 1 January 2017
  • ...of tiny aethereal whirlpools, each surrounded by electric particles. This was an idea, which according to Tesla in 1907, had in essence, long been known
    1 KB (166 words) - 12:48, 15 March 2021
  • ...Display&amp;id=48 Dr. John E. Chappell Jr.],&nbsp;who was present when NPA was formed. * I was a neighbor and friend of [../php2/index.php?tab0=Scientists&amp;tab1=Displa
    2 KB (275 words) - 13:11, 30 December 2016
  • ...a.org/wiki/Bundesverdienstkreuz Bundesverdienstkreuz]. In 1948 a doctorate was awarded to him." - <em>Wikipedia</em> In 1931, O. C. Hilgenberg proposed that gravity was due to the converging (sink) flow of the ether, and may have been the first
    2 KB (345 words) - 06:24, 2 January 2017
  • ...egral of Ampere?s Law. The inductance of the length required for the match was found to be zero. There are mechanisms in the current element that give up
    1 KB (202 words) - 10:24, 1 January 2017
  • ...case of the Michelson-Morley experiment. Within the experimental error it was found to vary as c<sub>2</sub> = (c<sup>2</sup> - v<sup>2</sup>) / c.
    1 KB (148 words) - 09:54, 1 January 2017
  • ...unes of nations was not taken into consideration by the powers that be and was not brought to mass notice." - V.V. Kuzmin (UKRAINE)
    655 bytes (85 words) - 10:39, 1 January 2017
  • ...avity was a property of matter, that the reason something fell was that it was small in size compared to the size of the Earth. It's hard to be skeptical
    1 KB (235 words) - 20:13, 1 January 2017
  • * The discoverer of the decaying neutron was Robson in 1950 and not Chadwick ...at are responsible for the remaining mass-quantity 5 of the nucleus. So it was conjectured that 5 socalled neutrons are embedded in the nucleus.
    2 KB (238 words) - 10:54, 1 January 2017
  • ...e was generated by the second object. The viewpoint that the second object was struck by the first is just as valid, but requires that the inertial force
    1 KB (220 words) - 20:07, 1 January 2017
  • ...of chemical society report on Lunar Orbiter Mission Design and Control. He was a Technical Monitor for the Viking mission to Mars.
    1 KB (149 words) - 13:24, 30 December 2016
  • ...he Commission du Conseil Sup?rieur de la Recherche Scientifique (1966). He was the recognised expert on radiation poisoning for the French government sinc
    1 KB (200 words) - 12:59, 30 December 2016
  • ...ped Molecular Resonance Effect technology (MRET). In 2000 Dr. Igor Smirnov was awarded with the US patent "Methods and Devices for Producing Activated L
    1 KB (139 words) - 12:46, 30 December 2016
  • ...father, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marcel_Brillouin Marcel Brillouin], was a physicist as well. He made contributions to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki Brillouin was a founder of modern [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid_state_physics solid
    4 KB (578 words) - 06:23, 2 January 2017
  • ...n's QED and QCD theories, which cover the other three forces of nature, it was a simple matter to offer a quantum theory of gravity to provide unification
    2 KB (311 words) - 19:16, 1 January 2017
  • ...the mid 1800's ranged from that of Stokes, where it was assumed the aether was completely carried along by matter, to Fresnel and partial convection, to M
    1 KB (151 words) - 19:37, 1 January 2017
  • ...ded development of what is now the PC modem. From this activity, Beaudette was issued patents on image processing for variable speed page scanning.
    2 KB (237 words) - 12:33, 30 December 2016
  • ...aerospace company Rocketdyne. He participated in a gravity experiment that was part of the feature-length documentary film [[Einstein Wrong - The Miracle ...ature-length documentary film [[Einstein Wrong - The Miracle Year]]. Geoff was in charge of the mechanical arm and authored a paper along with [[Robert de
    2 KB (331 words) - 11:57, 21 December 2018
  • ...on gravity in person on July 3rd of 2000. <div><br /> </div> <div>I was a constant reader of physics books and listened to books on tape on the sub
    996 bytes (160 words) - 12:53, 30 December 2016
  • ...s was performed by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). This phenomenon was reproduced qualitatively in the present replication experiment. ...tm for about 5 days. Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS) was performed to analyze the existence of the elements (Cs and Pr) and the mass
    2 KB (290 words) - 11:01, 1 January 2017
  • ...isitors. Searle was the last link with the academic world. Although Searle was one of the few who understood part at least of Heaviside's work, the book i ...nothing except duplications. This I accept, but wonder whether Searle, who was not a man to leave anything untidy, regarded it as still unfinished.
