pshs04

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pshs04

pshs04

@pshs04

Articles, donate here: https://t.co/KN8cizuKDy Papers: https://t.co/Kpo0MFKJ2B Dogma is the death of intelligence. Currently farming. 2046.

Sweden Katılım Kasım 2024
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pshs04
pshs04@pshs04·
Reminder that my public goal in life is production of super medicines, sustainable sci-fi like settlements, a new food distribution system, and turning the entire planet into a dense humid mutant rainforest-savannah mosaic thriving with trout, oversized alien plants, and enormous mammals. My research into pyramids, physics, free energy, the pole shift, my degree in electric engineering are simple consequences of it, things I need to do or know, as tools on the way there. This is why my range of interests seem so "broad"; I literally just want to do radical terraforming-druidism and forest keeping. My goal has never changed. It never will. This is what I want to study and do until the day I die and I will achieve it through any means possible. Everything else is a tool, and I do not care what happens to society or culture as long as humanity advances into its brightest possibility of the human being as a free, creative shepherd of life. Keep this in mind as you peruse my profile. My previous pyramid research pinned post: x.com/pshs04/status/…
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pshs04@pshs04

I'm speechless. I had saved this russian study for later as I've gotten busy with private things after my papers... I'm getting back on the grind in a week or so with my WIP physics paper and pyramid stuff. nobulart.com/pyramidal-stru… nobulart.com/the-pyramid-th…

