Friday, September 28, 2018

In Search of the Phantom Tone w/ John Fenderson and John Judge interview of UFOs (fascist observatories)

Adam Gorightly, conspiracy researcher, interviews a scientist on the psychological phantom tone effect

John Judge interview


Did you read the pdfs I posted yet? Hiley explains that Heisenberg was wrong about uncertainty.
So Heisenberg thought the uncertainty was due to the measurement process relying on technology interfering with the quantum energy - since quantum energy is based on frequency. So the higher the resolution of the measurement, the higher the energy, which then limits what can be seen, since it interferes with the object being measured. As Hiley explains actually position-momentum uncertainty is from time-frequency uncertainty. But, as Alain Connes points out, as well as others, the time-frequency uncertainty is actually due to noncommutative phase.

So the noncommutative algebra is the new science to overcome this uncertainty relation - Hiley has been working with "weak measurements" which means directly measuring the quantum correlations "before" the "collapse" of the wave function into amplitude squared as the probability location. So the weak measurement is also what Feynman modeled as the advanced time trajectories - from the future - in the noncommutative phase "pre-space" as Hiley details.

The whole issue here is how time is measured. Science measures time geometrically - so the uncertainty is based on 4pi due to, the quantum spin as a sphere. Since it is noncommutative then it means the 1/2 spin has to take two rotations as 720 degrees to resolve to a symmetric measurement that overcomes the uncertainty relation. But in meditation we do not define time as a visual geometric measurement. So science has proven that listening is up to 10 times faster that time-frequency uncertainty - and so as Dr. Mae-Wan Ho points out - this is due to quantum phase coherence. Also Dr. William Bisalek (now professor at Princeton) points this out - as does quantum physicist Lawrence Domash (previously at Hampshire college) and as I mentioned, CIA mind control scientist Dr. Andrija Puharich. So "listening" as logical inference does directly overcome time-frequency uncertainty because it engages directly with the noncommutative phase as the 5th dimension, as the process of "pure time" as Professor Hiley calls it (referencing Hamilton).

So due to relativity even zero and infinity are "relative" whereas only the phase is superluminal - as Louis de Broglie figured out - for both quantum and relativity to be real, then there HAS to be "two" times - one from the future that is superluminal phase and one from the past. So "frequency" as a concept is defined by the logarithmic math but as math professor Luigi Borzacchini details, actually logarithmic math was created from music theory! And this music theory was wrong - as I have detailed as well - since it covered up the noncommutative phase logic. The Pre-Socratic music of Pythagoreans was the same as Daoist logic, and is the same as the oldest philosophy of India - the "three gunas."


Noncommutative phase is beyond digital and analog. To do some "remedial" reading of this thread - I quoted Fields Medal math professor Alain Connes on what the truth of reality is:
 
  Quote
Our brain is an incredible ...perceives things in momentum space of the photons we receive and manufactures a mental picture. Which is geometric. But what I am telling you is that I think ...that the fundamental thing is spectral [frequency]....And somehow in order to think we have to do this enormous Fourier Transform...not for functions but a Fourier Transform on geometry. By talking about the "music of shapes" is really a fourier transform of shape and the fact that we have to do it in reverse. This is a function that the brain does amazingly well, because we think geometrically....The quantum observables do no commute; the phase space of a microscopic system is actually a noncommutative space and that is what is behind the scenes all the time.
 Russian psychic military training podcast

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