Lynne Mctaggart See book keywords and concepts | Bernie Haisch, with his NASA background, had his sights firmly on the possibilities open to space travel of having inertia, mass and gravity all tied to this background sea of energy. Both he and Hal received funding to develop an energy source extracted from the vacuum, in Bernie's case from a NASA eager to advance space travel.
If you could extract energy from the Zero Point Field wherever you are in the universe, you wouldn't have to carry fuel with you, but could just set sail in space and tap into the Zero Point Field ?a kind of universal wind ?whenever you needed to. | | You probably weren't looking at major space travel in his lifetime, although he still held out hope of extracting energy for earthbound fuel before he died.
The first international propulsion workshop was an undoubted success, a good meeting place for physicists who'd been working away on their own at problems of energy and thrust that might take half a century to see the light of day. It was evident to everyone that they were at the beginning of an exploration that would one day, as Arthur C. | | Both he and Hal received funding to develop an energy source extracted from the vacuum, in Bernie's case from a NASA eager to advance space travel.
If you could extract energy from the Zero Point Field wherever you are in the universe, you wouldn't have to carry fuel with you, but could just set sail in space and tap into the Zero Point Field ?a kind of universal wind ?whenever you needed to. Hal Puthoff had showed in another paper, also with Daniel Cole from IBM, that in principle there was nothing in the laws of thermodynamics to exclude the possibility of extracting energy from it. | | Elsewhere, in an article about future space travel, Clarke wrote: 'If I was a NASA administrator ... I'd get my best, brightest and youngest (no one over 25 need apply) to take a long, hard look at Puthoff et al.'s equations.'4?Later, Haisch, Rueda and Daniel Cole of IBM would publish a paper showing that the universe owes its very structure to the Zero Point Field. In their view, the vacuum causes particles to accelerate, which in turn causes them to agglutinate into concentrated energy, or what we call matters
In a sense, the SHARP team had done what Einstein himself had not done. | | Although he was embroiled in his aerospace work, Bernie had read some of Hal Puthoff's papers and himself got interested in the Zero Point Field, largely as a source of energy for distant space travel. Bernie had been inspired by the work of British physicist Paul Davies and William Unruh of the University of British Columbia. The pair had found that if you move at a constant speed through the vacuum, it all looks the same. But as soon as you start to accelerate, the vacuum begins to appear like a lukewarm sea of heat radiation from your perspective as you move. | | It was as though he and Alan had shrunk during space travel and what from home had appeared to be tiny humps and ridges on the moon's surface had suddenly swollen to heights of six feet or more. And yet if they felt diminished in size, they were also lighter than ever. He'd experienced an odd lightness of being, from the weak gravitational pull, and despite the weight and bulk of his ungainly spacesuit, felt buoyed at every step.
There had also been the distorting effect of the sun, pure and unadulterated in this airless world. | Gregg Braden See book keywords and concepts | While we know enough about these forces to apply them to technology ranging from micro-circuits to space travel, we also know that our understanding of them is still incomplete. We can say that with certainty, because scientists have still not been able to find the elusive key that combines these four forces into a single description of how our universe works: a unified field theory.
Although new theories, such as the superstring theory, may ultimately hold the answer, critics have posed a good question that has yet to be answered. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | The guy sure knows how to run a large organization with efficiency, and he's more than a little bit intrigued with space travel. In fact, he's launching his own company to help make long term space travel possible. If he ran NASA, I'm willing to bet he wouldn't make excuses like, 'Oh! We forgot to turn on the switch!' Or, 'We launched a billion dollars worth of hardware but decided not to test it until it actually reached Mars.'
I have another idea too. I think NASA should call all their launches 'Beta' launches. 'Today we're having a beta launch of the Mars rover. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | Like the Orteig Prize in 1927, the X Prize created a competition that got the world's foremost rocket experts and entrepreneurs working on the idea of making private space travel a reality. Ten million dollars spent on one project would have gotten limited results; ten million dollars in prize money triggered serious efforts by multiple teams. | | Today, commercial space travel faces the same psychological barriers—most people think that it is only the domain of government workers and scientists. But if a prize was able to spur the interest and experimentation to create what is today a $250 billion industry, perhaps the X Prize can catalyze the beginnings of a commercial space-flight industry.
In October 2004, the first private spacecraft made its debut. The inventors, who had essentially executed a very ambitious science project, were awarded $10 million from the X Prize Foundation. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | In fact, he's launching his own company to help make long term space travel possible. If he ran NASA, I'm willing to bet he wouldn't make excuses like, 'Oh! We forgot to turn on the switch!' Or, 'We launched a billion dollars worth of hardware but decided not to test it until it actually reached Mars.'
I have another idea too. I think NASA should call all their launches 'Beta' launches. 'Today we're having a beta launch of the Mars rover. And if this one actually works, we may have an official launch many years later. But we won't actually test the spacecraft until it gets to Mars. | Richard P. Brown, M.D., and Patricia L. Gerbarg, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | The development of this test led to rigorous studies to confirm which of the widely heralded herbs in fact help the body adapt to all sorts of unfavorable conditions, from combat, space travel, and Olympic competition to everyday stress. In 1968, Dr. Brekhman published the results of these studies. | | We suspected that they did, given their concerns about the dangers inherent in space travel and the strong evidence of adaptogens' benefits under such extreme conditions. But until recently, we couldn't be certain. The Russians maintained a high level of secrecy, even during their joint collaborations with NASA on space station Mir.
