Posted on 03/07/2023 7:52:30 AM PST by SunkenCiv
[snip] Eric Weinstein is a Managing Director at Thiel Capital, creator of geometric unity, a unified theory in physics, and the intellectual dark web, a loose coalition of intellectuals dedicated to free thought. Hal Puthoff is former CIA, NSA and AATIP (the government's official UFO investigation program). In the 70's, he oversaw Stargate: the government's psychic spy program at Stanford Research Institute. In this conversation, we discuss the physics of UFO's, private aerospace as the keepers of fundamental science and Hal's experience with parapsychology. Please enjoy 🛸👽
*** AMERICAN ALCHEMY is an original series hosted by Jesse Michels that explores the frontier of science and tech. Each week, we bring you exclusive interviews with some of the leading thinkers of our time. [/snip]The Physics of UFOs: Eric Weinstein + Hal Puthoff | 58:21
Jesse Michels | 83K subscribers | 543,274 views | February 11, 2022
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Transcript 0:00 · were there actually updates in physics maybe mid-century that were not disclosed to the public well i mean it quieted down because nobody ever got 0:10 · anywhere or it quieted it down because it did get somewhere and it went black ladies and gentlemen it's finally here the much anticipated conversation with eric weinstein and 0:19 · hal put off the world's most brilliant physics mind of our time is the son of the country's most 0:26 · prominent and important anti-gravity researcher of the 1950s i don't know what any of this is hal is 0:33 · an electrical engineer and laser physicist former nsa and cia hal was a senior advisor to atip the 0:40 · official government ufo investigation program that ran from 2007 to 2012 out of bigelow aerospace he 0:47 · also founded and ran the cia's psychic spy program called stargate out of stanford research institute 0:54 · in the 70s does our government have a protocol to wield stigma as a tool for keeping its programs 1:03 · secret certainly there are parts of the government who consider that to be their job many of you are 1:08 · already familiar with my colleague eric weinstein he's a mathematician who's dared to construct a unified theory of physics called geometric unity he's also a prominent yet rebellious cultural 1:18 · commentator who founded the intellectual dark web i still carry the sense of i cannot believe i am sitting here discussing visitations from some intelligent life that we don't understand 1:31 · this interview is neither for the queasy nor the faint of mind there are more videos some are better how much better as good as you could probably want for many of your comments i 1:40 · haven't cut much from this interview i left it pretty raw long form and unedited it's a deep technical dive into the physics of ufos along with the implications of their prominence 1:50 · in the modern zeitgeist that is that we are either being subjected to the most interesting 1:55 · effective and weird government psyop of all time or our top scientists are 2:00 · missing something fundamental about the nature of reality and finally hal gets about as candid 2:06 · as he's ever been about the government's psychic spy program stargate while eric who's a little 2:11 · more skeptical of parapsychology tries not to throw up we ran 70 30 instead of 50 50. sorry 2:17 · but if you want to do it feel free to do it i've told you how to do it so you can just go do it 2:23 · okay you don't have a lot of room to move you either have to postulate new physics or you have 2:29 · to say this isn't material everything here is bold my conclusion is that there is something 2:35 · there i don't like losing to jesse it's horrible losing him on ufos i don't want to lose it to him a second time but something is wildly off so with that out of the way hit subscribe and get ready to 2:47 · unlearn everything you thought you knew about the material world with eric weinstein and hal put off 2:57 · different parts have different activities but you know that don't you 3:16 · the intelligence committee has ordered the director of national intelligence and the secretary of defense to deliver a report on the mysterious sightings of unidentified aerial 3:26 · phenomena uap more commonly known as ufos the reason i found the report fascinating was because 3:36 · it reeked of conflict i could clearly detect a voice an authorial voice that wanted to disclose 3:43 · more and one that said over my dead body and the over my dead body people seem to be stronger 3:51 · but losing ground the first branch of the decision tree is is it stuff that is unintentionally 3:58 · in the air versus stuff that is intentionally in the air the unintentional stuff was broken into 4:03 · two categories that was clutter and atmospheric effects the stuff that is intentionally in the 4:09 · air was broken into the next branch which was us not us not us was broken into two things 4:17 · known others and unknown others and that other is intentionally in the air not us not anyone we 4:24 · know not necessarily aliens could be coming out of the ocean could be time travel i mean who the 4:31 · hell knows but anything in that other category is astonishing i think one very important thing that 4:41 · most people in government who study this seem to sort of have a consensus on that the public 4:47 · might not realize is the idea that there is a separation between substrate and signature when 4:53 · it comes to ufos and there might be a difference in terms of the way somebody perceives it and some 4:58 · underlying sort of proto architecture and so if we have been seeing these things for thousands 5:04 · of years we've been seeing them in different forms different forms and maybe different sources 5:11 · these days since our technology platforms are so high to generate effects they could mimic 5:20 · and our detection platforms are so well advanced so we could see a lot more 5:28 · then it really is a zoo of options and possibilities and so for example for the tic 5:34 · tac videos that are so well known lou elizondo was behind releasing those videos i remember 5:40 · seeing them in the pentagon before they were released but there are more videos some are better 5:47 · how much better well as good as you could probably want if you showed me 5:55 · pieces of a craft and you guaranteed me somehow that it came from outside the solar system my 6:01 · first thought wouldn't be technology it would be physics because everything is so far away from us 6:07 · other than our solar system that i would be wondering well how did it get here when you look 6:14 · at the civil war in the united states it took place in the 1860s 6:22 · within less than a hundred years we were dropping fusion devices from jet aircraft less than a 6:31 · hundred years less than a single lifetime it means that we almost had a nuclear civil war 6:40 · and it was a very near miss now what separated the 1860s which looked like antiquity to many of us 6:48 · from 1952 when we have the first fusion weapon explode it was changes in our understanding of 6:57 · the physical world that means anytime you have a profound physical insight post i don't know 1940s 7:08 · you have to