An Approach, To Understanding Psychotronics PDF
An Approach, To Understanding Psychotronics PDF
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An Approach, to Understandintg Psychotronicsoi Technicalefllg,
/0 Thoma ~*earden
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9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATIN NAME AND'ADDRES
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System-Development Corporation
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48;10.Bradford Blvd,
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ING AGENCY NAME &ADDRESS(
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17. DISTRIBUTIONSTATEgMENT (of th1 abstratct entered In Block 20, jidifferent
holder.
E T.E. Bearden 1976. RAeproduced by permission of the copyright
-unconscious, cqmplemen
* axioms of logic, blofields, biological system, *collective waves, duality,,
*tarity, consciousness, conservation of energy, death, deBroglie Heiseniber
-devices,
Einstein's 'spherical model of the cosmos, formon, freeL energy of opposite',
reality,'iety
uncertainty'principle, Hieronymus device, holographic, pyhoonc rer
20. ABSTRAC (Confitie on reverse 3ide'it necesr
an dnryb lc ubr The term
tinion of physics ahd. metaphysics.
7 td the interaction of mind, 5nd nmatter, and the o explain psychotronj. s. The authol
Thus a -new concept of reality must be evoked
opposites 'which has
* advances a fourth law of logic, the age-old identity-of
centuries. With the- author-'s
baffled- logicians, philosophers, and. scientists for to domprehendl-how the identity
pE2RceIro approach.-to perception, ow1e-is enabled
The fourth, law,
of opposites is accomplished, a-nd when it is accomplished. 1odt.fr mltIc
together with, the first three Aitlenlaws-of
EDITION DOI Nov 65 IS OBSOLETE
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T,. Bearden
System Development, Corporation
4-810 Bradford Blvd
Huntsville, Alabama 35805
Enclosed are two ,papers which I would like to have placed in the DDOsystem,
per our previous conversatiori,. Completed DD Form 1473's,,arealso enclosed. The,
material is copyrighted by me,,,but naturally this letter constitutes authority for yOu
tO; put it in DDCI°
Yqr assistance is. deeply apprediatedj' These- two papers, represent something
of absolutely fundamental importance, I believe,, and'their content should be available
to all, DOD users who are interested in parapsychology and .p6chotronics.
Sincerely,
I4
Thomas E. Bearden
LTC, U.S. Army (Retired)
Research Scientist
2 incl
the Observer back'Into the 'Equation" (d Copies)-
'"Writing
'1
/ +*N / 7" -
ANAPPROACH'TO UNDERSTANDiNG0'PSYdHOIROiN -8
Thomas B.Bearden
June6 1976,
\"n y.h~
.. '(riA)
" o (ph-cical d" ); the term. s chotronics refdrs
'to the interaction of mind and matter, and so -to a union, of physic ad metaphysics,.
ii-
UII
~TO.-7NDER8TAND, PSYCHOTRONICS (
N, VUGRAPH O(VNJ
the prefix pyco rfr to the -mind-.
AIt has bben said that fools-. rush-in where angels fear-to tread.,I
VUGRAPHON,
-this slide lists .a few of the tingis which no one rleally understands.
VUGRAPH, OFF:
SUGGESTED APPROACH (
VUGRAPH ON (Vg#3)
-A
cluster of an infinite number of orthogonali, 3-dimensional spatial frames
containing a,single common fourth dimension, or time axis, provides -a framework
6onto which mind, matter,, fields, being, life, and both physical and metaphysical
phenomena can be fitted and precisely modelled.
VUGRAPH OFF
3.
A SUGGESTED ,APPROACH1 TO PSYCHOTRONICS
(vg#4)
VIUGRAPH ON
From perception theory,, using :the perceptron coricept, the, author has
succeeded .inderiving a great deal of the present basis-of physics,,, as shown
on this slide.
Restated, the postulate becomes "Every photon in an inertial frame .is moving
at the speed of light, c , With respect to-every particle in-that inertial frame."
The corollary. then follows immediately: Every, particle in that inertial frame
is also moving'at the speed of light, c , with respect to every ,photon in that
inertial frame.
VUGRAPH OFF
4.
SUGGESTD,,.APPROACH- TO. PSYGHOTRONICS Of4
(vg#4) "i i.
