The
time will inevitably come when mechanistic and atomic thinking
will be put out of the minds of all people of wisdom, and instead
dynamics and chemistry will come to be seen in all phenomena.
When that happens, the divinity of living Nature will unfold
before our eyes all the more clearly.
Johann
von Goethe, 1812
The time
spoken of has now come.
Discover subquantum kinetics.
Simulation of subquantum kinetics
Model G showing an electric potential ZPE fluctuation forming
a neutrally charged subatomic particle. The amplitude of
the X and Y variables corresponds to electric potential and the
amplitude of the G variable corresponds to gravity potential.
Click above to activate.
Starburst conducts research on subquantum
kinetics, a new microphysics methodology that has successfully
solved many of the problems that presently confront physics and
astronomy. Its approach was inspired from general system
theory and from concepts that were originally developed to explain
the formation of chemical wave patterns in certain nonlinear
chemical reaction systems. Subquantum kinetics applies
these wave-order generating concepts to give an entirely new
approach to understanding physical phenomena. It
expands the scope of physics with the awareness that our material
universe of subatomic particles, fields, and energy waves is
a part of a larger higher dimensional whole that remains inaccessible
to direct sensory perception. Subquantum kinetics is simple and
elegant. Using a set of five nonlinear equations having
three variables, it presents a rigorous unitary description of
the physical world accounting for all force fields and relativistic
effects in a unified manner. Its
systems approach brings a new common sense understanding of physical
concepts and heals the schism that has traditionally separated
physics from the life sciences. It changes the limits of
what was once thought to be possible and opens up new possibilities
for the development of technologies in energy generation and
aerospace propulsion that could better our world. Details
about this new physics are presented in Dr. LaViolette's books
Subquantum Kinetics
(technical) and Genesis
of the Cosmos (general readership).
Chemical waves like those appearing above
in the Belousov- Zhabotinskii reaction can provide valuable insights
into how matter and energy quanta arise from the reactive ether.
Image courtesy of A. Winfree.
A video showing chemical waves
forming
in the Belousov-Zhabotinskii reaction.
The electric potential wave pattern forming
a subatomic particle is a dissipative structure that emerges
from a subquantum nonequilibrium reaction-diffusion etheric medium.
The physics of subquantum kinetics views the universe as
an open
system.
Nobel Laureate Hans
Bethe agreed to sponsor LaViolette's paper to have it posted
to the Cornell electronic preprint archive arxiv.org.
About this Pioneer effect prediction, Bethe conveyed to
LaViolette that he felt that LaViolette "may have something
there" and that he "doesn't know of anyone else who
has proposed something similar."
Mike Hagen's Radio Orbit talk show interview with Dr. Paul LaViolette discussing
subquantum kinetics, galactic superwaves, and physics establishment
repression
(January 23, 2005) (2 hours 4 min)
Should the communication to the scientific
community of innovative research be blocked by a small clique
of physicists just because it differs from conventional thinking?
The publicly funded internet archive
arXiv.org is currently practicing such frivolous censorship.
Visit archivefreedom.org to learn more about this and to help bring about
a change.