AIAS and Telesio-Galilei

By atomicprecision


Subject: Fwd: AIAS and Telesio-Galilei
Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2008 11:54:57 EDT

Many thanks again to Kerry Pendergast and congratulations to the distinguished TGA Persident, Jeremy Dunning-Davies, on his 2008 Gold Medal and Prize at Craig y Nos on 7th July. JDD has written an excellent book on the pseudo-theological state of many parts of modern physics, which is indeed very expensive. The Gravity Probe B experiment for example cost nearly a thousand million dollars. However that was at least successful. LIGO and CERN cannot be said to have produced much of real interest, at a cost of say twenty thousand million dollars. That kind of money is need now for basic human needs.

Dear Myron, Please find below the latest page of Crystal Spheres.        Stephen sees relativity as a theory that postulates that the speed of light in a vacuum is the upper limit on the speed that any material body may acquire.  The motion of objects is relative motion for which the laws of physics retain their form for all observers.  The general theory of relativity describes frames of reference in arbitrary motion with respect to each other, but as formulated by Einstein, contains significant flaws.  In paper 93 of the AIAS unified field series Stephen’s suspicions were proven to be correct and the Einstein-Hilbert field equation was found to be mathematically incorrect.  Workers at AIAS are now exploring how the corrected mathematics brings new insights into cosmology and physics.           In 2007 AIAS workers came into contact with Jeremy Dunning-Daviesand quickly found Jeremy had similar views to the AIAS, that deterministic physics was being largely ignored by modern scientists and in that truth the contribution Einstein made to modern physics following his ‘ambush’ at the 1927 Solvay Conference had been hair brushed out of history. Jeremy was born in Barry in South Wales and his father was a teacher who, for twenty-six years, was headmaster of Barry Island Primary School.  Jeremy’s father was deeply involved with schoolboy football in the UK, being treasurer of the Welsh Schools Football Association and Chairman of the Schools International Board, the body in control of schoolboy football in the UK.  Jeremy attended Barry Boys’ Grammar School and left there to study mathematics at Liverpool University as a Derby Open Scholar.  After graduating, he took a PGCE before moving to Cardiff to study for a PhD under Peter Landsberg.  This proved a turning point in Jeremy’s life, since Peter Landsberg was a true authority on Thermodynamics and he instilled a deep and lasting interest in that subject that has stayed with Jeremy to this very day.  Jeremy moved to Hull University in 1966 to join the staff of the Applied Mathematics Department and transferred to the Physics Department in 2002.  In his career Jeremy has worked in a variety of areas following the topics that interested most at the time.  As a result he has collaborated with various people in a variety of countries and, in total has produced well over one hundred papers.  His most important contributions have been in thermodynamics, some of which came to the attention of the late Max Born.        Jeremy believes there are many controversial issues about in science at the present time and, in many cases, some legitimate views are being with-held from the public.  In addition, he asserts that flawed science is being fed to and accepted by the public on some important topics and this then determines where public money is being spent. In many cases the amounts of public money concerned are large to say the least and many outstanding scientists from many nations believe that much of this money is being wasted.  Jeremy is president of the Telesio-Galilei association which has been founded by Francesco Fucilla to promote open discussion in science and to celebrate the enlightened thought of Telesio and Galileo in bringing fresh ideas to the world.  The prime aim of this association is to promote openness in science and it is hoped that eventually the association will include scientists from all disciplines AND all persuasions. The ideal is to have calm, open discussion of all scientific matters so that we can genuinely forge ahead with our search for the truth. This may seem a lofty ideal but surely that should be the fundamental aim of science and of individual scientists – to search open-mindedly for the truth!  AIAS fully supports Francesco and Jeremy with these aims and many AIAS workers have joined this ‘Academy of Scientific Truth’.  In 2008 Jeremy was invited to become a fellow of AIAS and Francesco was given the honor of becoming the AIAS Chairman.  As a result AIAS was greatly strengthened in 2008 and Francesco’s entrepreneurial skills are being put to good use bring new devices, developed from theoretical advances made by AIAS workers, to the market place.   KerryÂ