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Bryan Johnson
Bryan Johnson@bryan_johnson·
The world wants me to die. My incurable disease diagnosis became global news. It was omnipresent on social media and 1,900 articles were written in a matter of days. Many were saddened. However, joy dominated the commentary. People pointed to schadenfreude, the pleasure of another's failure. Yes, there’s that. There is a special place in people’s hearts that loves to see others fail, especially when that person’s presence threatens their own psychological stability in some way or helps them feel better about themselves. But, if you look over the social media commentary about me, you’ll see that pattern: “he deserved it.” I deserved it because I challenged death. The crowd was running a deeply rooted psychological script that represents the oldest, most deeply embedded stories of human culture. This was the first story ever written down, 4,000 years ago. Gilgamesh sought eternal life after losing someone he loved, only to have the plant of youth stolen by a serpent as he bathed. Leaving him to accept his mortality. Asclepius became so skilled at rejuvenation that he raised the dead. As punishment, Zeus struck him down with a thunderbolt to enforce life and death authority. This is the story of Jesus. Pontius Pilate offered a choice between a thief and the immortalist, and the crowd demanded the execution. People need this story conclusion to keep themselves sane. The challenger must lose and the loss must appear deserved. It’s a shield of self preservation. For if death is inevitable, their existence and that of their loved ones is justified and unavoidable. If death is not inevitable, nothing about their reality is safe. I occupy the same philosophical and archetypal position as Gilgamesh, Asclepius and Jesus. This statement will draw outrage and accusations of blasphemy, hubris and narcissism. Nevertheless, it’s the pattern that has repeated itself for thousands of years. Death has been the omnipresent concern of the human race. It encapsulates our greatest fears, joy and curiosities. The discourse around it changes over time; however, the fundamentals remain unchanged. What’s different about this moment, that is unlike any other moment, is that physical death may no longer be inevitable. What if I didn’t deserve it? And what if I am your ally, and not a threat?
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Trevor Hawke
Trevor Hawke@TrevorHawkeHRG·
Here is an update on my Qorikancha megalithic concrete recipe! Genuine pillowed masonry, with authentic syneresis “nubs” that glow under UV🎯 This mix pours like honey, and becomes workable clay in 25 minutes🗿 Exploring casting ideas as well😎 #geopolymer #natrontheory
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pshs04
pshs04@pshs04·
Cleverly masking willful ignorance in clever language doesn't make it wisdom, It makes it cleverly stupid.
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pshs04@pshs04·
bioticregulation.ru Anastasia Makarieva and her now deceased partner were the effective inheritors of Vernadsky, taking his work into climate, biotic Pump, population scales, DNA etc. Highly recommend their work.
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pshs04
pshs04@pshs04·
"....The system of our reality appears to be the following one: Consciousness generates entropy through free will, and then collaborates with resonance to generate cosmic order in thermodynamic systems... To frame humanity as a victim of chance or as doomed by entropy is to ignore humanity’s role as the current sovereign negotiator, tasked not with being terrorized by physical chaos, but reshaping and harmonizing with it, as our minds are a mechanism of redistribution of energy." More in the post.
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ArchaeoHistories
ArchaeoHistories@histories_arch·
For over a thousand years, historians thought the Viking "sunstone" was nothing more than a myth, until the ocean gave up its secret... The Norse sagas repeatedly referenced a mysterious object called a "sólarsteinn" or sunstone, a navigational tool so powerful that Viking sailors could locate the exact position of the sun even on the most overcast and cloudy days. For centuries, scholars debated whether this was real technology or simply folklore embellished over generations of retelling. Most assumed it was legend. They were wrong. In 2013, marine archaeologists excavating a British warship that sank near the Channel Islands in 1592 made a stunning discovery buried among the wreckage. Alongside navigational instruments including a pair of dividers and a slate, they found a rectangular chunk of translucent crystal. Testing confirmed it was Iceland spar, a remarkably pure form of calcite with extraordinary optical properties. The fact that it was found stored alongside other precision navigation tools was not a coincidence. Iceland spar possesses a property called birefringence, meaning it splits a single beam of light entering the crystal into two separate beams. When you hold the crystal up toward the sky and slowly rotate it, the two beams will vary in brightness independently until, at one specific angle of rotation, they become perfectly equal in intensity. That precise angle points directly toward the sun, regardless of whether the sun is visible to the naked eye. Cloud cover, fog, and even twilight conditions cannot defeat it. Researchers from the University of Rennes in France conducted extensive testing and published their findings in the Proceedings of the Royal Society A. Their experiments demonstrated that Iceland spar could locate the sun's position with an accuracy of within one degree, even under completely overcast skies. For Viking navigators crossing the North Atlantic toward Iceland, Greenland, and eventually North America, this accuracy would have meant the difference between a successful voyage and sailing hopelessly off course into open ocean. The Viking Age spanned roughly 793 to 1066 AD, and during this period Norse sailors were completing oceanic crossings that would not be replicated by other European cultures for another 400 years. Historians had long puzzled over how they achieved such consistent navigational precision without magnetic compasses, which did not reach Europe until the 12th century. The sunstone appears to be a significant part of that answer. What makes the Channel Islands find especially compelling is that the 1592 shipwreck is far outside the traditional Viking era, suggesting that knowledge of this navigational technique survived and was still being used by European sailors centuries after the Viking Age officially ended. The crystal was not a relic or a curiosity on that ship. It was working equipment. The sagas specifically describe King Olaf consulting a sunstone on a cloudy day to verify the position of the sun, with a separate observation then confirming the stone's accuracy. For generations this was dismissed as poetic invention. Science has now confirmed that every element of that description is physically possible and practically achievable with a simple piece of Icelandic calcite. The Vikings were not lucky explorers stumbling across new lands by accident. They were sophisticated navigators armed with technology so elegant and effective that it required no moving parts, no maintenance, and no power source beyond the sky itself. 📷 : the original calcite crystal alongside Elizabethan navigation dividers next to a cannon Alderney Museum #archaeohistories
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Mr Wolf
Mr Wolf@DamonRiddle3·
@marceelias Don’t worry. I tell ppl that you’re a threat to our democracy everyday
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Marc E. Elias
Marc E. Elias@marceelias·
Many of you are asking how you can help me. My only ask is this: Spread the word about the threats to democracy and how we can fight back. Tell everyone to subscribe to Democracy Docket and share its content. Thanks. bit.ly/4a7l1TR
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Stephanie Buchanan
Stephanie Buchanan@stephXskystory·
For a 1-day, 104° displacement: required mean torque is ~ 1.8e28 N·m 10% chi-r lobe peak is ~ 6.7e27 N·m 10% chi-c lobe peak is ~ 5.1e27 N·m In this screen, those amplitudes sit above the tested CMB magnetic-stress bounds. So, splitting the geomagnetic term doesn't make the fastest displacement cases easy. The month to year cases are less severe than the 1-day / 1-week cases, but they still need at least one of the following: stronger coupling physics, a more favorable anisotropy tensor, a different mass/phase redistribution, or a larger physically justified magnetic-stress mechanism.
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pshs04
pshs04@pshs04·
I have a saved description of the tree of life from the Enoch texts in my notes. “Its height is like a fir, its leaves resemble the Carob (carob, locust, false acacia). Its fruit hangs in clusters like grapes from the vine and are very beautiful, and its fragance can be detected from a long way off. Its leaves and blossoms seem to last forever, and the fruit resembles the dates of a palm. It survives in the High mountains of Old lebanon, 7366 BC. Its fruit will be a food which is a means of life. It will give a long life, with no illness, pain, and the fragance will penetrate the bones, and no plague will touch.” Here’s some candidates I’ve found.
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Alex Veremeyenko
Alex Veremeyenko@alex_verem·
The biggest scam humanity has collectively accepted as normal, according to Claude
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Bruce R. Fenton
Bruce R. Fenton@GenomicSETI·
Ok so it turns out the entire core of the mainstream consensus theory of human brain evolution, being driven by natural selection for intelligence, is bogus. The new model is a totally random lucky accident. I have a different alternative hypothesis - they won't like it though.
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History Content
History Content@HistContent·
A Roman drinking cup in the British Museum turns green in reflected light and glowing red when lit from behind. The secret, discovered only decades ago, is gold and silver nanoparticles, genuine nanotechnology built 1,700 years before anyone had a word for it.
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Brian Roemmele
Brian Roemmele@BrianRoemmele·
INFRARED LIGHT: Tiny Molecular Jackhammers Vibrate Cancer Cells to Destruction Advanced Science and related university research (e.g., Rice/TAMU echoes) show that Molecules that vibrate powerfully under near-infrared light tore apart cancer cell membranes achieving 99% kill rate in lab tests and cancer-free outcomes in half of treated mice. Mechanical disruption bypasses other therapies and is a potential game-changer for all and hard-to-treat cancers. nature.com/articles/s4155…
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