Thursday, August 27, 2015

Well, this is how a truly great tremendous discovery would happen. Without science.




There is something there.

SOMETHING IS THERE!

I know there is something there. Something I just have to find. I feel the resistance in my mind. Something that doesn't want me to make the discovery.

Whatever *IT* is wanted me to find it. That is why it got my attention. It made the pattern simple enough to get my attention. It wants me to solve the problem.

The kind of truly great discovery that doesn't need to be sold in order to become valuable.

No one can truly benefit from their own work in this country the United States. There is too much corruption that people refuse to recognize and too much organized crime. Anytime someone comes up with something valuable then the rodents - the Microsoft Corbis Bill Gates parasites - come out of the woodwork.

So a truly great discovery would negate those Microsoft Corbis Bill Gates parasites.










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106856/quotes

IMDb


Falling Down (1993)

Quotes


Sergeant Prendergast: Hey, Mr. Lee! D-FENS!










From 9/18/1960 ( premiere US TV series episode "General Electric Theater"::"The Man Who Thought for Himself" ) To 7/13/2010 ( premiere US film "Inception" ) is 18195 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/27/2015 is 18195 days



From 3/16/1991 ( my first successful major test of my ultraspace matter transportation device as Kerry Wayne Burgess the successful Ph.D. graduate Columbia South Carolina ) To 8/27/2015 is 8930 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 4/15/1990 ( premiere US TV series episode "The Simpsons"::"The Crepes of Wrath" ) is 8930 days



From 5/2/1988 ( premiere US TV series episode "Star Trek: The Next Generation"::"We'll Always Have Paris" ) To 8/27/2015 is 9978 days

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 2/26/1993 ( premiere US film "Falling Down" ) is 9978 days










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0586337/releaseinfo

IMDb


General Electric Theater (TV Series)

The Man Who Thought for Himself (1960)

Release Info

USA 18 September 1960

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0586337/

IMDb


General Electric Theater: Season 9, Episode 1

The Man Who Thought for Himself (18 Sep. 1960)

TV Episode

Ronald Reagan ... Himself - Host

Release Date: 18 September 1960 (USA)










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1375666/releaseinfo

IMDb


Inception (2010)

Release Info

USA 13 July 2010 (Hollywood, California) (premiere)



http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1375666/fullcredits

IMDb


Inception (2010)

Full Cast & Crew

Ken Watanabe ... Saito










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/the-crepes-of-wrath-1296/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 1 Episode 11

The Crepes of Wrath

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Apr 15, 1990 on FOX

Quotes


(Bart holds a cherry bomb in his hand.)

Milhouse: So, you're gonna flush it?

Bart: What can I say? I got a weakness for the classics.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/the-crepes-of-wrath-1296/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 1 Episode 11

The Crepes of Wrath

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Apr 15, 1990 on FOX

Quotes


Principal Skinner: Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, we have transcended incorrigible. I don't think suspension or expulsion will do the trick. I think it behooves us all to consider…deportation.

Marge: (Panicked) Deportation? You mean kick Bart out of the country?

Homer: Eh, hear him out, Marge.










http://www.tv.com/shows/the-simpsons/the-crepes-of-wrath-1296/trivia/

tv.com


The Simpsons Season 1 Episode 11

The Crepes of Wrath

Aired Sunday 8:00 PM Apr 15, 1990 on FOX

Quotes


(Bart tries to seek help from a French policeman after he is sent into town by Cesar and Ugolin, and he walks away dejected, because he couldn't communicate in French with the policeman.)

Bart: I'm so stupid. Anybody could have learned this dumb language by now. Here I've listened to nothing but French for the past (Speaking French) two months and I haven't learned a word. Wait! I'm talking French now. Incredible!










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106856/quotes

IMDb


Falling Down (1993)

Quotes


Bill Foster: I've passed the point of no return. Do you know what that is, Beth? That's the point in a journey where it's longer to go back to the beginning. It's like when those astronauts got in trouble. I don't know, somebody messed up, and they had to get them back to Earth. But they had passed the point of no return. They were on the other side of the moon and were out of contact for like hours. Everybody waited to see if a bunch of dead guys in a can would pop out the other side. Well, that's me. I'm on the other side of the moon now and everybody is going to have to wait until I pop out.

Beth: The police are here.










http://www.chakoteya.net/NextGen/124.htm

We'll Always Have Paris [ Star Trek: The Next Generation ]

Stardate: 41697.9

Original Airdate: 2 May, 1988


PICARD: Computer, this is Captain Picard.