    2 KB (348 words) - 06:43, 2 January 2017
  • ...us cosmologist and researcher in General Relativity. During the 1980?s, he was also trained by Dr. Vitaly Bronshten (1918-2004), the well-known expert in
    2 KB (208 words) - 06:18, 2 January 2017
  • ...uter Engineering at Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, in 2002. In 2006 he was named as Department Chairman and Voorhies Distinguished Professor at the De ...s distinguished research career spanning a number of years, and in 2006 he was elected a Fellow of the IET (formerly the IEE). He is also a Senior Member
    3 KB (387 words) - 12:34, 30 December 2016
  • Co-author of <em>Galileo Was Wrong</em> and speaker at the Geocentric Catholic Conference at Notre Dame. * 2009 - "[[Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Abridged Version]]"
    2 KB (275 words) - 13:13, 30 December 2016
  • ...ed in the Bajua High School where I learnt Mathematics from H. C. Ghosh. I was graduated from the Presidency College, Calcutta , an academic institution o
    2 KB (249 words) - 13:16, 30 December 2016
  • ...s death in 1909. According to Ritz's collected works (OEuvres) the disease was [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleurisy pleurisy].
    1 KB (216 words) - 13:24, 30 December 2016
  • It was June 2015 when Bob de Hilster presented his idea for the particle model of
    109 bytes (20 words) - 09:49, 9 October 2018
  • ...reat interest and passion. Dean was supported by his career in finance. He was highly regarded as an expert in mortgages. Through the years, Dean became a ...ionless thruster that was invented by Norman L. Dean. Dean claimed that it was able to generate a uni-directional force, in violation of Newton's Third La
    3 KB (419 words) - 13:06, 30 December 2016
  • ...nvection cell." The paper was rejected at the time "on the grounds that it was naive" (p. 9). In 1971 Carey resubmitted this paper with an attached letter
    1 KB (157 words) - 19:21, 1 January 2017
  • ...ulted from the work of two men; the first was a physicist while the second was an astronomer. According to Science, the first one proved that nothing can
    940 bytes (136 words) - 11:30, 1 January 2017
  • ...ilation, that had been discovered by Carl Anderson in 1931. The suggestion was, that throughout the universe there exists an all-pervading underworld in a
    805 bytes (125 words) - 12:11, 12 August 2022
  • ...e German establishment was attempting to discredit their work. Even so, he was prominent nationalist and after 1933 a member of the Nazi Party and the Bro
    1 KB (220 words) - 13:08, 30 December 2016
  • ...exposed to Hitler?s racism and biological theories.&nbsp; Part of his life was spent in Nigeria, helping with its industrialization.&nbsp; Concerned with
    2 KB (239 words) - 12:43, 30 December 2016
  • ...licts within the scientific community. The jury is still out on whether he was correct or not in his ideas but, be that as it may, all can learn a tremend
    702 bytes (100 words) - 10:08, 1 January 2017
  • ...torque exist. The result was null. The present paper shows why there never was any cogent reason to expect a torque, even in classical theory.
    750 bytes (95 words) - 09:57, 1 January 2017
  • ...<br />Bill was a great professor not just because of what he taught, which was so wonderful, but that he challenged you to get books, seek out people, thi
    2 KB (313 words) - 06:17, 2 January 2017
  • ...of light, permitting relativists to believe that a light-conducting aether was not required since light actually consisted of particles and hence waves we
    2 KB (242 words) - 19:40, 1 January 2017
  • ...he ether. Next, it is shown that the fault with Shenvin's expected results was, in fact, that he ignored the increase of mass withvelocity.lt is shown tha
    2 KB (230 words) - 19:16, 1 January 2017
  • ...<div>The story of Atlin and the people who built her. How the dynasphere was built, when, where, how and who. A personal account of the historical backg
    1 KB (217 words) - 06:32, 2 January 2017
  • ...data and theories which paved the road to the idea that the speed of light was a universal constant, a seemingly universal belief. The need for the endeav
    2 KB (284 words) - 06:34, 2 January 2017
  • ...s, for example, about the Earth being at the center of the universe, which was subsequently proven to be untrue. Nonetheless, it got Galileo into a lot of
    1 KB (238 words) - 10:10, 1 January 2017
  • ...to find out if one was granted. I was told that it would have been, but it was withdrawn at the last moment (funding dropped). I did however find a grante
    2 KB (403 words) - 13:16, 30 December 2016
  • ...e elite of the scientific and electrical communities. At that time, Nikola was a tall handsome charismatic speaker who literally held his audience in the
    678 bytes (92 words) - 19:23, 1 January 2017
  • It was the last straw when my pseudo-science friend said that I just had to read G ...uantum mechanics was not the final answer. But I could not figure out what was really happening in the strange microscopic world. So I left the world of p
    2 KB (261 words) - 06:42, 2 January 2017
  • ...lot of talk about how the subduction of the Indian plate beneath Indonesia was the root cause of the earthquake that triggered the disaster. However, a si
    748 bytes (97 words) - 19:50, 1 January 2017
  • ...is to be hoped that the response to Theory C will be more perceptive than was the general response to Theory H a century ago?
