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792 results found.
80 pages of results. 431. Bookshelf [Journals] [SIS Review]
... 107, Glen Arm, MD 21057, USA. Cheques should be made payable to William R. Corliss and overseas postage is an additional $4 .00 per book: Faster than the Speed of Light – by J. Magueijo. US$26.00 The author is a brash and maverick physicist who speaks his mind against established cosmology and especially Special Relativity. So far he has managed to get away with this heresy. Scientific Anomalies and Other Phenomena - compiled by William R. Corliss. US$17.95 A compilation of 6,000 articles and items from the scientific literature which appear to challenge a current paradigm and have not yet been satisfactorily explained by ...
432. Internet Watch [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... , fax + 1 (818) 794-1301. http://www.skeptic.com/ The magazine is a quarterly publication devoted to the investigation of extraordinary claims and revolutionary ideas and to the promotion of science and critical thinking. The latest issue (Vol. 3 No 4, Nov. 1995) includes a special section on Cosmology, and includes the following articles: Velikovsky's Believe it or Not - Some Basic Claims of Velikovsky' by Pat Linse, Velikovsky Still in Collision' by Ev Cochrane, An Antidote to Velikovskian Delusions by Leroy Ellenberger', Velikovsky's Place In The History Of Science - A Lesson On the Strengths and Limitations of Science' by Henry H ...
433. Plato (The Atlantis Myth) [Books]
... ready to ply his swift style on a stack of wax-coated wooden tablets. It was not the first time that this philosophical circle had met. Yesterday Socrates had regaled them with a `feast of discourse', a great talk on `The Ideal Political Administration of an Ideal State'. Now Timaeus was to speak on `Principles of Cosmology and Physical Science'; on the following day Critias was to discuss `The Behaviour of the Citizens of a Well-ordered Commonwealth under the Stress of National Emergency'; and finally Hermocrates was to round off the four days' `feast of reason'. Before the Locrian was called upon to speak, Socrates gave a summary of the ...
434. The Baalim [Journals] [Kronos]
... 1. II Kings 23:5 . 2. I. Velikovsky, Worlds in Collision (N . Y., 1950), p. 178. 3. Ibid, pp. 178, 197. 4. Ibid., p. 175. 5. M. Sieff, "Planets in the Bible: I - The Cosmology of Job," SIS Review 1:4 (Spring 1977), p. 20; H. Eggleton, "The Neglected Maiden,"SIS Workshop 3:4 (April 1981), p.31; A. de Grazia, Chaos and Creation (Bombay, 1981), pp. 188, 198, 223 ...
435. In Memoriam: Immanuel Velikovsky, Livio Stecchini and Ralph Juergens [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... the dilemmas of the Holy Land. The disappearance of the stratum in which Joshua destroyed Jericho, for example, had baffled establishment scholars for decades. Dr. Velikovsky furnished the clue to its discovery by changing the chronology, putting Joshua's time at the end of the Middle Bronze Age. I have not even mentioned his work in psychology and cosmology. Everywhere we find his influence we perceive a phenomenal skill with the written and spoken languages and records of man, a rational analysis and concatenation of seemingly disparate facts and events, a beautiful and sublime reconstruction of man's ever complex role in world history, and an obstinate insistence that his documentation be made available to casual readers and scholars ...
436. Sagan's Folly Part 1 [Journals] [Kronos]
... Origin of Religion," Pensée IX, Fall, 1974, p. 50- emphasis added). Deloria's last statement is especially applicable to Sagan who, despite his deep involvement with humankind's future "cosmic connection", is stubbornly oblivious to the fundamental implications of humankind's past "cosmic connection" (Cf. KRONOS 1: 1, "Cosmology and Psychology," April, 1975, pp. 33-50). Apparently, Sagan also forgot his own self-directed admonition: ". .. to keep firmly in mind the ancient writings which are the focus of [Velikovsky's] argument .. . [and] to confront his conclusions with both the facts and .. . logic ...
437. For the Record... [Journals] [Kronos]
... assumed gas exchange between Mars and Earth, which Velikovsky advocates, are poorly thought out in his writings; in fact, the tests contradict his thesis." In point of fact, where Velikovsky's thesis is concerned, tests involving Mars now contradict only Sagan. Wrong about argon, wrong about nitrogen, unsure about neon, it is Sagan's cosmological theories which are poorly thought out - if thought out at all - and found severely wanting in the balance. L. M. G. \cdrom\pubs\journals\kronos\vol0201\104recrd.htm ...
438. Jerusalem - City of Saturn [Journals] [Kronos]
... pp. 103-104; W. Carr, Hitler: A Study in Personality and Politics (N . Y.,1979), pp. 120ff. and pp. 156ff. 23. I. Velikovsky, Mankind in Amnesia (N . Y ., 1982); L. M. Greenberg & Warner B . Sizemore, "Cosmology and Psychology", KRONOS 1:1 (1975), pp. 33-50. 24. I. Velikovsky, Ramses II and His Time (N . Y., 1978), pp. 126-127. 25. G. de Santillana & H. von Dechend, Hamlet's Mill (Boston, 1969). \cdrom\ ...
439. Is Gravity Necessary? (A Response to Charles Ginenthal's Electro-Gravitic Theory) [Journals] [Aeon]
... conventionally in terms of the motions observed for their satellites. The reader is cautioned that there is no test of such definitions. We can not solve any problems using them; in fact, the opposite is often true. When we define Saturn's mass by the motion of its moons we must conclude that Saturn is less dense than water. Cosmologically this creates a serious problem. What mix of solid materials is condensed elsewhere into such an "airy" arrangement? Certainly Saturn can be viewed as a body containing lots of hydrogen and helium, but these gases show only as traces in Saturn's spectrum. The same arguments hold for the Sun itself: hydrogen is present in the solar ...
440. News from the Internet [Journals] [SIS Review]
... outside the solar system, being associated with the orientation of the measuring station relative to the galaxy, and not only relative to the Sun. Shnoll concludes: "From the data presented above, it follows that the idea of shape'- the fine structure of distributions of results of measurements of processes of diverse nature- is determined by cosmological factors." He does not put forward a definite hypothesis concerning the nature of the these factors, but suggests as a possibility the notion of a global "change of space-time structure," and notes that "a sound analysis of such a hypothesis will possibly require experiments under different gravitational conditions." Clearly, these results should be ...
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