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- Xref: sparky alt.sci.physics.new-theories:2624 alt.paranormal:2705 sci.skeptic:21733 alt.alien.visitors:9433 alt.conspiracy:13447
- Newsgroups: alt.sci.physics.new-theories,alt.paranormal,sci.skeptic,alt.alien.visitors,alt.conspiracy
- Path: sparky!uunet!well!sarfatti
- From: sarfatti@well.sf.ca.us (Jack Sarfatti)
- Subject: The Sarfatti Papers 3: The Gladstone Report II
- Message-ID: <Bzy12x.H6F@well.sf.ca.us>
- Sender: news@well.sf.ca.us
- Organization: Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 00:23:21 GMT
- Lines: 219
-
-
- Long orphaned by science and most philosophy, teleological superluminality
- has found a home in drama, religion, literature, and in film. Joyce's
- Ulysses is a treasure trove of Jungian synchronicities, which may be
- acausal loops-in-time that employ the future-to-past time sense. Joyce
- uses such seemingly random recurring events as a shout in the street, the
- wanderings of a crumpled piece of paper, the pealing of church bells, to
- order time through loops of causality. The inner geometry of Ulysses is
- not the geometry of billiards and of Newton. It is the strange inner
- geometry of Einstein and quantum mechanics. Causality seems to slide along
- this strange geometry like a roller coaster at an amusement park. Kurt
- Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five also reflects the strange geometry of future
- causality: The planet Tralfamadoria which exists in the future creates a
- civilization on earth so they can get a part they need for one of their
- spaceships. Just as the Greeks in Romans used the Deus Ex Machina to
- provide for a superluminal Voice of God. Chris Marker, in the highly
- acclaimed film "La Jettee" creates an eerie warring world of the future,
- that makes captives of people in the past to experiment on them. In "The
- Navigator" a young man leads his people from the plague-ravaged 14th
- century to the 20th century to find a cure for the mysterious disease that
- is decimating them. In the Sci-Fi genre, Sarfatti's fellow physics
- graduate student at UCSD, Gregory Benford, weaves a chilling tale of a
- doomed future earth in Time Scape. In the story, scientists send warnings
- to their colleagues in the past to save the planet. Phillip Jose Farmer's
- Riverworld series which includes practically everything that ever lived,
- requires future-to-past causality as well. And of course, we can't forget
- "The Terminator" or "Back to the Future" and "Peggy Sue Gets Married".
-
- Turning and turning within the widening gyre.
- - W.B.Yeats, The Second Coming
-
- Merging the ostensibly separate meanings of God and Machine, Edie, perhaps
- unconsciously, linked herself to a turn of thought and intuition that has
- its branches in antiquity and its roots in the far distant future. From
- the ancient stories of the Greek gods to the cyber-punk of today's Science
- fiction, people have taken for granted the existence of a superluminal
- reality. Almost all of us have experienced this firsthand. For example,
- invariably, when I call my mother, she will say, "That's funny I was just
- thinking about you." How many times have you thought about someone,
- suddenly, perhaps after a long period of time when you hadn't thought of
- them at all. Soon, sure enough, you see them in a day or two. then you
- know that you've just touched the mystery. Precognitive incidents like
- these have always suffered from the taint of impossibility, just like
- UFO's, although admitting to a dream that proves to be true or having had a
- precognitive experience may be less embarrassing than claiming to have seen
- or been aboard a UFO.
- Deus Ex Machina
- Deus ex Machina' or the God from a machine was originally used in ancient
- Greek and Roman plays, a device was brought on stage to intervene in the
- action of a play when conditions were in extremis; when the situation was
- such that only supernatural intervention could save the day. Jack Sarfatti
- thinks that his article "Design for a Superluminal Signaling Device"11'
- may lead to nothing less than a Deus ex Machina. Both he and Heinz Pagels'
- close friend, Nick Herbert, have spent years trying to develop God Phones
- which decode and utilize precognitive messages from the future. This is
- not the same as predicting the future. Sarfatti's goateed visage looms out
- from under a Greek fisherman's cap as he proclaims: "Prediction of the
- future from the past is part of the classical causality axiom, yet it is
- not really supported by the evidence. In quantum mechanics both the future
- and the past co-determine the present."
-
- The increasingly likely establishment of a superluminal world-view cannot
- be credited solely to an individual, or even to the sciences. Future-cause
- and past-effect has been an intrinsic part of the scientific, cultural and
- religious inheritance of the human race.