    785 bytes (119 words) - 11:12, 1 January 2017
  • ...is an Italian physicist, emeritus professor at the University of Pavia. He was one of the last students of Erwin Schr&ouml;dinger. Bruno Bertotti is well ...was a visiting scholar at the Institute for Advanced Study in 1958-59. He was awarded the Italian Gold Medal of Merit in Science and Culture. - [http://e
    1 KB (180 words) - 12:32, 30 December 2016
  • ...measured through a phase-shift between the two beams. No such phase-shift was be observed. Conclusion: <b>There is no time dilation</b>. We may go one st
    1 KB (177 words) - 19:29, 1 January 2017
  • ...f mass of objects by rotating them in specific ways. "In 1974, Laithwaite was invited by the Royal Institution to give a talk on a subject of his own cho ...owed me something I could not explain, so I just had to investigate it. It was sheer curiosity ....'" - <em>[http://padrak.com/ine/NEN_5_9_5.html <em>LETT
    2 KB (314 words) - 12:27, 30 December 2016
  • ...Any idea that I might be able to make an original contribution in physics was immediately followed by the suspicion that I might be losing my marbles.
    2 KB (369 words) - 19:43, 1 January 2017
  • | name = Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Volume I, The Scientific Case for Geocentrism | image = Galileo Was Wrong: The Church Was Right, Volume I, The Scientific Case for Geocentrism 916.jpg
    3 KB (522 words) - 06:39, 2 January 2017
  • | name = Why Einstein Was Wrong, or the Scroll Theory of Cosmology and of Matter ...tter/dp/0943796008/ref=sr_11_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1236650751&sr=11-1 Why Einstein Was Wrong, or the Scroll Theory of Cosmology and of Matter]][[Category:Book|ein
    581 bytes (72 words) - 06:56, 2 January 2017
  • ...d Erstedt and so on. The model of elementary negative and positive charges was proposed. These models permit to interpret the existing experiments and als
    1 KB (179 words) - 19:43, 1 January 2017
  • | name = Imagine if Einstein was Wrong | image = Imagine if Einstein was Wrong 1609.png
    1 KB (155 words) - 06:40, 2 January 2017
  • ...-- made better by science. One of the most popular attractions at the fair was the science pavilion. Mr. Wolfle, 96, died Dec. 26. He was a professor emeritus at the University of Washington and had taught in the
    3 KB (567 words) - 12:35, 30 December 2016
  • ...illion believe in a fallacy it is still a fallacy. The point he was making was that the validity of any theory does not depend upon the number of people b
    1 KB (200 words) - 19:31, 1 January 2017
  • ...f free fall go to 4.9 m/s<sup>2</sup>. So our results are not clashing, it was all due to a misunderstanding.
    2 KB (262 words) - 19:41, 1 January 2017
  • ...e who understood Relativity pointed out that the math of Newtonian physics was really the same as that of General Relativity.
    1 KB (191 words) - 19:44, 1 January 2017
  • ...he University of Maryland from 1970 until his retirement in 1997.&nbsp; He was an artist in ceramics and published several articles in <em>Computers and G
    1 KB (143 words) - 12:45, 30 December 2016
  • ...and <em>Paradoxes in the Theory of Relativity</em> (1966).&nbsp; The last was translated into English in 1968.
    2 KB (244 words) - 13:26, 30 December 2016
  • ...s of about half the university and research department libraries. Since it was published, interest in the authors? quarterly seminar on digital design has
    837 bytes (116 words) - 06:35, 2 January 2017
  • ...o be alluding to a symmetry in four dimensions. It was almost as though he was saying “this is what the solutions should be, but I can’t get there usi
    922 bytes (143 words) - 01:20, 7 March 2020
  • ...ed his MA and Ph.D.in Mathematical Physics at University College, Cork. He was appointed assistant lecturer in the Department of Mathematics and Mathemati ...mund Darrel Figgis. A deeply religious Catholic from early life, O'Rahilly was a member of the <em>Society of Jesus</em>. He maintained his (sometimes con
    3 KB (352 words) - 12:27, 30 December 2016
  • ...ileged to discover as in the future? The answer is you cannot. This paper was read in absentia at NPA Conference 4C as "Does Einsteinian Relativity&nbsp;
    832 bytes (119 words) - 19:27, 1 January 2017
  • ...ve years of music, I decided to take up studying again. That revived study was finished with a bachelor's degree in electrotechnics after which I accepted ...tudy again in my free evening hours as an autodidact. Input for this study was provided by the physics program of the university of Leiden, the Netherland
    1 KB (187 words) - 13:12, 30 December 2016
  • ...ressed" is that he never showed anyone how or why the machines worked, and was not interested in commercial development. ...istian Community, in Linden, Switzerland, he firmly believed that humanity was not ready to be responsible for the knowledge. - [http://www.free-energy.ws
    1 KB (173 words) - 13:08, 30 December 2016
  • ...experiment is attempted. Until now it was assumed aether, if it was found, was a static substance having a unique reference frame from which entities were
    1 KB (214 words) - 15:33, 17 February 2021
  • Wilhelm Reich was an Austrian-American psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. Reich was a respected analyst for much of his life, focusing on character structure, ...ients sat inside to harness the energy for its reputed health benefits. It was this work, in particular, that cemented the rift between Reich and other pr
    3 KB (392 words) - 13:24, 30 December 2016
  • ...out any intermediate actions which were unobservable and saying that there was no reason to object to action-at-a-distance.