ask yourself what pandora's box with a new physical insight potentially open and 7:20 · i don't know why we're not more worried about this i think because we've been failing at physics for 50 years we've gotten out of the habit of thinking physics is really 7:29 · dangerous and you have to track every single important physicist because any change in our physical understanding of the universe can unlock holy hell 7:38 · were there actually updates in physics maybe mid-century that were not disclosed to the public 7:48 · another puzzle we would love to have cleared up is an understanding of the role of aerospace 7:55 · companies as holders of potentially basic scientific knowledge not shared with the 8:01 · academic world is it possible it seems very wrong to me may be wrong but it's um true 8:08 · it is true you believe it's true yeah i know it's true you know that there's physics knowledge 8:15 · held by aerospace companies that is not there certainly is materials knowledge materials well okay materials which involves topological physics or whatever 8:24 · okay but fundamental physics as opposed to you know condensed matter or right certainly 8:31 · aerospace corporations have knowledge in the uap area that specifically are sequestered by 8:41 · against foia because of proprietary appreciables which the whole thing was set up to be that way 8:49 · on purpose right but the idea that there would be fundamental physical knowledge that would be housed in an aerospace company and not shared with the physics community there is no evidence of that 9:00 · no evidence for it i'm not that i know of and i wouldn't that doesn't mean it's not the case but 9:06 · that would be this crazy egregious it would change our entire concept of who we are if 9:11 · somebody kept fundamental physics secret in the years since we became capable of exploding 9:19 · fusion devices i would grab a pitchfork and a tiki torch and i would march on the national 9:25 · science foundation right right i don't i still can't believe that that's true 9:31 · it would only be if it were the case that in fact we have mastered anti-gravity 9:37 · and they're being built by aerospace corporations then new physics would have to be involved is 9:44 · what is called the golden age of general relativity tied to these topics that is 9:51 · there was this bizarre surge of activity in general relativity between you know i would say 9:57 · the time of einstein in the 50s or something like that there wasn't a ton of development in gr and 10:03 · then suddenly there was this explosion there was a well this explosion uh there there's a famous uh 10:10 · series came out in miami herald and other newspapers in probably the 50s the author was 10:17 · talbert and he did a series where he found out that a number of aerospace engineering 10:25 · companies were suddenly interested in anti-gravity and that people like dewitt on up and down 10:32 · really top level physicists were suddenly getting grants to look at the idea of antigravity for 10:40 · example the gravity essay came along the gravity research foundation foundation right and so 10:48 · it looked like it's going to be a big explosion but anyway then it all sort of quieted down and 10:53 · i could take two implications of that and that is it quieted down because nobody ever got anywhere 11:01 · or quieted it down because it did get somewhere and it went black my understanding is that there were really twin loci of activity one of which surrounds a 11:13 · gravity research foundation in new boston new hampshire and i guess that was the work of babson 11:20 · and the story is sort of not really very plausible that his sister had drowned in a pond or something 11:28 · to that effect and so he had gravity as his sworn enemy um you know this story no i had not heard 11:35 · this oh yeah so babson contacted lewis whitten who was coming out of johns hopkins and then oddly a 11:45 · similarly named individual named bainson with some sort of tobacco or air conditioning fortune 11:51 · reaches out to bryce dewitt and asks whether he will found an institute at the university 11:59 · of north carolina chapel hill right for the study of physical fields and particularly focusing on 12:04 · gravity particularly focused on gravity somehow dewitt has the courage to answer this essay 12:12 · contest in the other silo and destigmatizes it so there was money to be had but nobody wanted 12:17 · to touch it because of fear of ridicule from their colleagues and then there's a famous 12:23 · gravity conference at the university of north carolina chapel hill that sort of kicks a lot of this off it's a tremendous flurry of activity at a time when anti-gravity 12:32 · was trying to break into respectability at a minimum we know that the glenn martin company 12:39 · where martin was an early pioneer i think from the time of the wright brothers 12:45 · that the glenn martin company becomes martin marietta later becomes lockheed martin so that word martin is coming all the way through was employing i believe lewis whitton edward whitton's 12:58 · father to do anti-gravity research somehow tied up with wright-patterson air force base 13:04 · in ohio and the johns hopkins university in baltimore maryland so there's something 13:10 · about aerospace in the 1950s and sort of post manhattan project era that's pretty potent 13:18 · and we're confused by this why was solomon left schetz the great topologist recruited to be 13:26 · involved with louis whitten and to have an entire non-linear group working on mathematics that then 13:33 · gets moved to brown university when i believe that these programs are sunsetted so they get spun off 13:39 · back into the academic ecosystem i don't know what any of this is so you have top physicists 13:46 · working on crazy stuff and physicists don't know the story yeah right yeah it's like i knew 13:53 · it because it was weird it stood out the lewis whitten edward whitton story has never been fully 14:01 · made sense the world's most brilliant physics mind of our time is the son of the country's 14:08 · most prominent and important anti-gravity researcher of the 1950s do you think that string 14:15 · theory which edwin worked on is intentionally a bridge to nowhere i have privately said to you 14:22 · that string theory was a very odd development because it both allowed physics to proceed as 14:32 · if it was doing something new while breaking no new ground in the physical world in which we live 14:40 · i don't really know if you were trying to stagnate the field string theory is pretty brilliant 14:48 · if there was knowledge that allowed you to to traverse the cosmos in other words if you could render einstein's theory effective the way einstein rendered newton's theory non-fundamental 15:02 · but an effective theory derived from einstein's theory in a limit 15:07 · to not share that knowledge with the physics community would be seen as gross 15:14 · academic and intellectual malpractice yeah if somebody had that level of knowledge i mean 15:19 · the best that uh you know we could do in the in the a-tip program was say okay let's accept 15:27 · einstein's gr as being the theory okay even though there are all kinds