For this reason, finding evidence that the Russian cosmonauts used MPPA in their space missions wasn't easy. | | Earthly Implications
Any living creatures sent into space—humans as well as quails—encounter the most physically and psychologically challenging circumstances imaginable. Yet space travel is only one example of a work environment where human error in the face of stress can take a tremendous toll. Just think back to 1979, when employee missteps during an overnight shift at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant contributed to the most serious nuclear accident in U.S. history—one that came perilously close to a full-blown nuclear disaster. | James Howard Kunstler See book keywords and concepts | All other activities will be secondary to food production, which will require much more human labor. Places that are unsuited for local farming will obviously suffer, and I will discuss this later in the chapter. To put it simply, Americans have been eating oil and natural gas for the past century, at an ever-accelerating pace. | Patricia Bragg and Paul C. Bragg See book keywords and concepts | Jet airplanes? space travel? Lasers? Television? Radio? Computers? Telephones? Cell phones? Automobiles?
(None of the above compare with fasting . .7)
The Greatest Discovery of Modern Times
In our opinion, the greatest discovery by modern man is the method to rejuvenate himself physically, mentally and spiritually by fasting. Man can create a quality of agelessness and with fasting, can prevent premature ageing and a premature death!
The dread of "growing old" and becoming a burden to himself and others is one of man's greatest fears. | Alexander Hellemans and Brian Bunch See book keywords and concepts | The unsophisticated worried that space travel was affecting the weather, while the somewhat more sophisticated worried that genetic engineering would accidentally loose plagues upon Earth. Before 1946, nearly everyone seemed to think that science was ultimately beneficial, although a few (such as Aldous Huxley, who wrote Brave New World in 1932) were concerned. After 1945, many people were no longer sure that science would ultimately benefit humankind. A growing number worried that it would destroy it.
Major advances
Anthropology and archaeology. | Jane M. Orient, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | And even if the system manages to accomplish some basic tasks, the wrong assumptions could destroy the potential for significant advances as surely as Ptolemaic astronomy would be an insurmountable barrier to space travel.
Complexity, however, is just a clue. It is not a proof that the theory is wrong. Disproving a theory requires seeing how it actually works in practice—without fudging the data to make it fit.
A look at the actual results is what much of this book is about.
Let's start with a question asked by another patient.
Is You the Doctuh? | Patrick Quillin, PhD,RD,CNS See book keywords and concepts | ACID & ALKALINE, Macrobiotic Foundation, Oroville, CA, 1971
Chapter 13
Rational Cancer Treatment
FAMOUS EXPERT OPINION: "Space travel is utter bilge." Sir Richard vander Riet Wooley, renowned and knighted British scientist, 1956
I would use an appropriate combination of:
1) restrained cytotoxic therapies to reduce tumor burden
2) an aggressive collection of naturopathic (cell restorative) therapies to bolster host defense mechanisms. | Alexander Hellemans and Brian Bunch See book keywords and concepts | Using ideas about rockets and space from a 1924 book by Hermann Oberth, Vferefii fur Raum-schiffart (The Society for space travel) is founded in Germany; among its early members are Wernher
GENERAL
ANTHROPOLOGY/ ARCHAEOLOGY
ASTRONOMY
BIOLOGY
CHEMISTRY
1927 cont
Karl Martin Leonhard Albrecht Kossel, German biochemist, d Heidelberg, Jul 5
Thomas Hunt Morgan's Experimental embryology is published
Ivan R Pavlov's Con-ditioned reflexes relates his experimental work with reflexes in dogs
Ira Remsen, American chemist, d Carmel, CA, Mar 4
Heinrich O. | | From the first flights in 1961, the adventure (and occasional disaster) of human space travel has been the focus of much of the space programs of both the Soviet Union and the United States. The US program first focused on putting people on the moon. It succeeded in 1969, although the project was abandoned after a few additional trips. Later the US program concentrated on the development of a system in which most of a vehicle could be used in the way that an airplane is. | Zorba Paster, M.D. and Susan Meltsner See book keywords and concepts | Senator, presidential candidate, and unfailing supporter of space travel. That same attitude no doubt helped him challenge the notion that only the young should go into space. "It's not an old people's thing," he was told. "Just give up," he was advised. But he would not. And as a result, in 1998, when he was seventy-seven years old, John Glenn went on a NASA space shuttle mission.
A sense of purpose can be aimed at world-changing causes such as ending global warming. It can be used to achieve something extraordinary such as becoming a space shuttle astronaut. | Dr. Julian Whitaker See book keywords and concepts | | Regardless of your opinions of politicians, I think we would all agree that being a senator is intellectually stimulating. And space travel is a challenge on all fronts. Senator Glenn is an excellent model of optimal physical and mental aging.
You may know an older man or woman who inspires you with his or her intelligence, curiosity, and insight—perhaps a parent or a family friend. You yourself might even be an inspiration to others. What such people generally have in common is a zest for life, curiosity, and a willingness to take on new challenges. | Alexander Hellemans and Brian Bunch See book keywords and concepts | These ranged from clouds of particles to brown dwarfs—objects too large to be called planets but too small to become stars. space travel is an entirely new technology whose first real successes occurred during this period, although it was foreshadowed by rocket research before World War II. Since 1957, when the first artificial satellite was put into orbit about Earth, space technology has been most useful as a scientific tool when vehicles without people aboard were used. Small spaceprobes reached Venus, the moon, and Mars. |
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