    930 bytes (128 words) - 11:30, 1 January 2017
  • ...f his radio frequency transmitter. Kanzius, an autodidact, stated that he was motivated to research the subject of cancer treatment by his own experience
    1 KB (168 words) - 12:53, 30 December 2016
  • ...as shown that the Twin Paradox conclusively proved that special relativity was an impossible theory. However, there is an even more positive way to prove
    953 bytes (137 words) - 20:02, 1 January 2017
  • ...Century physics seems to have diverted attention from the fact that there was a unified field theory before his influence. Einstein faced the problem of
    817 bytes (119 words) - 10:26, 1 January 2017
  • ...near Notre Dame campus. The Theme conclusion"Galileo was wrong: The Church was right". The conclusion Science and Bible both support Geocentric model bett
    1 KB (132 words) - 19:33, 1 January 2017
  • ...ame known as Weber’s constant, was measured numerically to be c√2, where c was very close to the speed of light. Since this experiment had nothing to do w
    938 bytes (150 words) - 07:48, 17 October 2022
  • ...ependent permittivity and permeability. Time variation of these parameters was shown on the base of Maxwell's equations and Hubble's law to obey the expon
    759 bytes (103 words) - 11:14, 1 January 2017
  • ...eory (SRT) was well anchored in experiment, the issue of measurement units was often overlooked, leading to contradictory interpretations of SRT. The quot
    820 bytes (102 words) - 19:56, 1 January 2017
  • ...elieved for many years that the theory was self-contradictory. Although he was unsuccessful in persuading the scientific world of the inconsistency of the
    1 KB (196 words) - 19:19, 1 January 2017
  • ...and anti-gravity explored further in an NPA paper of 2007. The 2006 paper was very long because it covered a very wide range of phenomena (too long for i
    1 KB (190 words) - 20:12, 1 January 2017
  • ...Wikipedia A professor of philosophy at Johns Hopkins University, Lovejoy was critical of Einsteinian relativity.
    889 bytes (108 words) - 12:29, 30 December 2016
  • ...y and virulent, and now he is gone from us. The double tragedy was that he was preceded in death by his fiance, who had also developed an early and virule
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  • ...White Sands, New Mexico. The site is now a national monument. Although he was an avid physicist and engineer who liked to look at the world in a differen
    807 bytes (118 words) - 12:54, 30 December 2016
  • | name = Die Urknalltheorie faellt. Was von moderner Physik bleibt und faellt. Band 3 | image = Die Urknalltheorie faellt. Was von moderner Physik bleibt und faellt. Band 3 502.jpg
    1 KB (171 words) - 06:35, 2 January 2017
  • ...some of the odd effects which can now seen with superconductors. Cullwick was also one of the first to identify and attempt an analysis of the relativist
    2 KB (264 words) - 06:36, 2 January 2017
  • ...explained in paper (a), which I wrote when I still thought that Relativity was a logically coherent theory.)
    2 KB (223 words) - 06:16, 2 January 2017
  • ...otopes, and also correctly predicts their spins. The Electromagnetic model was improved by making detailed spatial and directional force balances using a In 2004, a new Electromagnetic model of all types of particles was developed based upon a three-level scheme of wrapping fractionally charged
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  • ...ns and properties that describe the propagation of light through space. It was this relationship as well as many others that caused this hypothesis to be
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  • ...s of the neutron and the positron, and the conviction that the photon also was a particle, didn't help any.)
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  • ...existence of matter and Dr. Russell assumes the existence of mind. Russell was also accomplished in philosophy, music, ice-skating, and as a professor at
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  • ...ch is why they couldn?t be unified. We were trying to rejoin a couple that was already happily married.