of arguments 15:33 · right subscribe by gr you mean general relativity general relativity and for this subject area for 15:39 · the uap subject area as far as as we've gone is to say okay suppose i treat general relativity 15:47 · einstein's equations for general relativity the way i would treat maxwell's equations for electromagnetism if we could manipulate variables and einstein's equations the way we manipulate 15:59 · variables in maxwell's equations you would see certain kinds of things which tend to match claimed observations of uap phenomena somewhere there's a missing key 16:11 · for how you can do manipulation of those variables in einstein's equations without 16:17 · having to have a black hole in your pocket are you talking about the idea that you want to promote 16:25 · constance to field content to be actual physical fields that can 16:31 · vibrate and live and move yes i would say so but then you have the quantum mechanical consequences 16:36 · when you promote something to field content you break it you bought it you've got a lot of uh 16:42 · you've got fluctuations and uncertainty principles and it contributes to all sorts of uh processes 16:48 · and sometimes you get you know explosions of terms of series things stop converging and things can get quite bad is that something that you feel you've handled well at a certain level 17:04 · how can we describe in layman's terms the idea of promoting a constant like the gravitational 17:10 · constant into a field variable so a very kind of helpful actual analogy used for me who's a 17:16 · i'm a total idiot when it comes to this stuff is a circle and pi being a constant you know the 17:23 · area of a circle is pi r squared uh and so if the circle had bumps in it or if it was topologically 17:29 · different in some way pi wouldn't be pi pi would sort of be more variable in such circumstances 17:36 · something that you thought was a constant turns out to be variable when considered in a 17:43 · larger space of possibilities likewise if i ask what is the temperature in this 17:48 · room i'm feeling a little bit chilly and you might say oh i think the temperature is 64. 17:56 · but then we might find out that in fact the room varies between 63 degrees and the 69 degrees in a 18:02 · different corner of the room so something that you thought was a number like we just we had inflation 18:10 · estimates of 6.8 and then 7.0 percent and i was very angry about that because my claim was 18:17 · that you should report inflation on various maps the way you show the temperatures in the country 18:26 · on a temperature map with gradients and isotherms and what have you if you do that to numbers like 18:32 · for example the gravitational constant that constant could be the value of a function 18:40 · and if it was the value of a function and then that function became quantum mechanical you would have to treat it quantum mechanically it's not cheap to replace a number by a function 18:49 · or a field we have an entire planet pulling us towards these couches and yet when the interview 18:57 · is done we will get up from these couches defeating an entire planet the weakness of gravity 19:04 · is one of the great mysteries of our lives it's inconceivably weak 19:12 · true enough yeah and if we accept gravit einstein's general relativity as 19:19 · again i'm not quite sure how much of it you you take issue with it would seem that we are 19:25 · either prisoners here or that we have to lean so heavily on time dilation or we would have to 19:34 · amass levels of energy i mean your point is yeah we can't we can't do it from what we know 19:41 · for sure okay so then the idea is we'd have to have something wrong 19:47 · in gr yeah something is at least missing okay maybe jar is okay 19:54 · as it goes but we're missing something that would have the effect of 20:01 · manipulating the variables in there that we can't do with any reasonable engineering 20:06 · approach well so far as i know there's only one analog that even smells vaguely like 20:12 · this in electromagnetism aaronoff and bohm argued that if you pass an electron beam 20:19 · around a solenoid and pass the current through it if it was perfectly insulated you would have 20:24 · no e and b fields out that is electric electric and magnetic fields outside of the solenoid but 20:30 · yet you'd get a phase shift in the electron beam is it circled this is what's known as a holonomia 20:35 · effect you guys talked about this incredible experiment called the bohm iron off effect can you show me the actual experiment imagine you have some sort of an electron gun and you have a beam 20:47 · of electrons and they hit a first mirror so that they bounce off of that mirror 20:54 · you have a next mirror in the form of a diamond and i'm looking down on my table top experiment 21:01 · and i've got some sort of a detector over here if i have a wire here that's heavily heavily 21:08 · insulated i can imagine running a current through this wire the solenoid in the center 21:13 · and the e and b fields would be dead equal to zero because of the insulator 21:19 · however when i pass current through this wire mysteriously the detector 21:24 · picks up different patterns of self-interference of the phase of the electron function 21:32 · in other words this setup can detect whether there's current passing through the wire despite 21:40 · near perfect insulation that was what was so frightening in the late 50s is that we were discovering that it wasn't the electromagnetic fields at all 21:49 · that were really the important actor in the electromagnetic story we thought we understood electromagnetism from the time of maxwell but clearly the electromagnetic four potential 22:01 · was really the main actor do we understand the nature of the electromagnetic for potential or 22:06 · is it just this sort of geometrically i think we have a very good handle okay and so you mentioned 22:11 · the higgs field looking like something like analogous to like a wine bottle what would the electromagnetic four potential geometrically look like well it looks like a version of the escher 22:24 · staircase or the penrose stairs in effect those stairs would be something like we would call them 22:32 · horizontal subspaces the weird feature of going around a circuit and always going up the stairs 22:41 · and yet never climbing in height that would be what we would call a holonomia effect due 22:48 · to curvature paradox and you can go way beyond that so there are all kinds of 22:56 · toroidal geometries for example where you have no em fields whatsoever but you have strong 23:04 · vector scalar fields and since you have no lorentz force in the absence of e and b 23:12 · then how can you detect them well you detect them by the by any kind of quantum detector they 23:19 · can detect phase shifts can detect the vector scalar potential even in the absence of fields 23:26 · so there's a whole engineering approach concerning which i have two patents by the way 23:33 · and have started a new company that involves only dealing with vector and scalar potentials when you 23:41 · are trying to come up with this analogy between electromagnetism and general relativity to 23:46 · explain some of these effects are you dealing only with the leviticuvida connection of the metric as einstein did or are you considering i'm basically dealing with the metric coefficients 23:58 · by postulating a dielectric vacuum whose dielectric constant values for say epsilon 24:06 · mu the permeability and permittivity of the vacuum can be manipulated and once you manipulate those 24:14 · you're manipulating c which is one over square root scrutiny epsilon and so once you begin 24:19 · to manipulate c then you can change effects associated with all of the and so you could 24:27 · with this with this polarizable vacuum approach which i published in physics journal 24:35 · you can get all of the quote tests of general relativity and so on so 24:41 · so the fact that you might be able to pursue that further by taking into account the fact that underlying electromagnetism is is vacuum fluctuations 24:52 · which have the effect of controlling the value for epsilon and mu so then 24:59 · you say okay well if i want to go over to general relativity maybe i can control the underlying values for the metric coefficients so there are various mathematical approaches to 25:11 · kind of pushing einstein's equations to be not quite einsteinian so we're not talking about this 25:20 · this is what has been confusing to me there's a question of accepting the einsteinian prison 25:25 · or trying to do to einstein what einstein did to newton and then say there's a more fundamental 25:32 · theory and what you're really saying is that you're trying to come up with a more fundamental theory than general relativity in which many of the things that are hard coded are in fact vacuum 25:43 · expectation values that are only discernible within the theory something like that yeah 26:02 · there are consequences after impact you have a theory that is a greater it's more expansive than 26:10 · einstein einstein would be you can locate einstein with you can locate einstein within it and so 26:16 · does any of the stuff in geometric unity your theory dovetail with what you're seeing in terms 26:22 · of observables with ufos and uaps there are two strong versions of geometric unity in one case 26:31 · you put an extra six dimensions as time dimensions into into the mix and so one plus six is seven 26:39 · and then you've got four extra spatial dimensions four plus the three spatial dimensions we already know is seven so you'd have what we would call a split signature metric seven and 26:48 · seven seven times seven space the other way of of effectively gluing these extra dimensions is 26:55 · in is to flip them so you'd have four extra time dimensions that would be five time dimensions in 27:02 · total versus nine spatial with three that we know plus six new ones in either case though 27:09 · you're talking about multiple temporal dimensions and even physicists rarely talk about multiple 27:15 · temporal dimensions because it completely breaks our paradigm of what we might call 27:21 · hamiltonian dynamics the idea that you you can take any situation in space and then propagate 27:28 · it through time to get the future when you have more than one time dimension you have 27:34 · more than one future you have no arrow of time you have a whirlpool of time for the first additional 27:41 · time dimension then you have a right hand rule of time and so this arrow of time becomes something 27:48 · you would call a time orientation and then the weird horrible thing about that if i may use the 27:53 · board yeah go for it when you have more than one temporal dimension you now have a new possibility 27:59 · that you've never considered which is you could go back into this extra extra time dimension 28:08 · and find yourself at an earlier event without ever having to retrace time steps you wouldn't 28:14 · have to run time backwards we don't really know how to think about these things very well they lead to something which is called ultra hyperbolic equations and we don't have a ton 28:24 · of focus or skill around these sorts of problems one of my biggest concerns is that if geometric 28:31 · unity turns out to be true we don't know what it means to be able to hack extra temporal dimensions 28:42 · that's a big concern i mean it would probably explain some of this uh at least observably 28:50 · faster than speeding travel see that's the thing there is no faster than light travel 28:56 · and we have to train people away from saying you think we have faster than light travel there may 29:01 · be something that would appear to be faster which temporal dimension hacking which sort of makes it 29:07 · because a lot of these uaps seem to sort of mater materialize and dematerialize it will 29:12 · look there's certainly scope for pattern matching if you have things like dark chemistry 29:19 · dark light if you have a multiple spatial and temporal dimensions beyond what we know 29:29 · the concern though is we don't know whether they're accessible the interest and the fear 29:35 · has to do with the idea that maybe somebody else knows the answer to this and they aren't human 29:44 · so that one's called the time warp i can't believe you never saw rocky wore a picture no i know it's a cult classic have you seen it speaking of cults how weren't you in scientology 29:56 · oh year years years back i checked into it because at that time we were doing you know 30:01 · setting up a remote viewing program we were checking into everything silver mind control scientology whatever whatever i thought some of the techniques were definitely of value but 30:12 · i disconnected from them in their mid 70s or whatever i think what we need to do is 30:17 · we need to talk about pseudoscience and stigma and its weaponization and its use so the first 30:23 · thing i want to ask you about is does our government have a protocol to wield stigma 30:32 · as a tool for keeping its programs secret is the is the government so certainly there are parts of 30:39 · the government who consider that to be their job is there language for the manipulation of stigma 30:47 · to discourage people from under undertaking scientific investigations that might lead them 30:53 · into an area of security concern there is a language in there there are certain operations that sort of have that effect but there are people who are trying to get around 31:05 · you you personally have been the target of a great deal of directed stigma it would seem to me do you 31:11 · have a sense that you've been that your career has been directed by manufactured signals certainly 31:18 · there was manufactured stigma and control we've had people actually shut down a piece of a program 31:26 · on the basis that american taxpayer dollars should not be spent on pursuing demonic technology 31:32 · you know denshian yeah okay i was friendly with dan sheehan and admired his work taking on all 31:40 · these crazy cases against the government not knowing he had any interest in ufo uap 31:46 · there was an attempt to discredit him through stigma because of his interest in the iran contra 31:53 · matter right with the christic institute and so i think he was fed wrong information probably so that he'd swing at a bad pitch and that's why