-
- Since ancient times scientists have tried to model the universe within
- their cultural and religious contexts. According to Sarfatti,
- Pythagoras,12 Newton, Einstein, Planck and Heisenberg, are the Illuminati
- who receive knowledge from the future God that is bringing our universe
- into being."
-
- Quantum mechanics is illuminating a trail which may lead to the roots of
- consciousness itself. Indeed, at the quantum level our own brains may be
- mirroring the quantum processes which occurred before the Big Bang itself.
- As above so below, says the ancient mystical truism, and now quantum
- physicists are echoing that sentiment. Recent work done at the leading
- edge of molecular biology supports this conjecture.
-
- With state Christianity in the Roman empire came dogma and a strategy of
- repression and elimination of views that differed. Speculation on the
- nature of the universe was discouraged by the Church Fathers. For nearly
- 1,000 years, science remained stuck in an ancient rut. As the renaissance
- dawned, however, scientists fought a mostly losing battle to be free of the
- constraints of religiouss tyranny. Marlowe's Faust is an allegory of
- scientific man's rebellion against the tyranny of Church authority. The
- careers of Bruno13 and Galileo amply illustrate the difficulties of that
- struggle. Over hundreds of years the work of Copernicus, Newton and
- Descartes eviscerated the Church's authority. Such literal Biblical
- teachings as creationism are taught only as a relic of religious thought
- rather than as valid theories of how the Universe comes into being. God-in-
- the-Machine is now just the voice of the machine. Anyone accepting the
- literal word of The Bible as truth in today's secular world would be
- considered a credulous fool by many secular westerners.
-
- Since the beginning of this century, physicists have gone by speculation
- and experiment where few can follow. Most of us must accept the claims of
- scientific authority as we once accepted the validity of religious dogma.
- Some scientists claim (just as many ancients must have done after observing
- a phenomenon they could not explain) that they can see the "handwriting of
- God" in some of the recent pictures from the COBE satellite which show the
- universe at a very early age.
-
- Sarfatti's Hyper-History
- Sarfatti suffers no embarrassment about his claims of a superluminal
- connection to all kinds of historical figures. In 1978 Sarfatti was
- suffering his indulgent idyll/exile in North beach, orphaned by the New Age
- Movement after his bitter falling out with Werner Erhard. He met someone
- who, according to Sarfatti, clarified the historical context he was in. He
- feels trapped in a time loop of causality reversal that connects him to
- such world historical figures as Hitler, Mussolini and FDR. "Sitting on
- the terrace of the Savoy Tivoli, I was introduced by a friend, Leila
- Dwight,to an aristocratic-looking young man dressed in Lederhosen, the
- Bavarian national dress. She said he was her cousin but it didn't mean
- anything at the time. I didn't know that Leila's family had intermarried
- repeatedly with the Sedgwicks for 200 years.
-
- He was Egon Sedgwick Hanfstaengl. At the time I met him I hadn't yet met
- Suky Sedgwick. He said something about his family being involved 'in
- history' but he didn't say what. These connections were made clear to me
- years later when the book Edie by Jean Stein and George Plimpton came out.
- Hanfstaengl was a cousin of Edie's and the grandson of Ernst "Putzi"
- Sedgwick Hanfstaengl.
-
- In 1904, Putzi spent hours in the basement of Teddy Roosevelt's White House
- with his cousin and Harvard classmate, Frank (FDR) playing the piano in the
- boisterous, somewhat oafish style, that his friends loved. In 1920, Putzi
- was playing piano to a captive audience in Munich. His new friend Adolph
- Hitler was in a hypnotic and joyous reverie listening to the music of his
- beloved Wagner. Putzi and his American wife performed a valuable service
- to the future Fuhrer. They arranged gemutlich little musical evenings with
- many of the prominent figures of post WW1 Germany for Hitler. They
- smoothed his rough edges. They eased his way into the upper circles where
- the spirit of unrepentant revanchism burned undiminished by defeat. In
- 1923 at Putzi's Tyrolean Villa, the distraught Hitler was in disgrace; his
- Bavarian Putsch was broken and he was about to be arrested for treason.
- The police were banging on the door and would soon be coming up the stairs.
- All was lost; but for the timely intervention of Putzi's wife who altered
- history forever when she wrestled the loaded pistol that he had pointed at
- his own head from him. Sarfatti claims that the hand of destiny that saved
- Hitler, also altered his own life. Saying that historical themes tend to
- recurr in within certain familial "Destiny Matrices", Sarfatti sketched out
- a nonlinear history of his clan.