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  • ...only possible interpretation of the facts of experiment. My first impulse was to withdraw the book from circulation, but on second thoughts it seemed mor ...hat they were using Tom?s book for their relativity course, even though it was no longer in print, because, they said, ?We have never been able to find an
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  • Louis Groarke was born in London, England and immigrated to Canada as a child. He finished hi ...Reality and Meaning, and The American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly. He was recently an Associate of the Northrop Frye Center at Victoria University (U
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  • ...expert. Particle composition is just my hobby. Nevertheless, what I found was a big surprise to me. Therefore I am convinced that the findings presented
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  • * 2006 - "[[Was Einstein Wrong?]]" ([http://www.amazon.com/Was-Einstein-Wrong-Enrique-Morales-Riveira/dp/1412022436/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=b * 2000 - "[[Einstein Was Not Right]]" ([http://www.amazon.com/Einstein-Was-Right-Enrique-Morales-Riveira/dp/958332020X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=
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  • ...England, and was educated at the University of New Zealand. For a time he was a lecturer in geology at Victoria University College, Wellington, but in Fe
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  • Who has detected the neutrino? It was not detected, it was ordered as a remedy to save a theory in trouble.
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  • ...rly in the twentieth century about the energy expenditure of the Sun. This was based on assumption, early history evolution of stars had hot beginnings. U
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  • ...e, N.Y.; a nephew; and a special friend, Kristin Ruggiero of Cambridge. He was born in Fitchburg, son of Richard J. Carey Sr., and lived here for 10 years ...s a computer engineer with Motorola, Mansfield, for more than 20 years. He was an avid reader and student of the history of mathematics.
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  • ...ld the story of a simple man who was chosen for a heroic task. David Hamel was given information enabling him to build a craft that would provide an abund
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  • ...y a partial time derivative was taken, and so the measured current density was equal to the current density measured at the source. An important implicati
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  • ...n Oil Company (AIOC). In 1954, when AIOC became BP, he went to Germany and was president of the Permanent Tidal Commission. From 1913 to 1918, Tomaschek s
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  • ...with the prejudice to support this belief. Indeed, the Copernican Theory was never proved, yet it is accepted because of fear of ridicule to ask for act I'm alleging that the Copernican Theory was never proved and that his book doesn't contain a single piece evidence to s
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  • ...system, which we manufactured and marketed.<br /><br />On Sep. 26, 1989 I was granted a patent no. 4,869,041 which I called it the Octet Truss Expansion
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  • ...hanical engineering in Guadalajara, Mexico. I did not like the education I was getting so I decided to come to the US. I went to Los Angeles Community Col ...e than 10 rocket engines and about 8 launch vehicles. By my senior year, I was already considered a mentor, not a student. I have not done much for the ro
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  • ...ttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrophysicist astrophysicist] and writer. He was educated at [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edinburgh_University Edinburgh Un ...ttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doctorate_of_Science Doctorate of Science]. He was also awarded the Silver Pen from the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin
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  • ...fied&nbsp;as a genius by the early IQ tests of Stanford's Lewis Terman, he was placed in&nbsp;Terman's special program for gifted youth.&nbsp; Through thi ...&nbsp; Among other honors, a 1941&nbsp;Scientific or Technical Award Oscar was "[http://awardsdatabase.oscars.org/ampas_awards/BasicSearch?action=searchLi
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  • ...oma with a B.S. in EE. From there attended the University of Texas where I was a teacher assistant in the EE Department. In '61 I graduated there with a M ...areer was mostly in the R&amp;D area of several companies. Most noticeable was the work with Texas Instruments with government products.
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  • | title = Why Einstein Was Wrong
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  • ...iki/Cold_fusion cold fusion] in the 1980s and ?90s. The two met while Pons was a graduate student in Professor Alan Bewick?s group at the [http://en.wikip ...e">[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_Pons#cite_note-0 [1]]</sup> which was quickly labeled by the press as [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_fusion c
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  • ...otherwise than what it might appear to others that were or might have been was not other wise than what you had been would have appeared them to be otherw ...t might appear (as) to others (i.e.) that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been (that) would have appeared to them to
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  • ...classical physicists believed that the electrical particle they discovered was a fundamental building block of matter?what we would call an elementary par
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  • ...n University, Granville, Ohio. He started a military career afterwards and was involved in a number of science programs. ...effect he discovered has been proven to exist by many others, Brown's work was controversial because others and even he himself believed that this effect
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  • Frederick Soddy was an English radiochemist,&nbsp;who received the [/wiki/Nobel_Prize_for_Chemi ...rged nuclei of [/wiki/Helium helium]. In the experiment a sample of radium was enclosed in a thin walled glass envelope sited within an evacuated glass bu
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  • ...ial was relatively positive, whereas between positively charged spheres it was relatively negative. Hence, both approaches confirm theoretical expectation
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  • ...the apparatus design was successful, an important input measurement error was discovered, thus the experimental results will need to be retested and the
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  • ...A and B is confirmed to a straight line. The 3-dimensional generalization was obtained by Moon, Spencer and Moon in 1989.
