Acclaim for Subquantum Kinetics
"The book on subquantum kinetics by Paul
LaViolette is one of the first profound works in the investigation
of the physical vacuum. There are grounds to recommend this monograph
as a compulsory textbook for students of the physical sciences.
There is no doubt that this book is an outstanding contribution
to modern physics and that it will receive the attention and
appreciation of many thankful readers."
Evgeny Podkletnov,
Ph.D.
Professor of chemistry, Tech. D., Tampere, Finland
"Paul LaViolette's book is an admirable
and lucid account that open-minded scientists would do well to
examine carefully for its creative insights."
Dr. Eugene F. Mallove
Editor-in-Chief, Infinite Energy magazine
"This book has a great amount of references,... clear and
convincing criticisms of the big bang and contains an open discussion
of relevant modern physics topics. I recommend it to all people
interested in the foundations of science and in the deeper questions
of nature."
Andre
Koch Torres Assis, Ph.D.
Institute of Physics, State University of Campinas
Brazil
"Entropy perpetually increases in a closed system but the
system that we take as our physical world is not closed. This
is a very important part of the world view of Paul LaViolette,
whose work is highlighted and reviewed on several Open
SETI pages. Readers can use the website's search facility
to locate the key passages.
Briefly, LaViolette is an "astrophysicist"
whose work is not in the mainstream but has turned some very
important heads. I used the quotes because he earned his
Ph.D. in systems theory, although he has published in the field
of astrophysics, and has had access to the Very Large Array,
etc.
His several books comprise an elegant "theory
of everything", beginning with the dynamics of the subquantum
domain, showing how this generates subatomic particles and physical
fields, including gravitational fields, and their observed characteristics
and behaviors, building all the way to vast cosmological systems,
not failing to bring in human mythological systems along the
way. LaViolette accomplishes all this with just a very
few equations describing subquantum dynamics. That's it!
the result is breathtaking.
Now, for the purposes of answering your question,
I'll just say that for LaViolette, energy isn't just "there",
arising out of the mythical big bang and running down ever since.
Rather, it comes out of the subquantum domain constantly
and in accordance with specific principles and conditions. The
most important condition is the local gravitational density.
The greater it is, the more energy "comes out". This
"genic energy" is incredibly important for understanding
how astronomical objects work.
Important for us, here and now, because, living in a galaxy as
we do, we are subject to what LaViolette describes as "Galactic
Superwaves" - periodic galactic core explosions whose shock
waves have in the past and will continue to rampage through this
galaxy and all others.
Out of his theory, LaViolette lists numerous predictions,
which have been being fulfilled one by one ever since he originally
published. Many more have yet to be tested!"
Gerry
Zeitlin
March 16, 2005
Interview with Karmapolis.
"LaViolette's book [Subquantum Kinetics]
in which he discusses his Model G is a masterpiece.
Jérôme
Huck, Electric SpaceCraft Journal,
June 27, 2001.
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Paul LaViolette explaining subquantum kinetics and its novel
gravity-drive predictions at the New Hydrogen and Space Drives
Conference in Weinfelden, Switzerland, June 2001. Image in the
background illustrates the Belousov-Zhabotinski reaction.
"This book should be in every college
library... This reviewer strongly welcomes Dr. LaViolette's contribution
to a much better understanding of the many unexplained problems
in physics and a theory that can be used to unravel these long-standing
mysteries. This book is highly recommended.
Hal Fox, Editor,
Journal of New Energy
"His work is considered as a step into the 21st century.
We recommend Subquantum Kinetics to our readers."
Anthropos, volume 13, 1998
"Much of science is so specialized that
the research is performed and reported in a vacuum. It is always
refreshing to come across scientific thinkers who go beyond a
single discipline, who explore and explain how their model may
account for a wide range of phenomena. Paul LaViolette is such
a thinker.
His speculation about subquantum kinetics is
more than a theory. It may be a kind of doorway to more generous,
unified concepts than those we have been trying fruitlessly to
reconcile. Waves and particles, the relative and the absolute,
entropy and order, all fit into an exciting rudimentary new way
of seeing whole.
In one sense, the idea of a reactive-diffusive
ether is startling. However, as the reader explores this notion,
it begins to make sense. Once considered, it seems more intuitively
plausible than our familiar idea of dead and empty space. It
is more like our earliest sense of a living, breathing universe."
Marilyn
Ferguson, Author of The Aquarian Conspiracy
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