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The Holographic Universe (Part One)

The Holographic Universe (Part One)

¿Cómo desarrolló EE.UU. la bomba nuclear? En su discurso, denominado 'Los recuerdos de la era nuclear: Los Álamos', Glauber, de 87 años de edad, compartió sus recuerdos sobre la serie de investigaciones científicas realizadas por EE.UU. durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial, conocidas bajo el nombre el Proyecto Manhattan. Cuando empezó a participar en el proyecto, era estudiante de Harvard y tenía 18 años, la edad en la que los jóvenes estadounidenses eran reclutados por el Ejército. En aquel entonces muchos de sus profesores ya se habían ido a trabajar para varios proyectos militares. Lo único que le dijeron los hombres "vestidos de negro" que se pusieron en contacto con él, era que tenía que coger un tren con destino a Chicago y llamar desde allí por teléfono a alguien que debía entregarle un billete a Santa Fe. Según las palabras de Glauber, para sorpresa suya, resultó que el hombre que vino a buscarle en la estación de destino era John von Neumann, uno de los fundadores de la mecánica cuántica. "Me quedé conmocionado.

Holographic Universe Workshops TIME TRAVEL MULTIVERSE DOCUMENTARY Everything is Sound and Light Water, molecularly comprising ~98% of the Human Instrument[i], , holds life together and behaves in a similar way to space, the medium for the slowest and densest forms of Light and Sound. Space functions as an oceanic medium for subtle particles and frequencies in a similar manner to Source Intelligence[ii], the Quantum Field that interfaces between Source and individualized consciousness. This field is the medium through which primeval Sound and Light is holographically refracted into intercoiled states and wave-patterns. This text explores the similarities between these three media (water, space, quantum field) through the lenses of science and esoteric traditions. Underlying correspondences are revealed which may begin to reconcile fundamental discord in current understandings of science and consciousness. As we will see, emerging physics are revealing a unified field created and sustained through dynamic geometric forms. Cube of Space (10^94gm/cm^3)[iii] [xii] [xviii] [xxv]

El Universo Elegante - La teoria de cuerdas - 01 El sueño de Einstein (Completo) El Universo Viajar en el Tiempo 5ta Temporada Kardashev scale The Kardashev scale is a method of measuring a civilization's level of technological advancement, based on the amount of energy a civilization is able to utilize. The scale has three designated categories called Type I, II, and III. A Type I civilization uses all available resources on its home planet, Type II harnesses all the energy of its star, and Type III of its galaxy. Definition[edit] Type I "Technological level close to the level presently attained on earth, with energy consumption at ≈4×1019 erg/sec (4 × 1012 watts) Type II "A civilization capable of harnessing the energy radiated by its own star (for example, the stage of successful construction of a Dyson sphere), "with energy consumption at ≈4×1033 erg/sec Type III "A civilization in possession of energy on the scale of its own galaxy, with energy consumption at ≈4×1044 erg/sec Current status of human civilization[edit] where value K is a civilization's Kardashev rating and P is the power it uses, in watts. Energy development[edit]

Mathematicians Predict the Future With Data From the Past | Wired Enterprise Peter Turchin. Image: Peter Turchin. In Isaac Asimov’s classic science fiction saga Foundation, mathematics professor Hari Seldon predicts the future using what he calls psychohistory. Drawing on mathematical models that describe what happened in the past, he anticipates what will happen next, including the fall of the Galactic Empire. That may seem like fanciful stuff. Turchin — a professor at the University of Connecticut — is the driving force behind a field called “cliodynamics,” where scientists and mathematicians analyze history in the hopes of finding patterns they can then use to predict the future. These academics have the same goals as other historians — “We start with questions that historians have asked for all of history,” Turchin says. ‘We start with questions that historians have asked for all of history. — Peter Turchin Turchin didn’t begin as a historian. He founded the movement in the late ’90s, and since then, many more have joined in. The basic idea is nothing new.

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