What I'm Reading
18 years ago
General
The Universal One
by Walter Russell
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Russell
His periodic table (note it was written before the current elemental and isotope names were coined):
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanave.....89/russtbl.gif
Reading a page of this book is like pulling the curtain hiding a secret of reality. It's probably the most complex thing I've ever read or am likely to ever read and I'm really taking my time digesting the information and theories it presents.
If you've ever taken advanced chemistry or physics courses you can really appreciate this as it reveals why there are so many exceptions to the rules that govern these sciences; and why they are unnecessary. I as of yet have not found fault with anything he has presented, and since the book was written before the 1930's it's even more impressive given the incredible predictions regarding quantum physics that have only now been discovered.
If you can find a copy I highly recommend it, but be forewarned, this is not light reading and is written in a somewhat old fashioned dialect.
by Walter Russell
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Russell
His periodic table (note it was written before the current elemental and isotope names were coined):
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanave.....89/russtbl.gif
Reading a page of this book is like pulling the curtain hiding a secret of reality. It's probably the most complex thing I've ever read or am likely to ever read and I'm really taking my time digesting the information and theories it presents.
If you've ever taken advanced chemistry or physics courses you can really appreciate this as it reveals why there are so many exceptions to the rules that govern these sciences; and why they are unnecessary. I as of yet have not found fault with anything he has presented, and since the book was written before the 1930's it's even more impressive given the incredible predictions regarding quantum physics that have only now been discovered.
If you can find a copy I highly recommend it, but be forewarned, this is not light reading and is written in a somewhat old fashioned dialect.
FA+

This journal!
Add a proton... new element.
Add a proton... new element.
I dunno. Maybe they didn't know about that.
I wonder what he would of though about string theory.
Another reason to toss a music reference, I assume.
Float us a PDF file and we shall see.
Sometimes I with I could cram an extra hard drive into my head.