COMPUTER: Holodeck three is clear.

PICARD: Location, Paris, Cafe des Artistes, as it appeared twenty two years ago. April the ninth










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0106856/releaseinfo

IMDb


Falling Down (1993)

Release Info

USA 26 February 1993










http://www.startrek.com/database_article/well-always-have-paris

STAR TREK


We'll Always Have Paris

Season 1 Ep. 23

Air Date: 05/02/1988



http://www.tv.com/shows/star-trek-the-next-generation/well-always-have-paris-19011/

tv.com


Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Episode 24

We'll Always Have Paris

Aired Unknown May 02, 1988 on CBS

Stardate: 41697.9 Picard meets an old flame, who is now married to a scientist that accidentally rips the fabric of space and inadvertently creates a new dimension.

AIRED: 5/2/88










http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=falling-down

Springfield! Springfield!


Falling Down (1993)


LITA: What's in Lake Havasu?
SANDRA: London Bridge.
LITA: Are you going to England?
PRENDERGAST: They moved it to Arizona.
-Stone by stone.
-Oh, yeah. I heard about that.
You're better off,
because cops get killed.
PRENDERGAST:
What'd we used to get, six?
SANDRA:
Seven.
Two sevens.
You all right?
Yeah.
You sure?
What?
I'm sorry, I wasn't gonna do this.
I should just shut up.
It's none of my business.
PRENDERGAST:
Tell me.
Lake Havasu?
It's nice. We like it.
She likes it.
What'll you do, watch cactus grow?
Cacti.
She's not handling
middle age too well.
The change of life and all that,
whatever it is that is.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: From: Kerry Burgess

Sent: Sunday, February 03, 2013 12:01 AM

To: 'Kerry Burgess'

Subject: Science

I read earlier today (now yesterday because midnight has passed in the few minutes I worked on this note) the article that this article references in the first paragraph.

I think about the notion that great discoveries with telescopes was easy when telescopes were a new invention.





http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/feb/03/teamwork-science-transforming-the-world

theguardian


In science today, a genius never works alone

Future discoveries are more likely to be made by scientists sharing ideas than a lone genius

Athene Donald

The Observer, Saturday 2 February 2013


It's a brave man who claims "genius in science has become extinct". But that's exactly what psychologist Dean Keith Simonton declared in Nature magazine. By this, he meant that neither the creation of a totally new discipline nor a revolution in scientific thought was likely to be forthcoming as the result of the work of a future lone heroic genius. If such radical developments were to occur, they would emerge from the work of large teams, he argued. Thus the world was unlikely to produce a further Newton, Einstein or Darwin and he saw this as a tragic failing.

I tend to agree with his analysis of how future discoveries will be made, with the possible exception of purely theoretical challenges: think of Andrew Wiles and his proof of Fermat's last theorem as one exception that proves the rule. But for experimental sciences, a lone researcher transforming the world is harder to imagine. No individual can sit down at a bench and nail down the existence of the Higgs boson; the Large Hadron Collider is needed with its concomitant community of researchers. Even the theory predicting the existence of the Higgs boson was not done solely by Peter Higgs. Although his alone was the name attached to the putative particle, several others had similar ideas at around the same time.

But does this matter? I don't think it does. The heroic genius was always something of a myth, convenient shorthand to make it easier to make a narrative out of the act of discovery; an exciting tale, but not a very accurate depiction of how science and scientists operate. Newton wrote: "If I have seen a little further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants", recognising that his discoveries did not come about in isolation. Why should discovery need to be the work of a single mind to make it exciting? It will be just as important whether it is the product of one brain or one thousand.

Concentrating on the brilliance of an individual is to falsify the nature of most scientific research and mislead the aspiring scientist as to how discoveries are usually made. Why should it be attractive to the young to believe they need to be solitary workers – the white-coated, wild-haired boffin of too many films – if they are to succeed? Some scientists might fit that picture, but far fewer than you'd believe from their media portrayals and it's an image likely to be off-putting to many.

Science progresses because people become expert in what is already known and then debate, argue, try something out and then something else when the first doesn't fit. It progresses because people reject or refine hypotheses as they learn about colleagues' and rivals' work and because people both share ideas and compete. Out of such endeavours novel ideas emerge and new fields develop.

Perhaps there will be more geniuses in the future, perhaps not. Science will always attract people with astonishing minds. But these will never be as important as the broader social structures of science, let alone as important as they think they are. Fundamentally, what matters is that, as a society, we continue to push at the boundaries of scientific knowledge in whatever way is appropriate for the challenge in hand.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 03 February 2013 excerpt ends]










http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1375666/quotes

IMDb


Inception (2010)

Quotes


Eames: If we are gonna perform Inception then we need imagination.