i was very interested at the weaponization of stigma 32:05 · and whether or not you were party to any knowledge of how that is carried 32:10 · out so as to keep these programs no i've never other than being the effect of them 32:21 · you do want to keep things like the loch ness monster and spoon bending away from 32:26 · the ufo conversation if you can and there's this tremendous force in this world to say 32:32 · well if we're opening our minds to ufos my aunt lived in this house that was haunted for 27 years 32:40 · like i don't want to hear this i don't want to listen to the fact that your aunt's house is 32:45 · wanted now the thing that goes against what i'm saying is something like cattle mutilation so 32:52 · either somebody is an amazing sadistic animal hoaxer or you have to open the uap story to 33:03 · them communicating something by their decision to study cattle or leave cattle as presents for us or 33:10 · who knows what well that brings up this really weird place called skinwalker ranch in in utah 33:16 · i think it's the near the utah basin and you enter you went to basin and so there's a myth 33:22 · that involves the ute tribe fighting the navajos and i believe the navajo is sick 33:28 · these skin walkers these sorts of youths were collaborating with the united states government the navajo weren't so happy and so they cursed this particular spot of land with skin waters 33:38 · and the family that used to live on the land would see tons of cattle mutilations they'd experience 33:45 · all sorts of paranormal things bigelow buys it bigelow is obviously very interested in the 33:50 · you know uap phenomena and now it seems like it's this place where they do all sorts of experiments 33:56 · they have anomalous electromagnetic effects on the grounds so what do you what do you make of this 34:02 · something is wildly off this stuff is interesting enough that it should be attracting scientists 34:10 · and the scientists who are attracted to this should be debunking the living crap out of this 34:17 · if it's some dime store bs but the absence of scientists is itself puzzling yeah partially 34:25 · due to stigma partially due to the fact that nobody wants to get sucked into some low rent 34:30 · uh horror movie where two kids see a creature in the black lagoon and they try to tell the 34:35 · townspeople and no one believes that yeah the question is is the stigma manufactured or is 34:40 · the stigma sigma because all this stuff is [ __ ] we're pretty clear that's a lot of stigma is 34:46 · manufactured so the government talks about an internal documents image cheapening and what's 34:53 · the context in which image cheapening is has been used or famously against a woman who was a leading 34:59 · actress in hollywood named jean seberg and the fbi is how we learned about image cheapening 35:07 · planted a story with a woman named joyce haber in the los angeles times that the baby that she was 35:14 · carrying was in fact not her french husbands but was in fact the baby of a black panther they drove 35:21 · her to suicide they drove her to miscarriage first and then 10 years of suicide attempts but the key point is our government does not necessarily blink trying to turn your reputation into absolute 35:33 · garbage if you get close to its treasured sources and methods yeah and that is not compatible 35:40 · with saying that we have something that we don't understand menacing our military its airspace and 35:46 · our nuclear sites very strange it's hard because it's clear that there's some element of the psyop 35:52 · here and then it's hard to sort of separate there has to be scion there has to be because project blue book yes and the pentagon report do not seem to be particularly compatible in other words 36:05 · it appears that either we were lying then that there's nothing to see yeah and we're telling the 36:10 · truth now or we're telling the truth then that there's nothing to see and we're lying now that 36:16 · ufos are here what i find really interesting about the blue book history is edward j rupelt was sort 36:22 · of running blue book he was an air force general and he seemed pretty open-minded to the phenomena 36:28 · being real especially after kind of empirical inquiry and then in 1952 something very bizarre 36:35 · happened which is there were a bunch of spottings of ufo spottings around washington dc in july 1952 36:43 · and then there's a there's a caltech physicist named h.p robertson who forms kind of a panel 36:48 · and the conclusion of the panel is basically the government needs to systematically downplay the 36:56 · importance of the phenomena and if the public were to know the truth it would touch off mass hysteria 37:04 · every single head of blue book from that point forward from 52 to 69 when it ended uh became 37:10 · progressively more kind of anti-ufo and so the question is is this you know typical cia leaked 37:18 · dock to lead us off the trail and is it [ __ ] or um did was manufactured stigma created between 37:26 · 1952 and 1969 actually blue book maybe initially was kind of open too what happened in 1952 37:33 · the dc ufo sightings in in july yeah i was going to say the oh what else the first 37:41 · h-bomb h-bomb teller yeah a tele-rule on design yeah so the concern that i have is that in 1952 37:51 · we sent off a signal just wait just the way when north korea detonates a nuclear device 37:56 · it sends seismic waves through the earth it can't stop sending information outside of the country 38:05 · i think in 1952 we sent a signal to the cosmos which is that we're very very close 38:11 · to being in possession of root level knowledge to take a software metaphor we are about to become 38:17 · root which is terrifying if you're a system administrator that you've got a hacker that's about to get full control of the system it's like your edge.org question which was uh what 38:26 · happens when we discover our own source code does something unprecedented happen there's something unprecedented happen when man first aliens well people didn't understand what the question was 38:35 · though it was the final edge question and instead of giving an answer he asked us to give a question 38:43 · the concern that i have is that in 1952 what if there was someone there to hear 38:49 · what we said in the pacific if there was something or someone there to hear us 38:54 · they probably heard us as saying we're on the verge of being able to come visit 39:02 · that's terrifying the stargate program which you ran which is a government sort of psychic spy 39:09 · program ran from 1972 to 1995 and it ended in 1995 under ed may and you know a lot of people 39:19 · after that said that it wasn't all that effective see that's part of the uh the stigmatization well 39:25 · i was just reading skin walkers at the pentagon you know where it talks about atip and and i guess 39:32 · yeah awesome these two programs uh and it looks like remote viewing is sort of again 39:38 · revived i guess i don't think it ever really died so so the question is yeah is that is that um 39:44 · creating a stigma because you're bundling in parapsychology um which might be pseudoscience 39:50 · with the ufo stuff or or