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67 pages of results. 591. Thoth Vol III, No. 15: Nov 15, 1999 [Journals] [Thoth]
... persona & differentiating it from their mother's persona. It's not absolutely equally the same for girls. DAVE DAVIS SEZ: Right, I must butt in here :) What are these words "boys", "men", "mothers", "girls", etc etc etc? They are getting used as if they were "biological determinatives" - but they are NOT, NO NO NO NO! They are *cultural performatives" (this terminology comes from theorist Judith Butler) Pam, I don't want to hear this "boys have to x...", "girls have to y..." Why do they *have* to? ...
592. Thoth Vol III, No. 12: Aug 31, 1999 [Journals] [Thoth]
... . NASA: Prior to the discovery of chlorine, the only elements observed escaping from Io's atmosphere were sulfur, oxygen, sodium and potassium. THORNHILL: Sulphur and chlorine are next door neighbours in the periodic table. Based on the pioneering work of Prof. Louis Kervran, each of the low atomic weight elements listed are strongly involved in biological nuclear transmutations so it is reasonable to assume that chlorine, like the abundant and obvious sulphur deposits on Io, will be created in the energetic environment of a plasma arc impinging on water ice. NASA: The most common inorganic compounds of chlorine are sodium chloride, which is ordinary table salt, and hydrogen chloride, a colorless gas ...
593. The British Connection [Books] [de Grazia books]
... of books or magazines. In this confusion of the age, there must be a place for a modest but forthright publication, and that is what Quanta seeks to be, that publishes for a certain critical mass of readers the facts, theories and news about a general and liberal approach to the phenomena of geology, psychology, astronomy, biology, and other science. Project 2. The Encyclopedia of Quantavolution. A person who is interested in the quantavolutionary modes of change in natural and life history is often frustrated when he searches for information about a writer, a river, an animal, a myth, a phenomenon, a period of time, a place, an excavation ...
594. New Fashions in Catastrophism [Books] [de Grazia books]
... the Earth 3500 years ago, balked at picturing the crust of the Earth exploding into space to form the Moon a few thousands years earlier. But Deg found that the model, proposed in Chaos and Creation, of a binary solar system, recently disintegrating, could accommodate lunar fission along with every major features and dynamic of the natural and biological sciences, together with the earliest grand legendary themes of mankind. When he finally got down to writing at length about geology in The Lately Tortured Earth, the work came easily. It was simply a matter of taking up in turn the elements of the biosphere, lithosphere and hydrosphere and applying to them all the material that he could ...
595. Thoth Vol II, No. 20: Dec 31, 1998 [Journals] [Thoth]
... verifiable fusion reactions, from a couple of thousand dollars worth of recycled parts. I expect he is probably correct. Why, in heaven's name, use inefficient heating to accelerate ions to overcome the Coulomb barrier between positively charged nuclei? And is the Coulomb barrier as simple as it is portrayed? In the realm of cold fusion at the biological level, it seems that the Coulomb barrier is not a simple electrostatic repulsion between two point positive charges. Instead, it is a complex dance between both positive and negative charges which make up the resonant electric particles we call the protons and neutrons in each nucleus. With this model it is conceivable that a "quantum" jump can ...
596. The Prodigal Archive [Books] [de Grazia books]
... to the present day. Mankind lived virtually in a Venusian world for seven centuries, for other near passes occurred at 52-year intervals, until the comet disturbed Mars, sent Mars to molest the Earth and Moon, and brought a Martian period that endured for rather less than a century. All of this had severe and prolonged after-affects geologically, biologically, and culturally. V. endeavored to be exact, allowing the series of Mars incidents to occur between the years -776 and -687 on the basis of legends and historical-archaeological evidence from around the Mediterranean and wherever else in the world it cropped up. For example, an incident of the year -776 would be the founding of the Olympic ...
597. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... was the painstaking lifetime work (of more than forty years) of Dr Harold Saxton Burr, Emeritus Professor of Anatomy at Yale University (died, 1975). as evidenced by scores of journal articles beginning with "The Electro-Dynamic Theory of Life" with F. S. C. Northrop, in Vol 10 of the Quarterly Review of Biology, pp. 322-33, 1935. His final publication was the book, Blueprint for Immortality, Neville Spearman, 1973; it was edited by Edward W. C. Russell, whose own book, Design for Destiny, Neville Spearman, 1971, had introduced Burr's work to the general public. Just before his own death (Feb ...
598. Thoth Vol II, No. 19: Nov 30, 1998 [Journals] [Thoth]
... . It got good coverage on TV at its launch in Canberra. Planetary catastrophe almost requires a Lamarckian mechanism to allow surviving life to rapidly adapt to the new conditions. The catastrophe is the punctuation and a new equilibrium has to be achieved quickly. I speculate on my CD about the role of the subatomic electrical interactions in "directing" biological activity in the sense of Sheldrake's morphogenetic fields. EV COCHRANE ADDS: I agree with Wal (as usual). Indeed, I meant to mention Steele's book some time back as a good sign that experiments are afoot which appear to confirm the Lamarckian position that acquired characters may be inherited. In my Master's thesis/book on Lamarckian ...
599. Thoth Vol II, No. 8: May 15, 1998 [Journals] [Thoth]
... upheaval, or of wholesale changes in the celestial order. When the popular astronomer Carl Sagan presented his impressive exposition on the nature of things, called Cosmos, he didn't ask if we may have misunderstood our past. Rather, Sagan's expressed view- the official view of science for many years- fits comfortably within the textbooks on astronomy, geology, biology, anthropology, and ancient history. When we launched the U.S . Space program in the late 50s, then devoted billions of dollars to exploring neighboring planets, no one thought to ask if the planets might have followed different courses in earlier times, whether recent disturbances of the planetary system might have left their tell-tale marks on ...
600. On the Length of Reigns of the Sumerian Kings [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Lengths of the Year', Pensee IVR VIII (1974), pp. 35-36. Rose argued for orbital changes to have accounted for different year lengths in antiquity but also noted that the ratio of the age at death to the age at paternity has changed. This, he explained, would mean that men from before Abraham's time were biologically different from modern men. -BN] 18. R. F. Willetts: Cretan Cults and Festivals (London 1962), pp. 41-49. 19. R. F. Willetts: Ancient Crete (London 1965, see Education, pp. 110 ff. and Skotioi, Eiren, Agela, Youth. 20. See Appendix ...
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