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onawah
21st August 2013, 07:53
The NASA spacecraft Voyager 1 has provided scientists on earth with a series of theory-shattering surprises.

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Published on Aug 20, 2013


The NASA spacecraft Voyager 1 has provided scientists on earth with a series of theory-shattering surprises. The probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are now exploring the outer boundary of the Sun's domain, called the heliosphere. What the probes have encountered are not what the astronomers expected. Through a series of surprises, the astronomers have openly expressed their complete bafflement over the Voyager data.

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CD7
21st August 2013, 12:22
Quote The NASA spacecraft Voyager 1 has provided scientists on earth with a series of theory-shattering surprises. The probes Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are now exploring the outer boundary of the Sun's domain, called the heliosphere. What the probes have encountered are not what the astronomers expected. Through a series of surprises, the astronomers have openly expressed their complete bafflement over the Voyager data.



REALLY...BAFFLEMENT!!!!????? OMG

say it isn't so...it cant be!!!! <------------------------yes an overloaded amount of sarcasm with a hint of anger all blended well to make a concoction sure to nauseate :)


ITS all so classic....being told who what where we are-- the stars, sun, moon, planets are without really KNOWING a FUKIN THING. Welcome to the world of the incredibly ignorant who claim to know everything from pieces of scrap

Ernie Nemeth
21st August 2013, 16:21
At the beginning of the video there is quick mention of a scientist named Hannes Alfven. Well, you know that strange phenomenom when a certain scene or object or whatever suddenly brightens or drops from a shelf or otherwise becomes foremost in your awareness for no aparent reason but inside you know it is highly important? Long ago at a sidewalk sale one of his books, World's anti-Worlds jumped out at me from the midst of a pile of other works.

It was the beginning of my "anti-training". Until then I thought I was being taught the truth, that I could accept their authority without question. Cosmology was always my first love in terms of science. When I read this book I suddenly realized we were not being told the truth, only a majority-held opinion of what the truth might be. For me that changed everything. I was fourteen.

I am not surprised by mainstream science's surprise. Their idea of the cosmos is about to be turned on its ear, the ramifications of which will transform human understanding in many areas of science, not just cosmology.

TargeT
21st August 2013, 17:06
Wow, this data corroboration is a big win for the electric universe guys very cool!

now if we could just leverage some everyday usefulness out of this new idea of the universe.... (I think we can/will & it will be very dramatic) the implications of this are pretty obvious, wireless power transmission being just the start.


I suddenly realized we were not being told the truth, only a majority-held opinion of what the truth might be. For me that changed everything. I was fourteen.

I am not surprised by mainstream science's surprise. Their idea of the cosmos is about to be turned on its ear, the ramifications of which will transform human understanding in many areas of science, not just cosmology.


I didn't get to that point until about 25 :(

but once you realize that if you are TOLD something, it's definitely not the definitive truth, and through my own experiences very likely wrong; the world becomes (IMO) a very interesting and exciting place.

we use "knowledge" to make our self’s dumb, we use "experts" to keep us from learning ourselves... it's the leverage of a classic logical fallacy: Appeal to authority; one that we seem to have a particular weakness for.

onawah
21st August 2013, 22:51
I felt that way when I began watching vids by Nassim Haramein.
I have no intellectual grasp of physics, but the way he explained things made my concepts of the Universe come alive and become experiential, quite in contrast to the purely mechanical picture I was taught in school.
James MacCanney's views about comets was another step on that path for me.
It's amazing to me how much one's whole mind set, attitude, even one's very being can change with just a few basic revelations about how things really work.


When I read this book I suddenly realized we were not being told the truth, only a majority-held opinion of what the truth might be. For me that changed everything. I was fourteen.