VTUGRAPH ON
In, addition,, a new- nature. of the photon has been, revealed. A, Photon: is
simply an ordinary 3-dimensional particle existing in, a 3-space that is orthogonal i
to the laboratory 3-space frame. Thus -the photonic particle hasa -2-dimensional
intersection with thelaboratory observer's, spatial frame, andit:appears as a wave
or2-dimensional entity to-"him. Astationary particle in thelabqratory frame
appears as a photon.to the brthogonal- spatial frame. (
This can readily be seen as a necessity if one restates Einstein's second A
postulate. The second postulate is usually stated as "The speedof light is the 4
'same for every -observer."
Aristotle's three laws of logic are incomplete, and it is ,necessary ,to develop
a fourth law to close logi -into a metalogic.encompassing physics and-meta physics.
The fourth law has the characteristics shown on the viewgraph.
VUGRAPH -OFF -
4.
-A_SUGGESTED APPROACH TO PSYCHOTRONICs (CONT'D)
(Vg#5)
VUGRAH ON
But if you can convince yourself of as simplea thing-as thatboth you and
I exist simultaneously, regardless of how we move with respect to each other, then
I assure you that physics is startling]y differeit from what you studied in the
ordinary university physics 'book.
The present author discovered that all his,perception theory -could be fitted
precisely onto Everett's many-worlds interpretation. On :that basis, a- theory or
schema of biofields was derived which provides an approach toward a unified
field theory. In fact, it predicts that any kind'of field can be turned into any
other kind of field, merely by correct and precise time synchronization. It also'
offers a physical and-exact model of mind and mental phenomena.
VUGRAPH OFF
5'
A FUNDAMENTAL CORRECTION TO CLASSICAL LOGiCd
(vg#6)
VUCPAPH ON
First, one does not have a thought pet se; one has a "'perceivedthought,"
There is a perception operatibh involved whenione 'thiniks.
Further, it takes a finite piece of time fot the perception proces s to occur.
So let us impose this ctiterion upon logic itself; i.e., so as to constitute "logical
perception" or the "logic of perception" or the "perception of logic." We begin
with Aistotle's third law of logic, A or not-A, the law of the excluded-middle.
We Willihskst that there is- n6 such thing as A per se, but that rather there
isa perceived A where A is the output of the perception process; Similarly, there
is
thenooutput thing
such of the as not-A, but
perception rather there is a perceived not-A where not-A is
process.
We has
perception, use a little
wil] occurred, square
and, box written
anything as an abbreviation
symbol inside for thethe
the, boxrepresents that
factoutput
of:that perception operation. One can speak of the little -box either-as mental
perception and describe thought, or'one can speak of it as physical detection and
describean instrumentation system :that does detection and measurement.
Also, since each little box requires a finite time to occur, one must carefully
keep up with the individual little pieces of time, the delta t's. -Sometimes one will
get tired of writing little delta t's, and in that case 'one will just Write :the number of
each one as a subscript and the delta t will be understood.
Looked at in this Way, Aristotle's third law actually is the law of monocularity;
i.e., it states that only one-thing at a time is perceived. Actually we had assumed
this when we assumed that perception was a finite process, so it is nice to find that
Aristotle's third law justifies our assumption, once we understand the third law.
The exclusive or symbol assumes a third operation, in time three (not shown),
whereby it is determined that perception output one and output two actually differ.
But such an operation itself requir@ inultiocular perception -- i.e., the .collL -ing
of two outputs at once -- and that in itself is a violation of Aristotle's third law. The
law as Written contains its own cohtradiction, as indeed does each of the other two,
laws when. one examines them meticulously. It can only be established as true by
invoking or involving an operation wherein it is not true.
4(
(continued),
So-now let-us write what-we, did-in time three toestablish-zthe third -law..
Wegathered up what had ,beenper-cepton ,output in time one -;-A
1 -- andi
What'had been perception output in-time 6 -- A2 , which, just yet We, do notknow
is different -from A or not - and shoved them both through the perceptin -process,
gettifg only one output -- let us -call it B ,--in time three. By the nature-6f B in time
three, we say that the outputs iitimes o neand twodiffefror hot. In either.
tlie-one rtimen w6,. there is-noirdicationb wihatsoever of difference-.orsameness.
existing betweefnoutput-o'neand output two'..
Now note that,, in time three, if A and .fiot-A 2 are precisely opposite - i.e.,
Ifone,operati6fialis simply the.negative obf theother--then B will-be, zero., If,
wil have a3 finite value.