-
- In 1923, Margherita Sarfatti, was the lover of Benito Mussolini, and later
- was patroness of the fascist cultural movement, Nouvocento, (New Century)
- which expressed a belief in the philosophy of future cause. She was the
- mother of one Italy's WWI heroes, Roberto Sarfatti, killed at the age of
- eighteen at Mussolini's side in the trenches. Roberto was later enshrined
- as one the immortals in the fascist pantheon. Samuel Sarfatti was the
- personal physician to Pope Julius II and he was instrumental in getting
- Michaelangelo to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. 'Sarfatti' means
- 'the Frenchman' in Hebrew and traces back to the great Rabbi, Rashi de
- Troyes (1040 - 1105)." Sarfatti sees himself linked in meaningful causal
- loops with many historical figures. "This historical context is not my
- creation", he says, "but a recurrent theme over hundreds of years that
- expressed itself in the lives of real people, who happened to be my family
- and Suky's family. Just like I happened to get that phone call. We were
- brought together as players in a scene written in the far future."
-
- He is not the only one to see himself this way. Sarfatti and his
- superluminal physics are portrayed in Robert Anton Wilson's Illuminatus
- Trilogy. Carlos Suares, a cabalist mystic and intimate of Henry Miller
- annointed Sarfatti to be the "heir" to his tradition. "I didn't know what
- he was talking about at the time. But he was a Cabalist Master who knew a
- great deal more than I about the significant role some of my relatives
- played in Jewish history." Fictionalized as Balthazar, in Lawrence
- Durrell's Alexandria Quartet, Suares urged Sarfatti to "smash the wall of
- light.", which Sarfatti sees as one and the same as Einstein's light
- barrier. "I saw myself as a Parsival character. I reached the Grail Castle
- and didn't know what I was doing there and I didn't get the Grail. But I
- got the challenge to "smash the wall of light" and that's what I'm trying
- to do.
-
- Since the publication of his latest paper in a prestigious physics journal
- and his reestablishment of ties with academics at Berkeley, Sarfatti's
- credibility seems to be rising phoenix-like from the ashes. It was at
- Berkeley in Ray Chiao's quantum optics seminar that Nobel Laureate Charles
- Townes was told by Chiao that a paper by Sarfatti some twenty years
- previously had helped them in their research. At another seminar, David
- Mermin,head of the physics department at Cornell, told the group that he
- had read Sarfatti's paper and had been perplexed because he couldn't find
- anything wrong with it. He finally realised what was wrong but he he said
- he couldn't remember. Sarfatti says the seminar broke up in laughter. His
- most recent salvo against 'fortress mentality' of the physics establishment
- is a paper he believes will invalidate Phillippe Eberhard's proof against
- communicating useful messages from future to past.
-
- With the help of modern technology man is extending his intelligence out
- into into the vast reaches of space and down to the mysterious level of
- quantum phenomena. In the worlds of art and science, ( which seem to
- uncannily mirror each other) there has long been dissatisfaction with the
- theories and dogmas which leave far too much of our real world unaccounted
- for. Sarfatti sees this as a 'vacuum of reason' which he like nature
- abhors. "What I'm after is simple. I want to prove the existence of God
- and a superluminal universe created from the future which created us so
- that the universe could itself be created. Let's not play games and stand
- on high horses when it comes to radical advances in thought. Let
- experiment decide. If it doesn't work then we've still learned something."
-
-
- 1 arguably Dylan's greatest album
- 2 from the poem "Edie" written on hearing of Edie's death.
-
- 3 Beyond Time, Danah Zohar
- 4 discoverer of the Pauli exclusion principle and the neutrino
- 5 at the University of Paris in 1982,
- 6 quanta of light
- 7 Carol Alley of the University of Maryland
- 8 Charles Bennett of Lawrence Livermore Laboratory
- 9 a resort near Big Sur in California,famous for sixties style sexual
- experimentation and lectures promoting a New Age of enlightenment.
- 10 Newsweek, 1980.
- 11 Physics Essays, Vol. 4, No.3 Sept. 1991 (University of Toronto Press).
- 12 whose famous theorem is at the foundation not only of relativity but
- also of quantum mechanics. Pythagoras was one of the great scientists of
- all time but also a mystic and religious leader.
- 13 Bruno was burned at the stake and Galileo was placed under a church
- edict to keep silent regarding his heretical beliefs.
-