Author Archive

The Diversity of Science: A Personal View of the Search for God

Written by Israel Lira

In one of his most famous works, Contact, the American astronomer, astrophysicist and cosmologist Carl Sagan (1934-1996) speculates in the guise of a novel on what would be the possible social, economic, political, philosophical, scientific and theological repercussions of receiving an interstellar message from a civilization more advanced than ours and one that could be within reach of our terrestrial radio telescopes; with the subsequent plausibility of being decoded and translated.

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Corruption of Modern Science: Light as Particles

Written by Claes Johnson

Modern Physics identified by quantum mechanics/atom mechanics as a revolution of classical non-atomistic continuum wave mechanics, was initiated by Max Planck (pictured) in 1900 with his mathematical derivation of the spectrum of blackbody radiation based on a concept of energy quanta hf (Joule) as discrete packets of energy with h=6,626070151034 Planck’s constant and a f a natural number (1,2,3,…) representing a frequency. 

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