A and- not-A 2 are not-preci'gely opposites, then 3 1B
And.this cofistitutes a fourth lawof logic: the law of :the boundry, -or the
boundary Identity-of exact opposites. All that is necessary to identify opposites is
to lose all perceptual distinction between- them. And that is accomplished"by
multiocular perception, of perceiving the presence~of both at once, hence theabsence
of either exclusively present. To a monocularprcess, multiple presence of paired
opposites is not perceivable;, hence no single one is perceived,, which means that
nothing is, perceived I
VUGRAPH OFF
7.
FOUR, ;LAWS1 OF L OGICAL ;-THOUGHT,
".. .(vg#7)
VUGRAPH ON
The first three, laws of logic, after Aristotle, are shown on this vugraph,
along:with the prqposed fourth law.
The first three 'lawsinvOlve perceptual output entities which are mohocularo.
I e., one-at-a-time has been perceived.
The ,fourth law involves' perceptual output entities which are multiocular.
I.e., two-at-a-time, have beenperceived.oroutputted.
The fourth law,as writtenis, the required multiocular law, and 'it completes
formal'logic.
We willalso see that the first three laws have been inappropriately -named'.
VUGRAPH -OFF
t
THE LOGICIAN'S'DREAM: A CLOSED METALOGIC.
(vg#8)
VUGRAPH' ON
Note also that the hidden time three operation -- which has actually, been
the application of the fourth law all along, - is, implied by the cofinecting symbol
in each of the firstthree laws. Identity or, non-identity between time one and time,
two 0utputs can- only be eStabliShed in a time- three. operation. The fact that
A or not-A exclusively exists can only , be established by a separate operation which
establishes that nothing else is there.
Since these laws refer to perceptual operations, one can, think of them
operationally, or vectorially.
To-ciose the vectorial system prescribed by the first three laws, the opposite(
or negation of -each of the:three vectorial statements must be present. I.e., -this
-follows simply from the definition of what constitutes a closed system.
Since the fourth law contains ,the negation of each of 'the first three laws,
then the four law system is indeed closed, and the logician's dream of a closed
metalogic is realized. Further, anything which c6ntradicts any combination of the
first three laws automatically is covered by the fourth law.
VIUGRAPH OFF
II ' ~ 9.
A 'PHYS] SAL :EXAMPLE
(vg4#§)
VUGRAPH ON
Take the surface: of a cube in deep space. Call the cube, thiny, a Z3-D-
concept. Call the empty space around the cube nonthing, meaninga 3-bD nohthing
or absenc'bf thing.
If one is standing inside the cube and looks at the boundary surface of the
cube, one cannot find a single piece of that boundary surfact that-does not belong
.toatily to the cube. S6oone can very reasonably proclaim that by the first three
laws of logic each piece of the boundary belongs totally to the cube, to .i-
But if in a different operation one is 'standing outside the cube, one cannot )
find a single piece of that boundary surface that does, not belong entirely to the,
space surrounding the -cube. So in thiscase, one can claim by the first three laws
of lgic that the boundary surface belongs totally to nonthing.
Then in a third operation- one can state that, bythe first law of logic, each
and every piece of the boundary surface is identical to itself, and of course-one
has just identified what.was thing with what was nonthing.
Specifically, what wa's thing in perception time one and what was nonthing
in perception time two have been identified, by all,distinction, and separation'between
'them being removed,/in time three.
Andall one has really donie is apply the fourth law of logic, the law of the
j boundary.
Every single perceived thinghas a boundary, where it-both begins and ends
its exclusive: presence in perception output. And at that boundary, the fourth law
applies. Thusthe law is universal.
VUGRAPH OFF
I" 0
=' 10.
THREE EXAMPLES 'OF. FOURTH.LAW
(vg#10)'
VjGRAPH ON-
Here are three more examples that have -baffled mathematicians and
logicians.
Since logicians used' only the first three laws, none of these statements
is acceptable or understandable. By the fourth law,, there is no problem with
these tatements.
The first merely refers to -the operational boundary between the operation,
used to establish "truth" and the operation used to establish "falsity." There is I
another class of operation where neither truth nor falsity exclusively applies.
To state the proposition is 'to jimply that you yourself can see or ufnderstand
both conditions at once, but that you Will extract one or the other separately, (
The other two:examples have corfiparable meanings. (
VUGRAPH OFF
11.
