Fourier meets Heisenberg

Fourier Math and Quantum Uncertainty I’m going to explore some delightful results from pure math, and a head-scratching way that the math appears in basic quantum physics. This may get a little math-y, but please bear with me. I’ll try to keep it (as Einstein would say) “as simple as possible, but not simpler”. Start … Read more

What happened to the data?

Do vaccines cause more harm than good? Or is there an overwhelming net benefit? Are there some vaccines in each category? Are whole-virus vaccines better than vaccines based on a single antigen (“epitope”) isolated from the virus? Are vaccines more effective against viruses than bacteria, or vice versa? Do mRNA “vaccines” work at all? All these … Read more

Evidence for “Dark Energy” Challenged

Summary   In 1997, two independent research groups published their finding that the expansion of the universe is accelerating. The concept of “dark energy” was introduced as a hypothetical source of negative gravity, which would add the acceleration to the standard Big Bang model. Subir Sarkar now claims that the two groups made the mistake … Read more

The Big Bang — a good theory while it worked

Since 1964, the Big Bang has been the context for interpreting all of astronomy. The theory has been troubled since 1997 by observations that don’t fit the model. That was the year that accelerating expansion was documented. The most recent observation is that All of Creation is rotating. We don’t even know how to calculate … Read more

Dean Radin: The Science of Magic (book review)

The Science of Magic, by Dean Radin, forthcoming October 21 from Random House / Harmony This is Dean Radin’s fifth book about parapsychology. They are all compellingly written. If this is the first time you are taking the paranormal seriously, the information can be transformational. Since 2018, he has come out of the closet, openly characterizing as … Read more

Darwin, Lamarck, and McFadden

Here are three ideas of how evolution works, which I’ll refer to as Darwinian, Lamarckian, and super-Lamarckian. Darwinian: Offspring are just like their parents except for mistakes and DNA copying errors — mutations that are completely random, caused, for example, by stray cosmic rays. All the functionality that evolves is due to natural selection — i.e., … Read more

What do THEY know that We don’t?

In 1951, the act authorizing the CIA was amended with the provision that the CIA and DoD might conduct secret research without revealing their scientific progress to the public or even to Congress. 74 years later, what do they know that university scientists don’t know? And what technologies do they have that are not in the … Read more

Magnetic Poles are Drifting Rapidly

Magnetic pole drift map

In just the last 20 years, the North Magnetic Pole has moved 400 miles out of Canada and into the Siberian side of the geographic pole. In Derinkuyu, Turkey, there is an entire underground city, half a million square feet of living space extending hundreds of feet down. It was built in a time before … Read more