CREATIVE PHYSICS AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE SPHENOID BONE

Aesthetics of future sphenoid technology by Professor Robert Pope

July 2007

Published by The Science-Art Research Centre of Australia

(An Australian Government Approved Research Institute)

PO BOX 733 Murwillumbah. NSW 2484 Australia.

Email pope@science-art.com.au

www.science-art.com.au

ISBN 978-0-9803702-3-2 


 

The shape of the human skull is now undergoing yet another evolutionary change. A global epidemic of children’s lower teeth non aligning with the upper jaw is occurring. This is being corrected by a process called ‘Dental Aesthetics’ in which the changing skull vibrations are transmitted to the children’s lower teeth, which then realign themselves to become compatible with the newly evolving skull shape. As well as changes to the jaw line there are also changes to the ‘aesthetics’ associated with human vision. The optics associated with the evolving properties of human vision can be seen to obey an 18th Century Theory of Science, reviewed by Hamburg University scholars as far surpassing anything ever written in the world literature concerning a systematic outline of logic.

It is beyond the scope of this paper to explain how evolving optical aesthetics becomes part of quantum biological science. This proposed worldview concept was deemed relevant for mention in the June 2007 volume of the journal NeuroQuantology, by Huping Hu and Maoxin Wu, titled On Dark Matter and How Mind Influences Brain Through Proactive Spin. The late Dr George R Cockburn, Royal Fellow of Medicine (London) as the Science-Art Centre’s Bio-Aesthetician published his book A Bio-Aesthetic Key to Creative Physics and Art in May 1984 during the Centre’s development of life energy mathematics. His optics has been considered to be compatible with Bernard Bolzano’s Theory of Science. Bolzano’s Theory of Science logic has been extrapolated into modern fractal logic.

In the book The Beauty of Fractals - Images of Complex Dynamical Systems, H.-O. Peitgen - P. H. Richter, Professor Gert Eilenberger wrote a chapter titled Freedom, Science and Aesthetics, upgrading quantum mechanics by correcting the work of Immanuel Kant, echoing an aspect of Bolzano’s research methodology. Both Cockburn and Eilenberger can be considered to give artistic images the power of demonstrating that from research, a link can be made between science and aesthetic emotion.

It is held that the Creative Physics involved was alluded to by the French mathematician Henri Poincare who consistently argued that aesthetics was more important in mathematical discovery that logic. Several years ago it was discovered that the some fractal images and some paintings over the centuries, when viewed through ChomaDepth 3D glasses, exhibit a holographic-like image, a property predicted in Dr Cockburn’s writings about a new world theory of art. This phenomenon has been referred to within arts literature as superseding the discoveries of artistic perspective that underlined the Science-Art theories of the Florentine Renaissance.

Bernard Bolzano’s 18th Century scientific theories were an extension of the logic that once upheld the ancient Greek ethical science. During the 11th, 12th and 13th Centuries the Islamic Translator School in Todedo, Spain became the greatest centre for scientific knowledge in the world. Surrounded by Islamic infighting, Christian, Jewish and Islamic scholars were protected and encouraged to translate ancient Greek writings in order to bring about a rebirth of the lost Greek science. With Islamic assistance the Florentine Renaissance emerged to carry on that quest. However, the Italian Renaissance failed in its attempt to bring about a rebirth of the lost Greek science. In Australia, during the late 20th Century, the soul force optics of the Translator School were employed to modify the optics key to Leonardo da Vinci’s Theory of knowledge. The writings of life force optical theories of Plato, the Jewish philosopher Philo and the Father of Optics, Al Haitham were among the writings that assisted in identifying the physics principles upholding the ancient Greek ethical science.

When the optical theories from the Toledo Translator School were used to correct Leonardo’s worldview, it became possible to predict a vast new science and technology. This was given theoretical credence by the 1991 Nobel Prize in Physics. In the following year an international team of scientists developing the Nobel Prize theory, discovered the previously predicted new science. The principal discoverer, Professor Barry Ninham, later appointed as the Italian National Chair in Chemistry, wrote that the Centre’s work embraced a revolution of thought as important to science and technology as the Copernican and Newtonian revolutions.