At
NEW-DEFINITION ZOF ZERO (
(vg#l1) _
\tUGRAPH ON'
VUGRAPH OFF
I.e., consider that a mbnocular detection process, asks the question, "Is
there a single exclusive thing present inmy input? "'
if the answer is no, no output is generated and perception does not occur.
Now note that the monocular perceptron cannot tell any difference in, the two
input conditions. To it, there is no difference between- the two conditions.
That in fact derives 'the fourth law of logic. Total absence and total,
presence are identical insofar as a monocular detection prodess is concerned.
12'.
SYNCHRON4ICI 0CONCEPTS
OF,
VUGRAPli ON
licAs is. so often -the case, two -persons,appear to haiveb derived the new5
WGAIIP
VUGRAPH ,ONj
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer:,1
14,.
Two :-SLIT E:XPEkRIMENT' (
., YU AVjGPH ON,"
(v9#i14
' """
Fey nman,
-,ndetstand's 'Nobel prize winner in physicsj, .has stated that -,n6-physicfst
this experiment. " ""
In -the experiment, electrons are emitted from a source .and tra-vel6 past~a
doubly-sit wall region. on theirWay to a screen. The apparatus is shielded against
light. If one belieyes that the emitted eldctron is a little 3-d,,particle-, muchlike
a little baseball,, then it should go-through one of -the slits and- not -the other., 'It
would then -hit"the screen at-one of the. tWo 'spots indicated ias the expected
distribution, With. a little scatter from those that chip the. edge of the:slit a bit.
Electrons which do,not hit the holes but strike the Wall are absorbed.
1
The 'expected Pattern is notat all what one gets.
Instead', the actual pattern is. essentially the same as what one Would get
'if each ,electron Were a wavefront, and that Wavefront passed through both, slits
at-orie. However, each electron still strikes ,the screen in only one point; the
distributionof'these points, fits the actual distribution pattern shown.
And that blew their minds in-physics. They , didnt believeit,at first, so they
set up a, photon gun and hit each ,and every electron with a photon as -it left the
emitter source and started over toward the two-slit region. 'That is, 'they determined
precisely when a little 'electron was on theway,, and the fact that'it was like a,little
baseball and in just.one place,. And this,:time the electron ohlywent through a single.
slit, and it gave the expected pattern .after all. And'when the experiment was repeated
and only a fraction of the electrons were hit with photons, then a. mixture of the
two patterns emerged.
If one'thinks in terms of the present, then the third law of logic is Violated andC
the fourth law applies. The two states -- 2-D, wave and 3;-D corpuscular - both
exist simuicAneously in the present,, but nonexclusively. That requires two simiultaneous
states, and that automatically means .that determination or ,Prception hs not0o .
TWO-SLIT-EXPERiMIENT (.
(continued)
And that is the explanation-of the two-slit experiment, that no one understands.J
The reason it has not been understood- is that the ansWer wasnot present in the first
three laws of logic. It requirest the addition of the fourth law :to complete the
explanation of the experiment. (
And photons 'do the same-thing, as indee d do all neutrons, .prti0ns, and other
fundamental particles.
VUGRAPH OVF.
16.
TPSYCHOTRONIC-DEVICE:., SPACE,(gUITON)AMPLFIIR
It is now possible to- speak Of a "'piece of nothing, #' that we will call a
guiton, . ,Aquiton will be defined as "the -smallest piece of nothings,, 'that still does
,n6i&(oocularly,appear as,a,perceived thing.,"
VURAP OFF
Note, to,briefer
Consider "nothing" in the multiocular sense; i.e., as multiplepresence.
Collecting all the multiple present things intoone reaches the boundary.
But one thing is perceivable by monocular perception. Therefore the one-thing
just collected now can be outputted by perception, and it is.
That -is how the unperceivable turns into the perceivable when one reaches the
boundary.
17. .:
-PSYCHOTRONIC DEVICE: SPACE (QUITON) AMPLIFIER
(Yg$15)
VUGRAPH ON
I e., collecting all-of bne type of thing -- quitons reaches the boundary
--
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer
17. [
Now, if one believes he cannot sense th e anenergy fields, then he can'.t.
