Jeffrey Grupp is a Buddhist philosopher, a political philosopher, and a lecturer at Purdue University Calumet and Purdue University Northcentral, both of which are in Northwest Indiana. He is the author of Corporatism (published by Progressive press, which is also Webster Tarpley’s publisher) and The Telescreen {not yet published). He has published twelve articles in academic philosophy journals (Metaphysica, Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies, Disputatio, among others), and he is a regular guest on the Nutrimedical Report, which is Dr. Bill Deagle’s radio show. Grupp is the former associate editor of the prestigious academic philosophy journal, PHILO (editor: Quentin Smith). Grupp is the originator of the mereological nihilist interpretation of quantum mechanics (published in Axiomathes in 2006), and he has written about issues to do with domination by global corporations around the world. He has two web sites: www.abstractatom.com, and www.corporatism.us. Grupp has said on national radio that his political views are entirely absent from his university teaching and his political philosophy and academic teaching do not ever mix because universities would not consider his political positions real or credible information. Grupp’s academic work in mainstream philosophy (specifically metaphysics, Buddhism, and quantum mechanics) has been claimed by Quentin Smith to be original and rigorous.
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Coast To Coast AM Wednesday August 8th, 2007 Developing Time Travel Professor of Physics at the Univ. of Conn., Dr. Ron Mallett shared his research into time travel. His interest in developing a time machine was brought about by the early death of his father and his desire to go back into the past and see him. Mallett’s concept for a time machine (see graphic below) centers around the idea that a circulating beam of light can cause a twisting of space and time, looping the past and future together. Travel into the past could only occur during the time frame that the machine had been turned on, as those are the moments that are “preserved,” he explained. For instance, if the machine was created in January 2008 and left on for a year, any month in 2008 could be visited in 2009. However, to go back further into time, he suggested that humans might eventually have access to et’s time machines which may have existed for thousands of years. Time machines could have practical uses as early warning devices, giving notice about catastrophes. While the cost to create one could run into the billions of dollars, Mallett said his first stage of experimentation would run about $250000. Once the basic principles can be established, it will take about five years to demonstrate the twisting of light with subatomic particles, and another five years for the twisting of space. He predicted that we could have human time travel by the end of this century. More Info & Links: www.coasttocoastam …
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Chicago; Pedro Ré, George Willis Ritchey; HALE OBSERVATORIES / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY; Pedro Ré and Whipple; ESA/INT/DSS2; HALE OBSERVATORIES / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY; Creative Commons License Michael Richmond; NASA; DAN SCHECHTER / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY; NASA/NCSA University of Illinois; Klaus Dolag (MPA, Garching; NASA, ESA and F. Summers (STScI); ESA/Hubble (M. Kornmesser & LL Christensen); CFHT (Jean-Charles Cuillandre), TWAN (Babak Tafreshi, Thad V’Soske); Tom Jarrett; Scott Kardel; © 2002 …
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Mars Science Laboratory – 2009-03-27 This animation demonstrates how the rover will enter, descend and land on the surface of Mars. Mars Exploration Rover Mission: marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov YouTube Play-list: www.youtube.com NASA’s twin robot geologists, the Mars Exploration Rovers, launched toward Mars on June 10 and July 7, 2003, in search of answers about the history of water on Mars. They landed on Mars January 3 and January 24 PST, 2004 (January 4 and January 25 UTC, 2004). Primary among …
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