is it is there some connection between those two things because there seems like a lot of overlap in terms of the people interested in the parapsychology stuff 39:59 · and the people interested in the ufo stuff as jacquefully and eric davis put out a very nice 40:05 · paper of six levels of uap phenomena which range all the way from nuts and bolts at the bottom 40:12 · to spiritual or metaphysical aspects at the top and everything kind of in between uh 40:20 · can you can you break that down for us so what are the six levels and how how are the nuts and 40:25 · bolts at all tethered to spiritual phenomena well actually the nutsables things but then some of 40:31 · the consequences of the nuts and bolts things are changes in what we call ordinary reality 40:38 · which people who are the effect of might claim that that's some kind of 40:45 · paranormal thing because that's the only word they can come up with to describe it so there are paranormal things and then it's sort of a gradation from there in the things that are 40:57 · purely non-physical but supposedly quote possibly psychokinesis i have to admit i have such a strong 41:08 · visceral negative reaction and it's very interesting because as jesse will tell you 41:14 · jesse was interested in this ufo uap stuff and i couldn't be in the room with it i just i hated 41:20 · the topic it always felt like garbage to me and i found out that i was apparently wrong about that 41:26 · the federal government is certainly tracking this it doesn't make any sense to me still that we have all these sensors and we don't have great video all over the place i don't know how 41:36 · these uaps you know could possibly evade all of the cameras that we have outside of the government 41:44 · and we have no conclusive proof but assume okay i was wrong about that at some level because we are 41:50 · now discussing this in the open so i'm willing to start to revise everything that is protected by my 41:58 · desire to throw up right there's this shows the the stigma programs it was on me right 42:06 · i'm being honest and open i still carry the sense of i cannot believe i'm sitting here discussing 42:11 · visitations from some intelligent life that we don't understand potentially 42:17 · uh but okay so you know a scientist should be able to consider these things and i'm not going 42:23 · to be the prisoner of the stigma but i am going to ask you guys av lobe at harvard setting up his 42:28 · thing to pursue it but but this is a really important question if if you could set up a ton 42:33 · of sensors how would we know what we're seeing at high sample size if right now we don't know what 42:39 · we're seeing at low sample size and i think one question i'd have for you where i'd challenge you 42:45 · is is is there some physics that we will figure out in the future around certain ability around 42:53 · certain people's ability to see these things and that sounds really pseudoscientine crazy 43:00 · but most of the people involved in the program seem to think that there's something around that and as far as as far as uh you know why aren't we getting really clear pictures 43:11 · i mean i'm not i wouldn't say that that's necessarily the case that we're not getting you may be getting really clear but you're an average guy with an iphone let's say the craft is 43:21 · there but it's manipulating the space-time metric so you're just going to get fuzzy outlines because 43:30 · light is being bent in various ways around the craft and so on so you're going to get 43:35 · a lousy picture it doesn't mean because it isn't really there i would imagine i would be drowning 43:42 · in high quality video and it's it's a great puzzle to me that i'm sitting here discussing 43:47 · this i can't even solve this puzzle and then the related puzzle having to do with remote viewing or anything like that is if i take a materialist perspective that the world is 43:58 · created of material whose laws can be understood and you put me in and you or say 44:04 · in two lead-lined rooms and we try to make sure that there's no way that any of the known forces 44:11 · or matter fields can communicate you know my mind goes to you know are we claiming that neutrinos 44:18 · are carrying the information are we claiming that there's a new force are we claiming that um 44:25 · the world isn't material or the entanglement is more see this is spread out and and well 44:33 · entanglement would be one of those things like beaumaranov and casimir which has the appearance 44:39 · of being spooky right in other words if you had a culture in which magicians possessed scientific 44:47 · knowledge they would have an edge over everyone else because they could explain they could predict the bone marrow and off effect see i can i can manipulate this electron beam without even 44:57 · having any possibility of touching it right so this gets to the issue of advanced science being 45:04 · indistinguishable from magic and then the idea that this is in some sense held by a particular 45:10 · silos over other silos i mean as a scientist i either want to laugh or my blood boils well i mean 45:21 · that's kind of a justifiable position for example early on in the cia remote viewing 45:30 · program that i set up at sri i was asked to check out claims of a psychic english swan ingo 45:40 · had done experiments at city college in new york under professor gertrude schmeider she had set up thermistors and from across the room he could make the temperatures go up and down and so 45:51 · i took this claimed psychic invite him out to sri to see what he could do 46:02 · we had the cork detector and so it was basically a quantum chip inside a new metal magnetic 46:08 · shielding inside of steel dewar for electrical shielding inside of superconducting shielding the 46:15 · requirement being that nothing could affect this thing from the outside so we want to see if you can affect it he affected it unequivocally 100 percent you had this slow oscillation 46:26 · what he did was he stopped the oscillation now what turned out to be even more quote magical was 46:34 · when we asked him you know how do you know what to do and he said well all i did was look inside and 46:40 · then he drew out how things were related inside that never been published and it turned out that 46:46 · they were accurate and so it was when i wrote all that up and circulated around that's when the 46:51 · cia came knocking at my doorstep and they said oh we've been looking for you and i said you know why 46:58 · would i do he said well the russians have been spending millions of dollars at their best institutes with their best people for years no scientists in america even believes there's such 47:07 · a thing as psychokinesis or esp or whatever and you happen to do this experiment and so you know 47:14 · we graduated from there to having remote viewing of super secret facilities and project titles 47:21 · hidden in safes that's how the whole program got started it ended up being a 20-year 20 million 47:28 · dollar program i don't know what to make of all of this i don't think any of this to me sounds real 47:39 · now that said you could imagine a one-time backwards upgrade saying we happen