One can turn the entire anenergy detection system in-,his body off with'his
unconscious mind. The negative psi effect is a Weli -documented effect in
parapsychology. There-are goats~as wellas sheep., ;Some persons do worse
on psi tests than chance would possibly allow. They-are the goats. They- exhibit
the negative psi effect,, for unconsciously they-want to §how you that psi doe:s
not Work, so badly that they use psi effects to do-worsethan is possible by chance.
I
At any rate, the human sensory system can get a tingle,.from the anefiergy -field,
generated by the flat c0il of wire in the Hieronymus machliie's output. What type of
tingleone gets depends upon one's own type of body sensory tuning. It madyfeel as
if the fingers on the plastic plate are in. thick syrup. Or as if the plastic plate were
vibrating,. Or it may feel greasy in a peculiar way. 'And the negative person does
not -get~a tingle at all.
The Hieronymus ,machine 'has been built, by many persons, and it works for
those'whoare not negative. It processes entities ,that existin the-dual-statej, or
thatobey the fourth law of logic. And one can do Some almost magical'things-
with -thesedual-state nonthings, these, nothings, -if one,ets "his mind- to it.
A; all of you reariZe,;that is what psychotronids isalla bout.
VUGRAPH OFF
19.
1 I "'
1[' . '
. L'i~
. i I li
"1 IN*
! 'lI" .... :' I~ "'i "'m l "l '°i 'i:' "{ i:'' ...
PROBABILITY:., THROW OF ADIE
(vg# 1.7)
VUTGRAPHE',ON
Let us usea very simple example to get at the answer to that queston.
Let us use the face of a die' turned uP. 'How can I model that, before the die is
'thrown?
it Now one can only think by operationalism. To operate and output something
is to automatically putit in the past. Its happened, iOs gone, the moment you do
it. To.perceive an object is to. put it in the past. To determine it is to put it in' the
.past. To observe it is to put'it in the past. There is no observed, perceived,
detected, mpasured, or determined present. That is, there is no separated,
exclusive, determined present such as is specified by the first three laws of logic -4i
the fourth law is the present, by the way -- but in observational physics which deals.
with determined, observed past phenomena, there exists no present. The ftiture
has not yet been observed, so it also is the -unobserved'. Only the 'past' therefore is
the observed. How then can one ever .hope to. model the-unobserved present or the
unobserved future?
If I look at this little problem-I'm disciissing -- the future 6bserved die with
one face up -- that is in the past. When I see it, it i's in the past. When I think it,
the die in the past,
it is in the past. So if all I can observe, think, or perceive is-
how can I ever model it in the future?
If I drive any problem set to its absolute boundary limit, it turns into its
p owli opposite by the fourth law of logic, by the law of the boundary. So how do I
do that With this problem of the die?
The problem set is specified by the condition "the perceived die with one
face up"; that is..the -most recent past. NOW' simply find.&ll the most immediate
pasts you can get to meet the condition specified, and gather themJall up ogether,
and they then must turn into and comprise precisely the&opposite, the most'imiebdiate
future. In this problem set, I can'constructand collect six such pasts, each (
consisting of the perceived die with-one face up. So by the fourth law of logic.,
J' those six-"faces up" collected together as an ensemble represent the future and
in'faict are identical to the future. The "present,' which -is simply'the boundary
.. ... .2.0.
. ..
PROBABILITY: THROW OF A-DiE
(continued)
betwee-n the -most inumediate past and the most immediate-future, was specified
by-applying; the fourth.law Of logic in the first ,place: identity of m6st immediate
past and most immediate future, being binocular, is unperceived, butit'is ,the
present nonetheless. So that is what probability is -- an application of the-
fourth law, of logic, so 'the most immediate future can be rep-esented interniis
of the most immediate past -- and physicists andhathematiciafns have been doing
that ever since they have .been-doing physics and mathematics.,
Without the fourth law of logic, there exists n6-rigorous logical basi's
forpr6bability!V
So the fourth-law is a very useful law indeed. W.e have just failed to,
realiZe that-we have 'been applying it all, along.,
vuGRAPH OFF
21
/ 21
i2 21. .-.
SOLUTION TO ONTOLOGICAL PROBLEM -
VUGRAPH- ON (gl8
22..
THE PERCEPTRON APPROACH (
(vg#19) 4
VUGRAPH ON
Since it contains all four laws, the concept is capable of modelling everything
which can be perceptually thought.
By the fourth law, since it can model everything which can 1e perceived,
it can also model everything which cannot be perceived as well.
VUGRAPH OFF
23.
