Klevius was amazed when in his teens he encountered the naivety in Einstein's social and cultural writings.
Klevius taking a selfie with Einstein after having read his social etc. views.Klevius analysis: Exactly in the same way as Peter Klevius (who had the additional advantage of a genius brain) did - by avoiding academic bias. Both Einstein and Klevius worked alone. It was only when he became more "academic" that Einstein lost his initial glory. However, unlike Klevius, Einstein talked math which logic was hard to explain away.
Unlike Klevius, Einstein had a girlfriend and later wife who was more intelligent and more precise with math and physics than himself. And of course, 'Einstein' for most decent people stand for a particular set of understanding the world we live in - not some idolatry of a particular individual. Therefore, Klevius doesn't put too much emphasize on accusations of Einstein's "plagiarism" - after all, Klevius warned in his book Demand for Resources (1992) about how selective citations (or forcing in citations when there are no relevant ones) may actually distort scientific discoveries. And the PhD-student type of struggle to chase citations just for the sake of it, has very little to do with scientific revelations. If Klevius revelations would have been all written down and somehow connected to nearest possible citations, the result would have been much more than the whole of Talmud - and definitely much more coherent. The only passus in Talmud Klevius has ever found interesting (not that he has read much - it all sounds very similar and completely falls short of old epos such as Kalevala, Eddan and their Greek copies/variants etc. - although the latter ones were written down earlier, the former are older).
However, one gets the impression that Einstein used a broad smorgasbord filled with lots of quite irrelevant stuff which was then filtered down by others for true essence (who probably knew about the ones Einstein was accused of having plagiarized). And of course there was a longing for a figure like Einstein at the time when Israel and Saudi Arabia, as well as the "Atheist" Soviet, were in creation. And although Einstein was an Atheist himself, more importantly, he was instead called a Jew because his family contained Jews (however, compare Obama who was born to a muslim father and brought up by a muslim adoptive father - yet was fully accepted as a Christian) and therefore also associated with Christians, especially in the U.S.. Calling oneself a Jew or a muslim for the sake of convenience may be personally advantageous, but may also contribute to strengthening the power of real "extremist" Jews and muslims.
Klevius: Academic bias starts with a biased portraying of the problem or topic, which then constitutes the negative to a biased "result".
Einstein's main discoveries happened when he was 16-26 years old - before he got his PhD - and at a time when all the pieces had just appeared and only asked for mathematical formulations (some of already existed).
Klevius: Most groundbreaking research happens outside academically produced peer consensus bias.
Einstein was able to compensate lack of brain power because he also had, unlike Klevius, an upbringing that gave him loads of time for reading plus advanced private tutors. Klevius had to sneak in his "studying" before falling asleep and at times when he managed to escape his work load in the foster family he had been kidnapped to (and later at age 17 kicked out of and sent penniless and without education to a foreign country). At school Klevius curiosity was too big for the curriculum, so he sneaked to the library instead - which fact took a toll on boring algebraic rules etc.. And to be fair, Klevius also wasted a lot of time on reading classics as well as a lot of non sense. He was after all just a lost teenager without a cause.
Einstein, like Klevius, wasn't too pedantic on details, and Einstein's math expressions faltered quite regularly. And although there's nothing in math that mathematically illiterate Klevius doesn't understand, his math reading and writing skills have never been honed in engineering and physics like Einstein and his friend. However, unlike Klevius (whose cowardliness usually silences him*) Einstein didn't hesitate to put forward less well thought-through propositions.
* Klevius plays safe in issues about Human Rights, human evolution, cosmology, consciousness etc. hence not only keeping tho wolves away but also simple minded admirers.
Klevius grew up in a foster home after being kidnapped from an other country at the age of two. And when the authorities eventually were informed five years later, he was declared "rooted" (this "rooting" suddenly ended when Klevius was 17 and told to go back to his country of birth for military service). And after that Klevius was more or less an enslaved child worker in the family. However, the regular physical violence and the heavy work load didn't create the most traumatic memories. Worst of all were the blistering cold winter days (down to -20 Celsius) when early in the dark mornings Klevius had to follow the foster father to a far away forest - all the time in the cold open air. And at the logging place the only thought Klevius had in his head was that the clock would reach mid-day so he could get some warm chocolate and a bread, and after that a long wait for going home in the almost dark (lit only by stars or moonlight on the white snow and ice). And had it been a loving father and part of the survival of a loving family - perhaps with other kids to play with during the day - then it could have been a lot easier. But it wasn't. Later Klevius learned that others had worries about how Klevius was abused but no one stepped forward back then.
As a footnote to this footnote it might be appropriate also to point out the fact that according to much populist social "science" popular in universities these kind of traumatic childhood experience will produce violent and abusive adults. Klevius may be a pervert in this respect because nothing of it has got stuck on him. On the contrary he has been the one that has protected children from female violence (not his last wife) despite the fact that those women came from stable and relatively well-off bio-families.