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  • | name = The Cult of the Big Bang: Was There a Bang? | image = The Cult of the Big Bang: Was There a Bang? 56.jpg
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  • ...he speed of light was invariant, the only explanation that became accepted was that time slowed and length contracted due to relative motion according to
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  • ...ot of written discussion, some of which was published in these pages 2. It was not, of course, unexpected . Indeed, in the article itself I suggested that
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  • The Global Sciences organization was founded in 1983 by Dean Stonier with the intent to promote the understandin By 1997, [http://www.globalsciences.com/ http://www.globalsciences.com/] was created. Local meetings were held every month in the Denver area in additio
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  • ...e sphere to the plates, the apparatus presented in this article originally was termed a ?reciprocating motor,? and more recently an ?electromechanical cha
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  • Georges Lakhovsky (1869 Minsk, Belarus - 1942 New York City, USA) was a Russian engineer, scientist, author and inventor. His medical treatment i ...pathogens corrupted them, causing interference with these oscillations. It was translated to English in 1935. Numerous depictions pictured in the book sup
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  • ...hree groups in Electrochemistry (Chemistry Department). In addition, there was the Center for Electrochemical Systems and Hydrogen Research in the Texas E
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  • ...meter collecting the data sensed the eclipse about eight minutes before it was visually noticeable.<span>&nbsp; </span>Based on the gravity profile of the
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  • ...s emanating from a dipole antenna. It was further proposed that the aether was nothing more than the combination of all fields set up by the relative posi
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  • ..., or moment of a pulse as it name physics. In result about 100 years there was closed a direction of researches of behavior of inhabitants of the microcos
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  • ...in civil engineering and mining in Australia, Canada, Asia and Africa. He was President of the Institution of Engineers, Australia in 1980-81.
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  • ...ng as an assistant professor of electrical engineering until 1935, when he was a lecturer at the Military College of Science in Woolwich, England. From 19 ...Navy, serving as electrical captain of "L" Branch in 1945-46. In 1946, he was named to the Order of the British Empire.
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  • ...y in excess of the electrical energy input to the pump motor. "Over-unity" was confirmed by satisfied customers, including the Albany Fire Station, where The presentation was impressive. A drum-type rotor close-fitting within a cylindrical housing ha
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  • ...hief Scientist accused him of doing ?bad science? and reminded him that he was on contract. Choi published his article in the <em>Journal of Petroleum Geo
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  • ...by Newton and the ancient Greeks. By introducing certain modifications, he was able to resolve the difficulties associated with quantization and relativit
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  • ...s an student of Bleuler in the late fifties. Upon returning to Colombia he was the Head of the Physics Group at the Institute for Nuclear Affairs in Bogot
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  • ...sophical Research in their online Masters degree program. Prior to that he was on the graduate faculty at the Pacifica Graduate Institute in Carpenteria, ...Boston as part of the Emerson Bicentennial Celebrations. In June, 2005, he was the Keynote speaker at the re-instatement of the Delphic Games in Delphi, G
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  • ...n the 1950s.<br /><br />The Oceanographic Survey Ship USNS Bruce C. Heezen was christened in honor of him in 1999.<br /><br /><br />
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  • ...greatest inventors, and definitely its most mysterious. To say that Telsa was ahead of his time is putting it rather mildly. Most of his inventions were ...bly just as fascinating as Tesla's inventions was Telsa himself though. He was the original, real-life "mad scientist", and often discussed his invention
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  • ...ny experimental technique, and the accuracy of his published data. The man was a genius. ...erious character (such deprecations are easily challenged historically: he was, of course, none of these), let us first identify his professional qualific
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  • ...Nuclear Physics in Krak?w, where he is presently employed. In 1986-1987 he was research scientist at the Laboratory of Theoretical Physics of the Joint In
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  • ...ouri Weather Service on the same system then prevailing in Iowa, and which was afterward adopted by most of the other states ... Professor Nipher was for several years president of the Academy of Science and also president of
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  • ...ion between the structure of atoms and the quantum hypothesis had to give, was later detected and played in the original considerations do not matter. The
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  • ...ograph of the Goat Island statue designed by sculptor Franko Krisnic which was given to the people of New York by the people of Yugoslavia in 1976. You've
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  • | title = Was vom Einsteinjahr bleibt
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  • ...peeding up. PART I of this book describes, without maths, how this mystery was resolved. It resulted from a solution to the first problem showing what Dar
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  • ...plates were hung on a torsionless suspension, the minimum energy principle was then supposed to cause the plates to turn such the plates were more perpend
