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181 pages of results. 271. Kronos Vol. I, No. 4. Winter 1976: Contents [Journals] [Kronos]
... MARVIN A. LUCKERMAN, EARL MILTON, ALAN PARRY, A. MANN PATERSON, and C. J. RANSOM Contributing Editors DWARDU CARDONA, VANCOUVER, B. C., ZVI Rix, JERUSALEM, ISRAEL London Correspondent MARTIN SIEFF STAFF Robert W. Bass (Ph.D ., Johns Hopkins), Rhodes Scholar, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young Univ., Provo, Utah: Senior Editor. H. C. Dudley (Ph.D ., Georgetown Univ.), Professor of Radiation Physics, Univ. of Illinois at the Medical Center (Chicago): Associate Editor. Lewis M. Greenberg (M .A ., A. ...
272. Introducing Anomalistics: A New Field of Interdisciplinary Study [Journals] [Kronos]
... by such practicing anomalists as Sanderson and Corliss is the familiar spectrum of disciplines known to us from university catalogs. Beginning (very scantily) with such "soft" subjects as theology, it proceeds through the humanities to the sciences, which it treats in order of increasing "hardness"- social sciences first, life sciences second, and physical sciences last. At first blush, it might seem that the number of anomalies per subject would vary directly with its softness, since softer disciplines are less tightly organized. In fact, however, quite the reverse is true, for reasons which a moment's reflection makes clear: the softer a subject-matter is, the more difficult it is ...
273. Anomalistics - a New Field of Interdisciplinary Studies [Journals] [Catastrophist Geology]
... , by such practicing anomalists as Sanderson and Corliss is the familiar spectrum of disciplines known to us from university catalogs. Beginning (very scantily) with such "soft" subjects as theology, it proceeds through the humanities to the sciences, which it treats in order of increasing "hardness" social sciences first, life sciences second, and physical sciences last. At first blush, it might seem that the number of anomalies per subject would vary directly with its softness, since softer disciplines are less tightly organized. In fact, however, quite the reverse is true, for reasons which a moment's reflection makes clear: the softer a subject-matter is, the more difficult it is ...
274. Kronos Vol. I, No. 3. Fall 1975: Contents [Journals] [Kronos]
... A. LUCKERMAN, EARL MILTON, ALAN PARRY, A. MANN PATERSON, and C. J. RANSOM Contributing Editors DWARDU CARDONA, VANCOUVER, B. C., ZVI Rix, JERUSALEM, ISRAEL London Correspondent MARTIN SIEFF STAFF Robert W. Bass (Ph.D ., Johns Hopkins), Rhodes Scholar, Professor of, Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young Univ., Provo, Utah: Senior Editor. H. C. Dudley (Ph.D ., Georgetown Univ.), Professor of Radiation Physics, Univ. of Illinois at the Medical Center (Chicago): Associate Editor. Lewis M. Greenberg (M .A ., A. ...
275. Thoth Vol I, No. 21: August 11, 1997 [Journals] [Thoth]
... importance for the human race to reconstruct the true nature of its past, at least those events and experiences that have left such a dramatic imprint on our individual and collective psyches. It is with this conviction that we continue our investigation of the ancient world, through the study and analysis of myths, rites and symbols, supported by new physical models and cosmology. If the great issues of human origins, purpose of life, evil in the world, and human destiny are showcased in a falsely constructed view of our past, how can any conclusions derived therein be valid?- VELIKOVSKY'S COMET VENUS (5 ) By David Talbott (dtalbott@teleport.com) [EDITOR'S ...
276. News from the Internet [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... work. It has forced plasma physicists and the IEEE to hold separate meetings and to publish papers on plasma cosmology. With a very few notable exceptions, the astronomical community ignores the subject. The strongest support for plasma cosmology comes from the close correspondence between observations, supercomputer simulations and experiment. It does not require any new forces, new physics or phantom particles to force a match with observations. It explains why galaxies naturally favor the beautiful spiral form. Gravity alone can only produce featureless disks. The current theory of planet formation relies on this fact. >> On the left is a series of single frame stills from a computer animation of a cross-section through two interacting Birkeland ...
... hot surface air with the cold upper atmosphere. This is an immense problem for the greenhouse effect of Venus. The second law of thermodynamics What is most unusual is that Sagan has it just the opposite way around. He has the clouds of the atmosphere which are cooler convecting downward to the hotter surface to heat it. A basic college physics textbook, Physical Science by Verne H. Booth and Mortimer L. Bloom defines the "Second Law of Thermodynamics" thus: "Heat does not of its own accord flow from cold regions to hot regions."8 Velikovsky long ago pointed out that the heat gradient of Venus shows that heat is flowing from the surface of the ...
278. Kronos Vol. II, No. 2. November 1976: Contents [Journals] [Kronos]
... LUCKERMAN, EARL R. MILTON ALAN PARRY, A. MANN PATERSON AND JOHN D. WASKOM Contributing Editors DWARDU CARDONA, VANCOUVER, B.C .; ZVI RIX, JERUSALEM, ISRAEL Consulting Editor JOSEPH MAY London Correspondent PETER JAMES STAFF Robert W. Bass (Ph.D ., Johns Hopkins), Rhodes Scholar, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Brigham Young Univ., Provo, Utah: Senior Editor. H. James Birx (Ph.D ., SUNY-Buffalo), Associate Professor of Anthropology at Canisius College (Buffalo): Associate Editor. H.C . Dudley (Ph.D ., Georgetown Univ.), Professor of Radiation Physics, ...
279. Mind's Frontiers. Ch.1 Of Racial Memory (Mankind in Amnesia) [Velikovsky]
... pretense on the subject's part? But the same person receives an order to be like a rigid rod and, upon being placed between two chairs, head on one and heels on the edge of the other, he or she- even a slight woman- in this cataleptic state can support the weight of several persons. Whence comes this physical reserve, unavailable in the conscious life, to the person now in catalepsy? And how can an oral order- nothing but sound-mobilize this reserve? A person in hypnosis is given a suggestion to perform some act at a given time, possibly days after the hypnotic session, and to forget the command until time for its execution. ...
280. Instantaneous Polar Shifts [Journals] [Aeon]
... as much as 90 degrees with respect to its spin axis (not a collision related event). Once the Euler axis reorientation is done, Earth is stable again- at least until something else drastic happens. Flavio Barbiero replies: I might not be a physicist, as Mr. Thompson points out, but I am confident that my Physics tutor, a first class professor colleague of Fermi, succeeded in teaching me the fundamental principles of Mechanics. Those principles included the relation between force (and torque) and energy, and the mechanics of rotating bodies, concerning both of which my critic seems to be rather confused. For instance, Thompson claims that "Gyroscopes work the ...
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