EINSTEIN"S SPHERICAL MODEL OF THE COSMOS
(vg#2O0)
VUGRAPH ON
In such a closed spacetime, each point inside thE universe .is also
at the extreme end of the universe in any direction. [
Thus the entire "physical universe" is totally outside any of its
internal points, and totally inside each internal point as well, in this model.
The adjective "total" merely moves one to the common boundary between
the operational concepts of "internal" and "extcrnal." At that boundary, there
is no operational distinction between one and the other.
VUGRAPH OFF (
Note to briefer:
24.
BASIS FOR A UNIF1ED FIELD THEORY: SOLUTION TO FEYNMAN'S PROBLEM
(vg#2 1)
VUGRAPH ON
Feynman pointed out that unified field theory must explain the
appearance of the same parameter 1042 in the respective force ratios and
radiuses of the electron and the macroscopic universe.
VU RAP.
... OFF
Note to briefer:
25.
REALITY IS HOLOGRAPHIC
(vg#22)
V(JGRAPH ON
VUGRAPH OFF
26.
MASS IS A TIME-DIFFERENTIATOR
(vg#2 3)
VUGRAPH ON
Applying the fourth law of logic, a thing does that which it is, and is
that which it does.
VUGRAPH OFF
41
'A;'
Ii _-
1 .A
27.
MIND IS OBJECTIVE
(vg#24)
VUGRAPH ON
Therefore one cannot see "time" with a mass perceiver, but can
see L 3 (spatial extension).
Therefore one also cannot perceive mind, because the plate (time)
on which it was sitting is lost in the perception process.
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer:
Thus Descartes was both right and wrong. He was right in that mind
is not present in physical detection output, but wrong in believing mind and
physical phenomena were therefore totally separate. E.g., time does not
exist except with respect to between one L3 perception and another, if L
3 (
is all that is outputted. I.e., "physical" time is totally relative, totally
mental, and exists only in memory. Mind is thus present in L3 T 4-dimensional
physical phenomena and is discretized along with time discreteness in the
Heisenberg uncertainty relation A E .4 t h/21Yt.
In fact, one can even take the extreme view that time is mind, with
some justification. Because to establish a delta t, a "former" L3 must be
3 3
established and compared to a more recent L . The only place the former L
can rigorously be found is in memory. An event, once occurred, is in the past
and is forever "gone" to the observer. Only in his memory can it be said to
exist. But then so is the observation also of the "most recent L3 . " Thus
rigorouslylobserved phenomena may be said to exist only in memory, and there is
only a past, never a present. Thus a full 4-D mind is inseparable from perceived
physical phenomena, and mind is quantized along with quantum change in the
$"physicalworld."
2(
BIOFIELD CONCEPTS
(vg#25)
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Note to briefer:
I:
29. .2
(142
2
i-i
MASS,,FORCE, AFT) 3-3) ROTATION
VU GRAPH ON (vg#2 6)
From the bottom left fig-re it can be seen that a force in the laboratory
frame, applied to the moving mass along its direction of motion in the
laboratory frame, only affects the mass ivi the mass's bent frame with a 4
projected portion. ,;
But in the bent frame, the object's mass has not increased.
The bent frame effect is why the mass of an object increases to one
observer but not to the other.
* When the bent frame can be rotated a full 900, no force applied by the
laboratory observer can accelerate it further, because the applied force
has zero resultant in the bent frame where the mass actually is. Thus the
mass (resistance to pushing) appears infinite to the laboratory observer,
while to the bent observer it is still exactly the same as iL always was.
v '
The absence of any single finite mass actually permits two indistinguishable
solutions: The absence of any 3-d mass at all, and the presence of more than
any finite mass at all, The two opposites are identical on the boundary
case*.
VU GRAPH OFF (
30.
k; __ __
PI - BENDING OF 3-D FRAMES
(vg#2 7)
VUGRAPH ON
VUGRAPH OFF (
k
Note to briefer:
31]
31.
QUARKS
(vg#2 8)
VUGRAPH ON
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer:
Thus quarks have not been independently detected to date because the
experiments have been designed to detect particles or waves.
__ 32.
EVERETT"S MANY-WORLDS INTERPRETATION OF QUANTUM MECHANICS
(vg#29)
VUGRAPH ON
VUGRAP OFF
,{- 4
Z..