to know about 47:47 · aliens for a long period we've kept it secret we figured out the physics the physics has different 47:53 · fields we're actually able to use this we call it psychic phenomena and so we don't have to give our secrets away you could imagine a complete reworking of reality 48:02 · without that real working of reality i would say this is bs what would what would be your best guess assuming you think because you have levered a lot of your 48:12 · life into parapsychology and you've levered a lot of your life into physics how would you reconcile 48:17 · physics with parapsychology which i realize is a you know a 64 million dollar question but what would be your best guess do you have any theory well we we it can definitely rule out 48:27 · that it's em brain waves because we put some of our remote viewers on submarines and took 48:32 · them to the bottom of the ocean and we got some of our best results in fact the remote viewers in the submarine said boy it's really quiet here you know so yeah i mean if i think 48:41 · about it in terms of telescopy right for every long-range field we now have a telescope so we 48:48 · have optical and radio telescopes for photons we have neutrino telescopes which is actually 48:56 · matter rather than force we know that neutrinos can zip through a planet and not even notice it was there and then we have gravitational telescopes in the form of ligo 49:05 · and the weak force is going to be super short range super wheat because it's effectively massive 49:12 · and we have vector scalar forces and em uh sorry when i think about e m i'm thinking you're 49:19 · including vector and scatter potential hell yes nobody nobody okay everybody's moved on to vector 49:26 · i don't even want to call it vector and scale just potential they're different connections on fiber bundles and then you have this issue of gravitation with ligo right so we can we can pick 49:36 · up super long-range stuff from colliding black holes by now measuring gravity waves gluons aren't 49:43 · going to do much for you quarks aren't going to do much for you these are the fields that really 49:48 · give us information from distant galaxies and then there's the question of are you talking about a material world that we don't yet know or material effects that is part of the material where we do 49:59 · where the somehow we have it for example i mean you have all these but you know the usual 50:06 · issues about it not being useful to communicate information you have this bizarre non-locality 50:12 · of entanglement but you can't use it for ftl for faster than light communication right right so if 50:20 · two two events are space-like separated uh you're not so far as we know there's no means of tricking 50:29 · uh an intention of controlling it right yeah so this is what it happens 50:36 · well i'm i'm struggling with this to be to be honest to say just to put it mildly and i don't 50:42 · like losing to jesse it's horrible losing him on ufos i don't want to lose it to him a second time 50:48 · but i guess what the question is really you don't have a lot of room to move you either have to 50:54 · postulate new physics you have to say that there are new effects like iron off bone that we didn't 51:00 · understand during the physics that we already know but we haven't unpacked them yet or you have to say this isn't material that there's there they're angels and demons and spirits that uh 51:10 · that don't conform to our understanding everything here is bold there's nothing that simply yeah we 51:18 · we saw this effect it was robust so for me i've looked into the stargate stuff and i've talked to 51:24 · you a decent amount my conclusion is that there is something there and yet it feels like there are a 51:30 · lot of near misses as well and it seems very hard to instrumentalize and scale up there was plenty of times when we produced really good data and to be fair there were plenty of times when it failed 51:40 · if you don't understand the causal mechanism then you're going to have repeatability issues and so is there like a part of the brain like so like the penrose thing which is probably wrong 51:49 · but you know this idea that he wrote in the emperor's new mind that the microtubules um 51:54 · i guess that was the follow-up of the emperor's new mind with hameroff the microtubule is our quantum sensor that collapses the wave function into an eigenstate yeah i have some sympathy for 52:04 · going along that direction so you think there's some sort of quantum sensor in the in the brain and do you have a top candidate for the specific structure well i can't rule it out i mean they 52:13 · certainly started from a very fundamental thing is and that is if you can get rid of consciousness by 52:18 · using an anesthetic then however you're doing it must have something to do with consciousness 52:24 · if this effect exists why is it classified and why is the government where is it in the stock 52:31 · market well there are remote viewers who use it on the stock market so like the classic the good 52:36 · example is that you guys tried to start a hedge fund you know just trading silver futures and 52:42 · you made something like 260 k and i think scaling it beyond that seemed to be a big big challenge 52:47 · it was only a challenge because i didn't have the time to do it i mean our particular thing i gotta 52:56 · i mean i want to be polite but i also want to be aggressive my experience with money 53:02 · tells me that you can win over any skeptic very quickly if you can just shove millions 53:08 · of dollars into their pocket by arbitraging their skepticism okay let me let me tell you 53:14 · how to do it and you just go do it it's really easy actually i know some people with capital 53:20 · okay just have somebody pick a couple of objects have them label them mark it up mark it down 53:29 · and they're going to show you the object the following day depends on what the market does and then you do your best to generate a description then based on that description they 53:38 · can go back and the next day on the average you get get your money we ran 70 30 instead of 50 50. 