JOURNAL ARCHIVE: Posted by H.V.O.M at 2:20 PM Saturday, July 30, 2011


Papers





I had an incredibly vivid dream earlier this morning that I awoke from and thought about writing down but decided not to. I thought about writing about it specifically because it was so vivid. There was no kind of dream quality to it. The details were vivid and it seemed no different from a strong memory that I can sit here write now and think about it my conscious mind.

Many of those vivid details have diminished now and that makes me feel kind of sad because I wish I could remember it as well as I did in the dream.

I decided to write about it because I just read the word 'tartan' in a news article and for some reason, that word made me think of the dream. The word itself is the opposite of a prevailing detail in the dream which was the color of a long overcoat worn the state security police of the country I was in.

The only part about the dream that wasn't vivid was the part at the beginning. I have thought about it since then and the details for the most part escape me but I seem to have been in a panic, at least in my mind. There was something about my cover being exposed and that created a life-and-death danger for me personally and I cannot recall the all the detail but there was something about me running through the streets to get someplace.

I seemed to be going to the airport. I passed by a lot of people and I think a lot of people standing in lines. I saw a group of people in plain red overcoats, and hats too, I think, but those details have also diminished. I might have been running by them or that sense of running just represents a sense of urgency in my mind that I needed to escape before getting caught.

I went by that group of people and a person, who I recognized as a person with the state security forces of that country, and I think I was in Russia, stepped away from the group and said to me, "Papers" as he walked up to me.

I had seen others like him and he was identifiable by the long overcoat he was wearing that was just a plain color of wool and a sort of yellowish color. It wasn't yellow but I cannot think of the color that would be called.

I am standing there and he is examining my identity cards. He tells me I haven't paid my bill for my hotel and I tell him it is charged to my credit and so my documents must have listed that on there because he says, "American Express," as though that is the explanation.

The other details are vague but we might have talked more or there was just more drama to it. Ah, yes, my presence as an American did not seem unusual. That detail was established right off because he asked if I was an American just after he asked for my papers and I think I said something that prompted him to ask if I am American. After he examined my documents, I think his precise words were "Well, the airport is right there" and he gestured behind him and that was the airport. Maybe a parking garage that was part of the facility.

I think he was going to escort me to the gate for my flight but there seemed to be some confusion and I just stood there and I saw him walking away through some passageways in a building nearby. Then I started trying to find my way to the gate for my aircraft flight and the details were all very vivid and I was seeing four digits numbers that were always in a combination of three. Even after waking up from the dream, I never did remember any precise numbers from that particular dream, which I thought about as well because I have done that before. Those numbers were similar to nnnn, nnnn, nnnn. The numbers were always four digits and were always in groups of three. Those combinations were what I was studying as I was trying to find the gate for my flight, because I think that was printed on a document I had in my hand but I don't recall that now for certain if I was holding a document with those numbers on it. That would make sense though because how else would I know. So I was having trouble with it though because I could not distinguish a pattern in the numbers I was seeing on the walls as I walked around. Those numbers were just about everywhere. The occurrence of those combination of numbers was in a frequency not unlike I have seen while serving on United States Navy warships.

So finally I seemed to have reached my destination or I was very close to figuring out how to get there and something about how I write this sentence doesn't seem right. But I think I was close to where I wanted to go. The point of this observation though is that I examined my documents, for the first time I think, and I noted that something was missing. There should have been two cards in the documents, similar to credit cards and such, and that should have been in a sleeve similar to the aircraft ticket that the airlines issue. But those cards were gone. I was aware that I could not get on the flight unless I had those cards. There was also a lingering uncertainty in my that I was going to miss the flight and it would take off without but that detail is never confirmed in the dream. I had the sense that I did have enough time though. So anyway I stood there looking at the documents and I might have awoken abruptly and non-startlingly at that point. At some point, that seems to be in my waking mind, I decided that the state security officer, of the government of Russia, the state police or whatever those national forces are called, had taken those cards out when he examined by documents. I woke with the sense, calming considering the drama of the dream because I was thinking in the dream I was there as a covert intelligence agent of the United States of America and I didn't want them to know that, that he had simply taken the cards and was going to escort me to the gate and he was probably standing there at the gate with my cards which would allow me to board the flight.


[JOURNAL ARCHIVE 30 July 2011 excerpt ends]



































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- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 06:01 AM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Thursday 27 August 2015