religion
Suppression not the path to knowledge
Submitted by cybe on May 31, 2007 - 22:22The suppression of uncomfortable ideas may be common in religion and politics but it is not the path to knowledge.
It has no place in the evidence of science.
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The Scientific And Rationalist Case For Life After Death - An Interview with Michael Roll (1994) part 1/4
Submitted by cybe on May 31, 2007 - 15:02- Britain
- France
- 1800s
- Adrian Berry
- Albert Einstein
- CRT
- death
- duality
- establishment
- heaven
- laboratory
- life
- materialism
- Michael Roll
- money
- paranormal
- Prof. Charles Richet
- proof
- religion
- Ronald Pearson
- Sam Nicholls
- Sir Oliver Lodge
- Sir William Crookes
- soul
- television
- theory of relativity
- wave particle duality
- 1920s
- 1994
- ether
- experiment
- mathematics
- science
- spirituality
- video
- wave
Clip from "Die Wassermeister" / "Les Maîtres de l'Eau"
- Bad Ischl
- Austria
- Germany
- academic
- Alexander Lauterwasser
- ancient
- barrel
- civilization
- conduit
- flume
- Franz Fitzke
- Gert Folk
- Gunther Bachor
- h2o
- Jorg Schauberger
- Klaus Rauber
- log
- meander
- miracle
- Otmar Grober
- pollution
- Prof. Ralf Otterpohl
- religion
- resource
- screw
- Wolfram Schwenk
- documentary
- fish
- fractal
- horn
- implosion
- kudu
- pipe
- PKS
- research
- science
- spiral
- technology
- timber
- Viktor Schauberger
- water
This clip is from the documentary "Les Maîtres de l'Eau" which I found at:-
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/firefly/eau/
Please click download instead of play
Transcript:
...For certain scientists, research on water should go farther than problems about pollution. Documentary by Frantz Fitzke (Germany 2001 - 41mn) ZDF. Water which, in ancient civilizations and religions, was capable of miracles, has now become a trivial resource. Worse, science and technique do not consider its globality anymore, but only it's formula H2O. Some researchers have nevertheless launched original works, like Viktor Schauberger, considered as the father of modern research in this matter. He notably developed a theory along which water does not flow in straight lines, but in whirlpools, un a movement that ressembles that of a corkscrew. His revolutionary ideas inspired real applications. His students are for example working on new types of conducts, more reliable analysis processes, and better recycling systems. He is today followed and supported in his unorthodox methods by academics finally convinced than water is more than <gets cut>more than a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen. ..."