However, Klevius was after all "taken care of" by authorities. Klevius had three different surnames during his first eight years of life. One of them was Lindroos, i.e. the name of the foster family, which was used when Klevius was sent over the fields (no roads) to a school that wasn't used by other kids from the same area. Due to Klevius excellent performance at primary school, one might guess, the foster mother wanted to adopt him but was hindered by the foster father and, one might guess, the grown up son. Such an adoption would have rendered Klevius a third of a relatively big farm on the outskirts of the capital. Instead Klevius was kicked out to a foreign country he had never visited after his second birthday, without finished education and without any money. A decade later, still without Klevius having put his foot even close to a university, philosopher G. H. von Wright (Wittgenstein's successor at Cambridge) gave his approval of Klevius analysis of the evolution of human societies (see Klevius 1981 and 1992). This included, apart from "expanded demands for resources", Klevius "stone experiment" (abt. consciousness/awareness) as well as the new concept of 'existence-centrism' (abt. metaphysics).
The daughter in the foster family (who never married) later on gave up much of her part in the farm to her brother. However, although she never had anything to do with Klevius after he left, when she read what Klevius had published on line about her favorite poet the Finland-Swedish modernist Edith Södergran, she wrote a will in which she gave 15% of her tiny estate to Klevius, i.e. not far from the 20% she gave her own brother (who never answered Klevius request to at least be able to buy a small lot for building a house).
Max Planck: "To shun much more the reproach of having suppressed strange opinions than that of having been too gentle in evaluating them."
Comparing Klevius upbringing and scientific stimulation with that of Einstein may be exemplified by an episode when Klevius was 12 and told his foster mother that there's electricity in the phone cables and she refused to believe and gave him a hard slap in the face instead. Although both foster parents were physically very abusive, the foster mother did it much more frequently. The foster father was more evasive - except when commanding to work.
Is there a general interest in the fact that while Einstein is possibly the most overrated "genius", Klevius challenges the position as the most underrated genius?
A modern male Homo sapiens*. This particular individual belongs
to the bastard race that was the result when mongoloids mixed with
archaic Homos.
Peter
Klevius contemplating human evolution, consciousness and sex
segregation. His father was a Goth from Gothenburg (possibly Sweden's
best chess player of his time considering he won the Gothenburg
championship many times over more than four decades) and his mother was
from Finland and possessed 1/3 mongoloid features (she was extremely
intelligent - just like her two brothers who both had studied double
exams in engineering and economy and were leaders in Finland's biggest
companies). Klevius himself may in this context be seen as a
generational step downwards, i.e. in line with an overall progression
towards a more diluted absolute intelligence. Klevius half sister (same
mother but different father) followed the same trend and scored only 167
on an IBM IQ talent test (which she won). Photo taken some years after
Peter Klevius in 1979 wrote the original Demand for Resources and
created the 'Woman' drawing.
Although
Peter Klevius had the most unprivileged upbringing (kidnapped at age
two to an other country and secretly kept in a foster home and then
kicked out at age 17 to his country of birth but penniless and with no
family ties) and early adulthood, he also got the most privileged body
when it comes to muscle power, motor skills and serotonin/dopamine
balance, as well as super fast mental reaction time - which I only
realized when visiting Munchen tech museum in the 1980s and tested a
reaction time meter there and was shocked when the whole hall was filled
with a deafening "dinosaur" roar from the loudspeakers - late in the
month I had set the monthly record. Still at pensioner age my reaction
time hasn't declined, as hasn't heart recovery rate (between 62-68),
blood pressure (fluctuating around 70/110 5 min after exercise). Only
resting heart beat has dropped from 38 at age 18 (I didn't do any sports
because of lack of time) to between 45 and 55. Triglycerides I started
measuring around age 40 and it has stayed the same (around 1 mmol/L) but
my cholesterols have always been high. I have never been hospitalized
for a disease or using medical or other drugs - nor has any woman caught
me with erectile problems despite me having lived with women almost my
entire life. I've consumed loads of sugar and fat - but I've kept my
weight and still fool around with balls recreationally. At age 45 I got
viral haemorrhagic fever and was badly down for more than a week but got
no permanent issues. I even called the hospital but they said they
couldn't do anything against a viral infection. So why am I telling
this. Well, apart from questioning the stereotyping classification by
age, firstly to comfort those who, like myself don't fit many health
recommendations re. fat and sugar (where can one get a fizzy drink today
with sugar instead of sweeteners?!), and secondly as an example of not
to judge people who might not have been genetically equally lucky.
However, I've also suffered from a rare genetic sensitivity for vision
problem (less than 1 in 4000) where both parents need to carry the gene,
and, in my case due to my unprivileged background, I inflicted it on
myself through poor nutrition at a young age and lack of money. Had I
known back then about it I would have stopped smoking earlier, and
stopped living on cornflakes, coffee, cookies and beer for almost two
years while working full time in the weeks plus educating myself in a
profession (non-academic because I wasn't admissible for university
because I'd been working in my teens instead of studying) in the
evenings and filling weekends with extra jobs. At age 18 in the military
I plus 26 others were chosen out of some 4000 because of extra good
night vision. What an irony! Only later in life I was diagnosed (but no
cure available) and started paying more attention about nutrition to
slow down or stop the progression until stem cell therapy is available.