During 1979 China’s most highly awarded physicist, Kun Huang, outlined a methodology of research to the Science-Art Centre in Australia. Huang was familiar with the ancient Greek ethical science and had tried to explain to his colleague Albert Einstein and other framers of the 20th Century worldview, that they had based its governing law upon completely false assumptions. He explained that the Greek science had been based upon the logic of Golden Mean geometry which linked the living process to the workings of an infinite universe. This idea was incomprehensible within the 20th Century worldview which held that all the heat in the universe must eventually be lost in cold space. Einstein’s Premier Law of all Science, was this Universal Heat Death Law, and of course it demanded that all biological sciences could only be about species moving toward an inevitable universal heat death. Therefore, it was impossible for the evolutionary process to extend to infinity. Overwhelming evidence from new discoveries is now collapsing that worldview.

Kun Huang suggested that Golden Mean geometry could be found within the world’s sea shell fossil record and by observing the patterning changes over evolutionary time periods, the physics laws guiding evolution might be identified. During the 1980s the Australian Science-art Centre had several sea shell life force papers published by Italy’s leading scientific journal, Il Nuovo Cimento. Two of these papers, written by the Centre’s mathematician Chris Illert were selected from the 20th Century world literature for reprinting by the SPIE Milestone Series in Washington. That organization is considered to be the world’s leading research institute. In 1995 the papers won a physics first prize in Europe, internationally acclaimed for the discovery of new physics laws governing optimum biological growth and development though space-time. Professor Illert’s work can be considered to be one of the great milestones in the history of biological science.

The theory of science by the mathematician Bernard Bolzano, was written to correct a fundamental error within the translation of the ancient Greek Science for Ethical Ends made by the philosopher Immanuel Kant. Kant’s limited work is called ‘Aesthetics’ relevant to art appreciation theory and Bolzano‘s work can be considered to be about an art appreciation science. It is now possible to reunite science and art in order to bring about a genuine rebirth of the lost Greek Science for Ethical Ends. The Toledo School’s optics were found to be compatible with Bolzano’s science. The reviews of Bolzano’s work by German scholars, who found it to be a superior worldview logic, opens up new scientific vistas. Such values as love beauty, wisdom, justice and compassion, the fundamental virtues woven into the fabric of the lost Greek science, can now be fused into our scientific thinking. This does not completely negate the laws associated with universal chaos but rather balances them to provide a biologically friendly future rather than one of a chaos of accelerating destruction that condemns all life to extinction.

The general thrust of the ancient art appreciation physics is not difficult to explain. It could be considered that the movement of the moon about the earth was held to influence the female fertility cycle. This movement was considered to be musically harmonic. Therefore the ethics of a mother’s love and compassion for children might be explained by a science of particle movement linked to human musical appreciation. In his unpublished paper The Vegetation of Metals, Sir Isaac Newton wrote of his conviction that a more profound natural philosophy existed to balance the mechanical description of the universe and that its basic principles would be derived from particle movement. Newton dared not publish this during his lifetime, even today this work is referred to as Newton’s Heresy Science.

Western science originated in ancient Greece. During the 5th Century BC. The philosopher Anaxagoras was imprisoned for declaring that the sun was not a god but a red-hot stone and the moon reflected its light. Released from prison, he established the basis of a scientific research methodology, which led to the establishment of Western science during the 3rd Century BC. Anaxagoras proposed that a whirling force called the Nous, acted upon primordial particles in space to construct the physical worlds and evolve intelligence.

For some three hundred years the Platonic tradition of Greek philosophy attempted to fuse ethics into the Nous in order to develop a Science for Ethical Ends. Cicero the Roman lawyer in the 1st century BC recorded for posterity, that in the 3rd Century BC, Epicurus, who taught a science of ‘universal love’ based upon harmonic atomic movement, was called ‘The Saviour’. Cicero noted that the science was being taught throughout Italy and as far away as Turkey. Pythagoras taught about the ‘Music of the Spheres’ and Plato described the heavens in terms of musical ratios. Aristotle linked celestial movement to ethical wisdom within the functioning of his 5th element of quintessence.

