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Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Thu Nov 20, 2008 6:56 am
by skyfish
FM,
I read this years ago too. Physics/metaphysics again. Good stuff.

The Dancing Wu Li Masters

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dancing_Wu_Li_Masters

this guy was mentioned....again....I see a connection...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Sarfatti

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Thu Nov 20, 2008 7:01 am
by skyfish
It's every where I look!

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081119/sc_ ... darkmatter

It's everywhere and driving the expansion of the universe....sounds familiar.

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Thu Nov 20, 2008 9:37 pm
by FM No Static At All
Mr. Skyfish,
How about the possibility that what is being called dark matter and dark energy is really conscious intelligence, which is the creative energy that does cause the universe to expand, and it causes the aether to exist? See, I am certain that thought is energy. I haven't looked into how much energy is contained in a thought, but it must be small. But what happens when thoughts align and focus on a common goal? When happens when people meditate or pray in harmony for something?

Understanding the method which links thought to quantum physics is something that has been tested and perhaps exploited by our covert ops or black projects labs. I don't know if that is something that will be considered ubiquitous any time soon. Truth about UFOs may be forth coming sooner than mind/matter linking. But wasn't that also how Clint Eastwood (Firefox) flew the Soviet jet he stole?

But back to dark stuff, it does seem quite possible that we are entering a realm of energies that swirl in vibrational harmonies that expand and condense forming waves and particles along there path, obeying the rules of the road if you will, enforced by the aether border defenses. The aether spins and rotates along with its mass clinging to it and providing the weak force of gravity which holds us to the planet below "escape velocity" and the strong gravity that binds particles, allowing the formation of complex structures.

I feel that within the aether, we will discover the secrets of spin dynamics and its relationship with frequency to create points of tension, and we will discover how asymmetry in design caused imbalance with nature, and that is why anomalous energy has been observed. Instead of creating a proton, that energy was diverted to an imbalanced condition created by an asymmetrical circuit that was open to the environment.

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 7:26 am
by skyfish
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... -tick.html

Time and quantum gravity again...

Physicists have become increasingly argumentative about what exactly time is. because this is now being recognised as perhaps the most fundamental question of all. For decades they have been attempting to wed quantum mechanics, our theory of how very small things behave, to relativity, our theory of how space, time and matter interact. This would give us the long-sought-after theory of quantum gravity that describes the entire universe.

Space, time and matter interaction. Sounds familiar.

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 7:30 am
by skyfish
Oh..and if we accept the article I just posted in the quantum hotel thread:

http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn1 ... tions.html

most of our mass comes from virtual quarks and gluons fizzing away in the quantum vacuum.

That makes the universe space, time and energy.

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 1:52 pm
by htmagic
skyfish wrote:http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg2 ... -tick.html

Time and quantum gravity again...

Physicists have become increasingly argumentative about what exactly time is. because this is now being recognised as perhaps the most fundamental question of all. For decades they have been attempting to wed quantum mechanics, our theory of how very small things behave, to relativity, our theory of how space, time and matter interact. This would give us the long-sought-after theory of quantum gravity that describes the entire universe.

Space, time and matter interaction. Sounds familiar.

skyfish
Skyfish,

I think you missed an important part of this article you quoted.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20026831.500-what-makes-the-universe-tick.html?full=true wrote:If time does indeed exist, then it brings us back to the other part of the problem. What do we do about the quantum side of time?

This question also has a strong pedigree. In the 1930s, the mathematical genius John von Neumann tried to use Boltzmann's ideas to construct a quantum arrow of time. He failed - as has everyone who has tried it since.

That doesn't surprise Steinberg, whose work with quantum systems has left him convinced that we are missing a fundamental idea of what time is. To illustrate the point, Steinberg considers a quantum-mechanical process called tunnelling, which allows particles such as photons to burrow through barriers they don't have enough energy to get over. Steinberg asks a simple question: how long does the particle take to cross the barrier? It was first asked in the 1930s, and the answer remains elusive.
Looks like someone else is finally putting together the fact that Thomas Townsend Brown (TTB) already discovered with his "special" tunnel diode - that it is the "heart" of a FTM. To go "Back into the Future" we don't need Dr. Brown's "flux capacitor" but his special tunnel diode.

MagicBill

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Sun Nov 23, 2008 4:15 pm
by Mikado14
htmagic wrote:Looks like someone else is finally putting together the fact that Thomas Townsend Brown (TTB) already discovered with his "special" tunnel diode - that it is the "heart" of a FTM. To go "Back into the Future" we don't need Dr. Brown's "flux capacitor" but his special tunnel diode.

MagicBill
Since you have made a definitive statement about the "tunnel diode" being the heart to the FTM, when do you think you will be posting the hard data on your conclusions?

I will further assume, probably wrongfully, that you have the specifics on the tunnel diode and the application that Dr. Brown used if for.

Too many...way too many conclusive statements being made.