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  • ...s market is also estimated at $2 trillion. About twenty-five years ago, I was contacted by a young electrical engineering student, Barry Bowser, to see i ...enry was interested in using gravity waves as his communication method and was awarded a patent on his method. The force of gravity is one of the fundamen
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  • ...0 to 1945, he held the chair for astronomy at the University of Vienna and was director of its observatory. After 1945, he lived as a private scholar in K ...as against theoretical physics, especially including quantum mechanics. He was also a student of the philosophy of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Ding
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  • I was born in Belgium in 1929 and hold an MS in Electrical Engineering from the After 15 years with IBM Belgium, I was hired by The Coca-Cola Company where in the 70's en 80's I masterminded the
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  • ...Manager of the Marine Corps Non-Lethal Electromagnetic Weapons Project. He was considered to be an expert in the biological effects of extremely low frequ
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  • ...fection, communication! Tesla?s Magnifying Transmitter (the ultimate coil) was for wireless power/global communications. - <em>[http://www.teslatech.info/ ...rculating the internet I was curious why I should pay $10 for this book. I was pleasantly surprised. The detail and simplicity of the book make it a great
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  • Stephen Hurrell was born in 1956 in Great Britain. He was a practising engineering designer and is married with a son. Whilst designi
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  • ...shment; he had just had a book of his own published showing how relativity was consistent with the universe erupting from a pin point, expanding and then,
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  • ...he opportunity of such a gathering for the discussion of eclipse problem.s was taken by the arranging of a number of colloquia on the various problems to
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  • ...use it does not come from vegetable matter. The original theory of how oil was formed is that swamps filled with vegetation, (biomass) were covered with m
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  • ...y of Descartes at that time was the most convincing natural philosophy and was based on a single dynamic ether as the only reality of the universe. The th
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  • ...or of the so-called Fuelless Motor (1928). In the 1920's Lester Hendershot was working on a new type of aviation compass. He stumbled across a method of g ...iated with Hendershot and learned of the device through him. The generator was self-resonant at 500 kHz. - <em>PESWiki</em>
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  • ...of particles. This was an objectification similar to the theory that heat was a "caloric fluid", instead of vibratory motion. This one error invalidates
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  • ...tic (or geometric) and dynamic (or frame-space perspective). Second, there was a Lorentzian programme, which provided a quasi-classical exposition of Rela
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  • ...t of "ether" velocity, in spite of an earlier paper that proved that there was exact cancellation between two first-order effects, one due to "ether" velo
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  • ...or inventing the first completely electronic television. In particular, he was the first to make a working electronic image pickup device ([http://en.wiki
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  • ...1950), was the first book in English on subjective Bayesian statistics. He was the General Editor of <em>The Scientist Speculates: An Anthology of Partly-
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  • ...d, or must it be modified to take into account the seasonal variation that was discovered by the Monti? Can we believe that Maxwell?s equations, as postul
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  • * Cave terrains where the waterpower station was built on Drin river in Vau i Dejes, Shkodra, Albania ...ated from a granite dike, where waterpower station of Fierza on Drin river was built
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  • ...street from the entrance to a nine-hole golf course, and even though golf was never before my game, I have learned now that my neighbors are attracted to
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  • ...s possible. In the process, an equation for the gravitation constant ''G'' was developed. These calculations from the graviton equation have shown that ''
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  • To show that the equation E = mc<sup>2</sup> was already implicit in Maxwell’s 1861 paper “On Physical Lines of Force”
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  • | name = Albert Was Right - God Does Not Play Dice | image = Albert Was Right - God Does Not Play Dice 543.gif
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  • ...erican, and appearing long before the rise of home schooling, Stong's book was reviewed in New Scientist as "most fascinating" and sold well. It went out
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  • Cooksey was the Secretary and Treasurer of the British-American Scientific Research Ass
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  • ...American scientist, in this article "The Quantum and the Universe", which was published in the collection "Astrophysics, quanta and relativity theory" (M
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  • ...ation of the interferometer, and so was rejected by them solely because it was less than the 30km/s orbital speed of the earth. A 2002 post relativistic-e
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  • ...ry and quantum theorists finally accepted the possibility that unification was the primary goal of physics, albeit a unification based upon the quantum co
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  • ...ties in the negative-energy solutions of the Dirac equation. Its existence was subsequently confirmed via the Wilson chamber and became an established par ...lance, because matter was treated at all levels of study, while antimatter was treated only at the level of second quantization.