33. 1
_ - - i
SPACET[ME CURVATURE IS TRICY
(vg#30)
VUGRAPH ON
What a thing is, is relative to the perceiver and his perceiving frame.
Entirely. It can even be nothing in a great many frames.
VUGRAPH OFF
!I;
34
(
CLUSTERED ORTHOGONAL WORLDS
(vg#3l1)
VUGRAPH ON
VIJGRAPH OFF
35.1
BIOFIELDS: TIME-CLUSTERED ORTHOFRAMES
(vg#32)
VUGRAPH ON
1
be orthorotated and turned into another kind.
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer:
'i
'I;
36.
LIFE AND DEATH
(vg#33)
VUGRAPH ON
Instead one must look at the format of all formats, which is formatless
by definition.
VUGRAPH OFF
Note to briefer:
In fact what we call our own "physical reality" can be shown to be nothing (
but the sum total of all the crosstalk from all the other worlds that passes through
this particular differential zone w t
37.
(
MAVERICK WORLDS
(vg#34)
VUGRAPH ON
One example is shown here, where the effect (i.e., the effect in the
laboraLofy franle) always precedes the cause (i.e., the cause in the
laboratory frame). This world would appear to run backwards to us.
VUGRAPH OFF
38
(
38.
ANGELS, IMPS. AND UFO TULPAS
(vg#35)
VUGRAPH ON
VUGRAPH OFF
z :: 39.9 v
EXAMPLES OF UFO WAVES S
(vg#3 6)
VUGRAPH ON
Here are some examples of major UFO waves which show the imprint
of stress upon the collective unconscious and the noise and tuning of
the groups unconsciously tuning in the phenomena.
VUGRAPH OFF
° I '
40. i
SUGGESTED APPROACH: SUMMARY $
' (vg#37)
VUGRAPH ONg3
Using the perceptron approach, the fourth law of logic, and Everett's
many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics, a theory of biofields can be
constructed to unit' field theory and provide a framework for some of the strange
effects of psychotronics.
Literally, one has to create a totally new physics paradigm -- one which
contains the old physics, and yet contains the mind, life, hyperspaces, and a
great deal more.
I
"i
As best I can, I have tried to put together the schema for that new paradigm,
and that is what I have presented to you today. V
Thank you for your kind attention.
VUGRAPH OFF
4'
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REFERENCES
7. Bearden, Thomas E., The Fourth Lay; of Logic, 1976 (privately published).
9.
10.
Bearden, Thomas E.,
to UFO Phenomena,"
The Holography of Being , (in publication, private).
Bearden, Thomas E., "Writing the Observer Back Into the Equation," address
I
given to Princeton Center for Alternative Futures, Princeton, N.J., March 5, 1976.
13. Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne, and John Archibald Whieeler, Gravitation,
W.H. Freeman and Company, San Francisco, CA, 1973.
18. Richard Garvin, The Crystal Skull, Pocket Book Edition, March, 1974.
21. David Bohm, The Special Theory of Relativity, W.A. Benjamin, 1965, j
22. Edwin F. Taylor and John Archibald Wheeler, Spacetime Physics, W.H.
Freeman and Company, 1966.
23. David Michael Jacobs, The UFO Controversy In America, Foreword byJ. Allen
Hynek, Indiana University Press, 1975.
24. Brad Steiger, Mysteries of Time and Space, special archeological research by
Ron Calais, Prentice-Hall, Inc., Copyright 1974 by Brad Steiger.
25. Robert Bruce Lindsay and Henry Margenau, Foundations of Physics, Dover, 1957.
28. Hector Hawton, Philosophy For Pleasure, Fawcett World Library, fifth printing,
June 1970, pp. 21-24. 4.
29. A. Einstein, "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies," Ann. Physik. 17, 891,
1905.
4 30. Robert Eisberg and Robert Resnick, Quantum Physics of Atoms, Molecules, Solids
Nuclei, and Particles, John Wiley & Sons, New York, NY, 1974, pp. 63-68, 146-15:}
31. Evert W. Bech, The Foundations of Mathematics, Harper Torchbooks, The Science
Library, Harper & Row, New York, NY, 1966, pp. 481-518.
212. Donald R. Barr and Peter W. Zehna, Probability , Brooks/Cole Publishing Company,
Belmont, CA, 1971, pp. 16-17.
33. N.A. Kozyrov, "Possibility of Experimental Study of the Properties of Time,"