Mikado

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2008 4:12 pm
by htmagic
Mikado14 wrote:I will further assume, probably wrongfully, that you have the specifics on the tunnel diode and the application that Dr. Brown used if for.
Nope, do you? And if you do, why aren't you telling us? :twisted:
Mikado14 wrote:Too many...way too many conclusive statements being made.
Are they? What do you know that you aren't telling us? :mrgreen:

I know this website is sort of old, but I just ran across it and it resonated with me. I'm not sure if it was a download, to my computer it was for sure. I was attracted by the fact that this individual is using barium-strontium-titanate in 3 solid state coils. Details are at J.L. Naudin' site here: http://jnaudin.free.fr/html/gseamnu.htm
Thoughts anyone?

MagicBill

You do

Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2008 5:35 pm
by Mikado14
htmagic wrote:
Mikado14 wrote:I will further assume, probably wrongfully, that you have the specifics on the tunnel diode and the application that Dr. Brown used if for.
Nope, do you? And if you do, why aren't you telling us? :twisted:
I don't have to tell since according to your previous post .......
quote wrote: To go "Back into the Future" we don't need Dr. Brown's "flux capacitor" but his special tunnel diode.
.........that "his" special tunnel diode is the ticket as you stated. I just wanted to know on what facts you based your definitive statement.

Mikado

Re: You do

Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2008 8:12 pm
by htmagic
Mikado14 wrote:
htmagic wrote:
Mikado14 wrote:I will further assume, probably wrongfully, that you have the specifics on the tunnel diode and the application that Dr. Brown used if for.
Nope, do you? And if you do, why aren't you telling us? :twisted:
I don't have to tell since according to your previous post .......
quote wrote: To go "Back into the Future" we don't need Dr. Brown's "flux capacitor" but his special tunnel diode.
.........that "his" special tunnel diode is the ticket as you stated. I just wanted to know on what facts you based your definitive statement.

Mikado
Mikado,

Call it a hunch. I saw the other post with the scientist talking about tunneling and we already discussed this topic in some detail. I also saw Kevin's "football" that he was talking about.

MagicBill

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Mon Nov 24, 2008 8:24 pm
by skyfish
I searched the forum for Hans Coler, and found his name mentioned but did not see a link to this.
It reminds my of the device in your link Magic.

http://www.angelfire.com/ak5/energy21/hanscoler.htm

http://www.angelfire.com/ak5/energy21/coler2.htm

http://merlib.org/node/5235

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 2:34 am
by skyfish
"Quantum force of empty space"...the quantum vacuum again....aether.

Professor Ulf Leonhardt and Dr Thomas Philbin have worked out how to turn the normally ‘sticky' quantum force of empty space from attraction to repulsion using a specially developed lens placed between two objects.

"In order to reduce friction in the nanoworld, turning nature's stickiness into repulsion could be the ultimate remedy. Instead of sticking together, parts of micromachinery would levitate," explained Professor Leonhardt.


"Casimir force" is the quantum vacuum...the zpf, zpe,aether, dark energy, cosmological constant, gravity, dimension of
time.

For smaller parts, the levitation will occur using a phenomenon called the "Casimir force", which was predicted by quantum physicists back in 1948. It wasn’t proven to exist until scientists were finally able to measure it ten years ago. Scientists are still struggling to fully understand it.

The force is caused by a little understood quirk of nature which seemingly enables particles to “pop into existence” from out of nowhere. This creates a force that pushes together two objects placed very close to each other.


http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/20 ... -use-.html

skyfish

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Tue Nov 25, 2008 7:03 pm
by FM No Static At All
skyfish wrote:"Quantum force of empty space"...the quantum vacuum again....aether.

"Casimir force" is the quantum vacuum...the zpf, zpe,aether, dark energy, cosmological constant, gravity, dimension of
time.

For smaller parts, the levitation will occur using a phenomenon called the "Casimir force", which was predicted by quantum physicists back in 1948. It wasn’t proven to exist until scientists were finally able to measure it ten years ago. Scientists are still struggling to fully understand it.

The force is caused by a little understood quirk of nature which seemingly enables particles to “pop into existence” from out of nowhere. This creates a force that pushes together two objects placed very close to each other.
If these particles "pop into existence from out of nowhere" then nowhere must lie beyond the aether, hence there is another layer beneath the aether which contains the life force, the intelligence layer that creates and powers the aether. I don't know, it just makes cosmic sense to me.

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2008 12:26 pm
by Junglelord
Magnetic Scalar Waves may be the Gravity Wave they are searching for, and Dave Thompson of the Aether Physics Model has some detection work ongoing.
http://www.16pi2.com/magnetic_scalar_waves.htm

Re: What do you think gravity is?

Posted: Sat Dec 06, 2008 1:44 am
by skyfish
Hey! this is what I was saying when I said the dimension of time is manifesting the force of
gravity...time is compressed energy....yes! From Bearden...

We live in a 3-dimensional world, which physics calls "3-space." But there is also spacetime, or 4-space, or the "4th dimension." Then suddenly comes this amazing new knowledge that time itself is actually compressed energy. And it is energy which is compressed by exactly the same factor by which matter is considered compressed energy: the speed-of-light-squared!

So we have a new companion to the famous E=mc2. It is now paired with E=tc2 (where t is actually "delta-t," or change in time)

And as the atomic bomb released the compressed energy in matter, so can we now unleash the tremendous energy that is compressed into time itself. It gives a completely new meaning to the term "time bomb."

http://www.prahlad.org/pub/bearden/scalar_wars.htm

skyfish