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science

This tag is associated with 9 posts

a deep physics of finance

The global economic crisis that started in 2008 has summoned a deeper skepticism of the economic mainstream with its corresponding prognostications for endless growth and prosperity. Individuals are starting to question the need to play on the giant wheels of churning money that represented the retirement funds and investments of the past. While I’ve been [...]

bubbles in everything: human genome edition

Even science is subject to the bubble mentality. Not because of rising prices but because of high expectations concerning the outcome of a proposed research or innovation project. The Human Genome Project is a particularly good example of a social bubble. A recent paper covers the history of the project and the expectations associated with [...]

I’ve become a Possibilan

The more I learn about the world, the more I realize that the possibilities for explaining humanity and our role in the world are nearly infinite. Is there a God? Are there many Gods? Why are we here? Fortunately, there’s a word for that method of holding many possibilites at once: possibilianism.

EEG correlation papers, the first pillar toward the evidence of psi phenomena

Dr. Dean Radin recently posted a great list of scientific papers that cover studies on EEG correlation between separate individuals. It can be argued that the first pillar of establishing evidence for psi phenomena is in EEG correlation. These studies provide a great starting point if you’d like to research the topic for yourself.

the physics of the impossible inspire a sense of wonder

It is not a stretch to say that Michio Kaku is singularly responsible for my undergraduate major in Physics. Back in 2004, the shiny cover on the front of Parallel Worlds led me to promptly purchase the book as I walked into a bookstore in Concord, NC. Inside those pages were a rich description of [...]

magnetism!

I don’t post about science nearly enough, especially since I’m training to be a scientist. Art and physics meet in this awesome video of the space science laboratory in Berkley,

yet more evidence for the Global Consciousness Project

Dr. Dean Radin’s Global Consciouness Project (GCP) has been running for over a decade and has some interesting history in showing that his random number generators placed globally show statistically significant variations when preceed major global events like September 11th, 2001. Ultimately, they are trying to answer the question, “Is the global mind, the collective [...]

a double standard for science

Remote viewing is a fabrication of statistics right? Not according to long time noted skeptic Richard Wiseman,

everything is a black hole?

I’ve been following Nassim Haramein’s Resonance Project as close a possible once I learned about his work on a unified field theory of physics. Interestingly though, it does not involve strings or anything like that. The model has specific and testable values.

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