53:47 · and so it's two steps forward one step backward two steps four what's that that's how we downed in class that's how we got this 260 dollars which is why did you stop 53:58 · well the reason i stopped was i was already working uh frankly 24 hours a day on on training 54:03 · the army intelligence officers and so i was exhausted after 30 days of doing this sorry 54:10 · but if you want to do it feel free to do it i've told you how to do it so you can just go do it 54:16 · okay now i'm having a very surreal experience for a large portion of the conversation 54:24 · you seem absolutely cogent coherent well-informed well-spoken and then 54:30 · there's this part that just doesn't make any effing sense and this is the part that doesn't make any effing sense rolling up in a bugatti to your gulf stream to fly to your island 54:40 · is a very powerful argument that you know what you're talking about bitcoin community has been 54:45 · insulted by the economists they've been laughed at by financiers and they have a phrase which i 54:53 · really detest but i think you need to hear it and it's called number go up and number go up means 54:59 · that when you're talking to an esteemed professor of economics or finance and they're telling you 55:05 · that you're an idiot and you say well why don't you visit me at the yellowstone club i'll i'll send the jet around for you number go up is an incredibly powerful argument because 55:15 · of human greed and avarice okay i think we made this point what do you think about you 55:21 · know when we hear that they're unidentified aerial phenomena that's one thing but then when somebody 55:27 · like bob lazar comes out and says that he worked at a place called s4 which is a part of area 51 55:33 · on alien reproduction vehicles literally reverse engineering crashed ufos what are we supposed to 55:40 · make of things like that well i mean i'm skeptical to the degree behind the scenes we can check on 55:48 · his clearances and so on i have reason to be skeptical so i can't absolutely rule things out 55:54 · because everything can be manipulated sure you've looked at the magnesium bismuth piece from roswell 56:01 · which was i guess a grandfather who was a colonel in the roswell cleanup collection this was sort of 56:08 · left in the safe and the grandson found it you do material analysis on this bismuth magnesium piece 56:13 · the magnesium ratios were way off i mean not even close to being natural it can micro size wave guys 56:23 · channels you know to me only data counts have no idea whether the story of somebody finding in his 56:30 · grandfather's diary and so on is true or not so the only data i have is this piece of material 56:37 · and does it have any unusual properties that that are interesting well i can check that out and i 56:42 · found out that it did have this miniaturization of waveguide channels well below wavelength which is 56:50 · quite an accomplishment but once you realize how many materials work you can do that so so that was interesting 57:06 · i definitely believe that many people have been through the experience of contact 57:14 · whether or not that's completely in their head or a government induced hypnotic state or who knows 57:20 · what i no longer believe this is just a bunch of people looking for attention well it's good 57:26 · that's what i'm saying that that makes it the most interesting thing in the world because it's either the best if you're the force ranked psyops it's up there in terms of you know the the intersection 57:36 · between interesting and effective it's good how we really appreciate you being here eric thank 57:42 · you for co-hosting you were a great uh co-host you asked a lot of questions that i could not jesse 57:48 · i really appreciate what you're doing trying to get this issue out in front of the public and get it taken seriously and putting it on it you know it's best foot forward awesome thank you 57:58 · perfect conversation though it's always very exciting to you know delve into these things 58:03 · so yeah i think so too and i think there are a lot of loose threads but uh to be content 58:09 · with a lot of loose threads yeah we'll chase them all okay sounds good thanks
So there I was in mid-fall, wondering how I might alter me some gravity.
[14:08] ...most prominent and important anti-gravity researcher of the 1950s do you think that string theory which edwin worked on is intentionally a bridge to nowhere i have privately said to you that string theory was a very odd development because it both allowed physics to proceed as if it was doing something new while breaking no new ground in the physical world in which we live. i don't really know if you were trying to stagnate the field string theory is pretty brilliant
Good post.
Freepers get a peek into the rabbit hole.
“so many out-of-the-way things had happened lately, that Alice had begun to think that very few things indeed were really impossible.”
““If there’s no meaning in it,” said the King, “that saves a world of trouble, you know, as we needn’t try to find any.” “
Is String Theory Even Wrong?
by Peter Woit
American Scientist
March-April 2002
...The reigning Standard Model of particle physics, which string theory attempts to encompass, involves at its core certain geometrical concepts, namely the Dirac operator and gauge fields, which are among the deepest and most powerful ideas in modern mathematics. In string theory, the Dirac operator and gauge fields are not fundamental: They are artifacts of taking a low-energy limit. String theorists ask mathematicians to believe in the existence of some wonderful new sort of geometry that will eventually provide an explanation for M-theory. But without a serious proposal for the underlying new geometry, this argument is unconvincing.
The experimental situation is similarly bleak. It is best described by Wolfgang Pauli’s famous phrase, “It’s not even wrong.” String theory not only makes no predictions about physical phenomena at experimentally accessible energies, it makes no precise predictions whatsoever.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1686282/posts?page=4#4
https://www.google.com/search?q=not+even+wrong+peter+woit
They harnessed the earth’s magnetic field.
If folks want to dig into this stuff here is where to go:
https://omega-point.medium.com/loose-threads-af8f652ee8cb
This link includes a three hundred page plus pdf file that goes deep into the weeds. From the summary:
“The Advanced Theoretical Physics working group was a collaboration of contractors, scientists, and intelligence community officials devoted to uncovering the truth about the government’s involvement with UFOs, exotic technologies, and related phenomena. The group, formed and directed by Col. John B. Alexander in the mid 80’s”
But air brakes are so much cheaper.
Heh... gettin’ our geek on...
“the area of a circle is pi r squared uh and so if the circle had bumps in it or if it was topologically different in some way pi wouldn’t be pi pi would sort of be more variable in such circumstances something that you thought was a constant turns out to be variable”
Seems to me that the variable then in not Pi but rather R.
Gotta love those nine-dimensional rabbit holes. ;^)
30:01 · ...silver mind control...
that was in the YT generated transcript, it’s a small thing, but that is actually “Silva Mind Control”.
Not all radii are created equal.
String theory is the physics analogy to Climate Change.
No physicist is permitted to mock string theory! It must be accepted without question, even though there is zero experimental evidence for it. I don’t know if it’s true now, but for a time anyway only string theory physicists were offered tenure at major universities.
I taught freshman college physics for awhile. One of my colleagues nicknamed me “the experimentalist”. That was not meant as a compliment.
Another quibble — the photo shown here:
36:43 · and then there’s a there’s a caltech physicist named h.p robertson who forms kind of a panel
...is that of Luis Alvarez, not H.P. Robertson.
Big Science has always been the enemy of real scientific progress.
The institutions focus on defending their turf and their reputations—at all costs.
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