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  • ...y in his sleep on December 15, 1996, of an apparent heart attack.&nbsp; He was only 70 years of age. From 1952 to 1957, Charles worked for Marchant Research.&nbsp; It was there that a co-worker first introduced him to the puzzle of the speed of l
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  • | name = Waves Versus Corpuscles : The Revolution That Never Was | image = Waves Versus Corpuscles : The Revolution That Never Was 331.jpg
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  • ...he question is not always how much knowledge but the perspective. &nbsp;It was clear that incorrect interpretations or perspective could make a simple pro
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  • ...then the Army Air Corps as a flying Cadet. At the close of World War II he was commanding the 824th Bombardment Squadron (B-24s) of the Fifteenth Air Forc ...icer, where he worked on nuclear weapons development. From 1953 to 1957 he was Chief of Scientific Research, Headquarters, Air Research and Development Co
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  • ...the Big Bang and the characters involved - explaining at every step how it was done. ...l these years of searching for the Hubble constant, all they ended up with was something any schoolchild could have found by recalling three very common p
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  • ...y the Special Relativity. Until now it was assumed ether, if it was found, was a static&nbsp; </div> <div>substance having a unique reference frame from w
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  • ...of distant clocks by radio is now a precise and well known technique. This was not the case in 1905 when Einstein published his famous paper on relativity
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  • ...with cancer of the bronchial tubes, of which he died in 1996. Thomas Kuhn was married twice, first to Kathryn Muhs (with whom he had three children) and
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  • ...ity which became clearer with the advent the pulses in digital electronics was evaded for the next half century. Ever more glaring flaws in this misallian
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  • ...ork. I was living in Phoenix then, working for KinetX on Iridium, and this was probably around the mid 90s. ..."President of the APGR" but Bill Carnahan really was the organizer. Then I was President of the NPA and then maybe "honorary President" for a while, while
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  • ...bert Adams of New Zealand tells all in this intriguing narrative as to who was the original inventor of this device. Adams settles this dilemma for all ti ...the corridors of its birth and subsequent biography. Who, on planet Earth, was it's real inventor and why has it's past become so bogged down in such a ve
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  • ...y of London in 1970, and a PhD from the University of Tasmania in 1978. He was a Professor of Geology in the School of Earth Sciences in the University of
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  • ...rand Canyon was calculated using known explosive equivalencies. The energy was found to be equivalent to about 4-5 times the current level of solar output
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  • Quoting Nikola Tesla from his 1907 paper “Man’s Greatest Achievement” which was published in 1930 in the Milwaukee Sentinel, ...lectric and magnetic waves in a sea of aethereal vortices. While this idea was still being published as recently as 1937, as seen from another quote from
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  • ...peeding up. PART I of this book describes, without maths, how this mystery was resolved. It resulted from a solution to the first problem showing what Dar
    2 KB (242 words) - 06:34, 2 January 2017
  • ...and this trend continues. The main reason for the adopted energy strategy was the lack of fundamental research on alternatives to nuclear energy.
    1 KB (162 words) - 10:46, 1 January 2017
  • ...ossibly imagine. Go to www.letsplaybridge.com. One day a few years back, I was slow getting out of bed, my mind wondering about the universe, when quite s
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  • ...ns are carried out for a single moving sphere, while the Wilson experiment was done on an assembly of many spheres. We present arguments making it plausib
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  • ...for ?closed? systems with a timeindependent energy-momentum tensor) and it was generalized by Felix Klein in 1918 (for arbitrary timedependent ?closed? sy
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  • ...t impact on the world scientific community. It was a wonderful read, and I was impressed that Fritjof Capra, who is my favorite modern philosopher, wrote
    1,014 bytes (143 words) - 06:47, 2 January 2017
  • ...ge of sixty-four, only weeks prior to the second Swansea Workshop which he was due to attend. ...ion</em>-based physics is essential. His final conviction, in this regard, was that all our knowledge of nature stems not form the <em>physis</em> of trad
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  • ...sical Lines of Force"''</b>, which was written in1861 in Great Britain, it was not until 1864 that Maxwell created a distinct listing of <b>''eight ''</b>
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  • ...</sup>and 257<sup>o</sup> from the direction of motion. Special attention was paid to the effect of the hydrogen pressure and other influences that may n
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  • ...rmations of the Theory of Special Relativity (TSR), though it was actually was left open. Consequences of my alternative transformations of the space and
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  • ...ant paper on the testing of Mach's Principle by re-evaluation of data that was first taken by Ives and Stillwell in 1937 and 1938. ...demy of Sciences.&nbsp; His work ranged far beyond nuclear physics, and he was not afraid to look beyond the boundaries of establishment physics, as evide
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  • William Gordan (W. G.) "Bill" Carnahan was the founder of the Association for Pushing Gravity Research (APGR) and the ...and a niece, Jean Cordell. He was born May 10, 1911 at Center, Teaxs. Bill was awarded a four year scholarship to Texas A&amp;M University from which he g
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  • ...n sixteen jurisdictions within the United States. Additionally, in 1998 he was the advisor on British constitutional law and history for the amicus curiae
    2 KB (259 words) - 12:53, 30 December 2016
  • ...itect for USAF's Space Based Experimental Version (StarWars) in 1988. This was one of the first successful GRID computing implementations - long before th
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  • ...ng He<sub>4</sub> from some form of nuclear-chemistry process whose action was directly proportional to the amount of DC electrical energy used. At the sa
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  • ...SRT). While that certainly didn?t invalidate SRT, it did indicate that SRT was perhaps not needed to explain MM. That analysis strongly suggests that the
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