In Greece there existed a concept that universal musical harmonics contained a geometry that extended to infinity. Because human emotion responded to it, humans were thought to possess an immortal soul, functioning in harmony with Aristotle‘s fifth element, the essence of Quintessence. The infinite geometry was the precursor of modern fractal geometrical logic and the transfer of wisdom through harmonic resonance concepts was a basic understanding that can be now be extended to explain the functioning of David Bohm’s holographic Universe.

 

Scientists such as P V Cruji’c of the Institute of Physics in Belgrade, Yurij Baryshev of the St Petersburg Institute of Astronomny and Pekka Teerikorpi of Finland’s Tuorla University, consider Anaxagoras to be the ancestor to infinite fractal logic. Anaxagoras’worldview model of reality was constructed upon concepts of consciousness, linking the living process to fractal logic, as well as to the concept of a holographic universe. Mainstream science today accepts that fractal logic does indeed extend to infinity. The ethical science built around Anaxagoras’ work, now given the highest possible credence by Bolzano’s acclaimed Theory of Science, completely challenges the logic of the fixed worldview and with it, the sterile rationalism upholding global economics.

In the October 2006 volume of Physics Today, Professor Burton Richer’s Editorial denounced the current

condition of ‘Contemporary Particle Physics’ as being “theological speculations”. It is possible to explain how this claim may have arisen and with it, why Western civilization entered into its Dark Ages. It can be considered that global science and technology has not fully emerged from the Dark Ages due to it being governed by an obsolete physics law that denies the existence of natural ethics in science

Encyclopaedia Britannica advises, that in the 3rd Century, Saint Augustine attempted to fuse the Platonic tradition of Greek philosophy into the New Testament. His translation of the ‘evil’ of unformed matter from within the atom is mentioned within the writings of his recorded Confessions. It can be considered that, instead of alluding to the anti life properties of radiation or nuclear detonation, Augustine translated the evil of unformed matter in the atom as an evil associated with female sexuality. The later effects of this disturbed anti feminine attitude upon Western physics is well recorded.

During the mid 14th Century, History’s Doctor of Science, Saint Thomas Aquinas, invented his Angel physics. He was convinced that three angels had given him a magic white girdle to wear so he would not desire female sexual relationships. Women or female children thought to challenge his physics worldview could be legally imprisoned, tortured and burnt alive as witches. For three centuries countless thousands of such victims fell into the clutches of such organised sadism. This religious science cannot be considered to be ethical nor logical, as it prohibited the earth to revolve around the sun. To teach that ethical wisdom might be generated by particle movement within an infinite universe was punishable by torture and burning alive.

The scientist Giorano Bruno, considered to be the father of modern civilization caused offence for teaching at Oxford University about an association of ethics with the workings of an infinite universe. Upon his return to Rome he was imprisoned, tortured and then burnt alive by the Christian Church in 1600. In the same year in England, the East India Company was formed, destined to become a powerful world force with the backing of English military and naval force.

The religious denial of an infinite universe was entrenched in England during the time of The Rev. Thomas Malthus, who was ordained as a minister of the Church of England in 1788. In 1800 his monetary theories led to him being appointed as a professor of Political Economy at the East India College in 1805. The religious denial that the universe might be infinite can be seen to have influenced both economics and the Sciences. The 20th Century Quaker, Sir Arthur Eddington, referred to Einstein’s Premier law of all science as the Supreme metaphysical law of the entire universe.

Malthus organised for Charles Darwin to sail on HMS The Beagle and Darwin’s Theory of evolution, not only endorsed the East India Company’s policies about economic power but became a 20th Century authority within the biological sciences. During the 20th century the Jesuit Priest, Tielhard de Chardrin, was chastised by the Church for developing Anaxagoras’ work. He wrote about a higher intelligence that would only open the Golden Gates to a wondrous future for all people at the same time and not for any chosen race or privileged few. The scientist Matti Pitkanen, writing about de Chadrin’s ideas, described a higher form of consciousness acting for the betterment of all people at the same time. Every 11 years the sun emits balls of lethal radiation that are sent toward the earth but are deflected into outer space by the earth’s electromagnetic field, acting for the benefit of all life at the same time. This process in scientific terms, provides enough data for it to meet the criteria needed for it to be classified as a form of solar system consciousness. Such concepts are now going into the melting pot of ideas from which the ancient ethical science is now re-emerging.

During the geological period when life was preparing to emerge from the ancient seas onto the land a sea shell came into existence to balance a small creature upright in the water. The design of the sea shell became the balancing bone in the human ear, linked directly to the vibrations of the sphenoid bone. It can be considered that the Centre’s sea shell discoveries of new physics laws governing optimum biological growth through space-time also must also apply to human evolution. As Golden Mean geometry was relevant to the sea shell discoveries it is of interest that, to some researchers, the sphenoid means Golden Mean.

Fossil evidence records that 90 million years ago the sphenoid bone in small monkeys underwent a movement which acted to bring the animal down from the trees to learn to walk upright. It is now possible to learn the evolutionary purpose of human existence by going backwards into time to study millions of years of evolutionary guidance from the forces acting upon the prehuman and humanoid sphenoid bone. The Sphenoid can be seen as a guarding sentinel for aesthetic human evolution.

Aristotle’s “The Ethics and Politics”, is about science. It can be considered that the ethical science was once thought to be about establishing a guideline to advance Democracy, an ideas that appears to have influenced the writing of the Constitution of The United States of America. In his paper entitled The Great American Experiment, how Newton‘s laws shaped the Constitution, Professor Patric Diggins wrote that Alexander Hamilton summed up the concept of Democratic Liberty. Hamilton wrote that “Liberty is ensured, not by civic virtue, but by the design of government itself, which, in turn, rests upon the principles of physics and geometry“. In order to truly honour the ennobling ethos of ‘The Great American Dream’ it becomes necessary to upgrade those principles. Arthur C Clark in his television documentary titled Fractals ; The Colours of Infinity, referred to fractal logic as the greatest mathematical discovery of all time. Such geometrical principles must of course be used to upgrade Hamilton’s definition of Liberty and Newton’s unpublished physics principles should now be examined for their possible contribution to Democratic government, as alluded to within this paper.

Given opportunity to explain this to the public, the issue is not difficult to understand. In 2000 the Councils representing all six of the South Australian Riverland and the Regions State Parliamentary Representative, signed and sealed a document recognising the contribution that the Creative Physics of Science- Art was making toward global democracy. I believe that this little document, hard won in the Hurley burley of everyday life, will one day prove important to posterity. Australian democratic government carried a tiny little spark to ignite a great global pioneering enterprise for the betterment of the human condition, forward into the 21st Century.

Professor Robert Pope.

Director. The Science-Art Research centre of Australia.






RE CREATIVE PHYSICS SCIENCE-ART WORLDVIEW

This paper was written as a follow up of the Science-Art Research Centre’s paper,

The Aesthetics of Evolutionary Science by Robert Pope and Mark Robinson. 2007.

Following the publication of the paper, Woolongong University made a sphenoid bone available to the Centre to be used by a computer graphics scientist familiar with the computer modelling used for the Centre’s sea shell papers published by Italy’s Il Nuovo during the 1980s, two of which were selected from the 20th Century world literature for reprinting by the SPIE Milestone Series in Washington.

NOTES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY of The Aesthetics of Evolutionary Science are relevant to this publication

World wide web url: http://www.science-art.com.au/Aesthetics.pdf

The Quantum Biology paper mentioned herein was published in the journal NeuroQuantology, June 2007.

By Huping Hu and Maoxin Wu.

On Dark Matter and How Mind Influences Brain Through Proactive Spin

The text makes reference to Pope, R. & Robinson, M. The aesthetics of evolutionary science

…But, on the other hand, they also violently crush (enfold) visible matter into nonlocal energy with the patterns of said visible matter being seen as the symptom of a Black Hole and said regressive process being seen as dark matter. Of course, other authors probably have already expressed similar views from different angles or perspectives (See, e.g., Pope & Robinson, 2007). Page 209.

BIBLOGRAPHY includes :-

Pope, R. & Robinson, M. The aesthetics of

Evolutionary science. 2007; Also see

http://science-art.com.au/Aesthetics.pdf