Peter's first child
Peter working as a forwarding agent at Volvo BM instead of university
Perpetua (203 AD): 'I saw a ladder of tremendous height made of bronze, reaching all the way to the heavens, but it was so narrow that only one person could climb up at a time. To the sides of the ladder were attached all sorts of metal weapons: there were swords, spears, hooks, daggers, and spikes; so that if anyone tried to climb up carelessly or without paying attention, he would be mangled and his flesh would adhere to the weapons.' Perpetua realized she would have to do battle not merely with wild beasts, but with the Devil himself. Perpetua writes: They stripped me, and I became a man'.
Peter Klevius: They stripped Perpetua of her femininity and she became a human!
The whole LGBTQ+ carousel is completely insane when considering that the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) art. 2 gives everyone, no matter of sex, the right to live as they want without having to "change their sex". So the only reason for the madness is the stupidly stubborn cultural sex segregation which, like religious dictatorship, stipulates what behavior and appearance are "right" for a biological sex. And in the West, it is very much about licking islam, which refuses to conform to the basic (negative) rights in the UDHR, and instead created its own sharia declaration (CDHRI) in 1990 ("reformed" 2020 with blurring wording - but with the same basic Human Rights violating sharia issues still remaining). The UDHR allows women to voluntarily live according to sharia but sharia does not allow muslim women to live freely according to the UDHR. And culturally ending sex segregation does not mean that biological sex needs to be "changed." Learn more under 'Peter Klevius sex tutorials' which should be compulsory sex education for everyone - incl. people with ambiguous biological sex! The LGBTQ+ movement is a desperate effort to uphold outdated sex segregation. And while some old-fashioned trans people use it for this purpose, many youngsters (especially girls) follow it because they feel trapped in limiting sex segregation.
Excerpt from Demand for Resources (original title Resursbegär, by Peter Klevius 1992:21-22, ISBN 9173288411).
Chapt. Existencecentrism
The
civilized human retraces her/his steps, lights a light and allows
her/himself to be enlightened - only the suffering in the past and the
shadow over the future are greater.
The word exist, from the
Latin existere (to emerge, to appear) has, like the word existence,
nowadays as the main meaning existence, i.e. something that has
arisen/been created and now exists in the world of our senses.
To
exist, i.e. existence, constitutes our vantage point when we consider
the surrounding reality in time and space. We are existence-centered.
Existence prevents godlike all-seeing but also easily leads to
self-glorifying considerations. The word anthropocentrism covers some,
but not all, of the meaning of the concept of existencecentrism.
Existence
stands in contrast or as a complement to the modern Protestant concept
of God. Existence and God, or as I prefer to express it, human and the
unconscious (the unreached) together form 'everything' - God/The
Unreached is thus not seen in things but in the existence of things via
the awareness of existencecentrism.
That the human thought is
locked to its subject, i.e. that someone thinks the thought, is
connected to our linear cumulative conception of history. The whole
story/thought creation turns into a giant inverted pyramid where stone
is added to stone while the tip of the pyramid proportionally gets
narrower at the same time as it points downward/backward and we
ourselves stand on the top/latest and widest part.
The engine of
the cumulative conception of history, i.e. what determines the value of
past and present-day social phenomena, exists in the present.
The
perception of history as linearly cumulative has as a consequence the
need for creation. Development requires a beginning. The creation
stories can be divided into two main groups: Creation from something or
from nothing. In more "primitive" cultural contexts, it is common to
imagine some form of primeval being that is brought to life during
creation, while within the religiously influenced cultural circle,
creation out of nothing with the help of a deity (the "first mover") is
advocated. This can sometimes take surprising expressions such as e.g.
in the s.c. "Big Bang" theory.
The driving forces behind science
and religion are close to each other and the idea of an eternal
universe where creation only exists in the human mind is difficult to
accept (P. Klevius 1992:22).
Peter Klevius additional comments 2023
Existencecentrism,
together with the stone example in the same 1992 book, laid the ground
work for EMAH, which 1994 added the new findings re. cortico-thalamic
two-way connections reported in Nature 1993. Although Peter Klevius had
always been convinced it all happened in thalamus, he out of
intellectual cowardice didn't dare to write it down in the 1992 book -
which, btw was strongly supported 1991 by G. H. von Wright,
Wittgenstein's successor at Cambridge.
The reason no one likes Klevius science is precisely his annoying definition of true science being chasing for whatever bias that can be spotted.
The same applies to Klevius defense of the Universal Human Rights
declaration of 1948. Most people have tied themselves to religious or
ideological doxies (racist, sexist or supremacist) which sooner or later
clash with Klevius analysis.
So how does Klevius himself survive himself? Simple, exactly in the same
way Klevius has survived his testosterone driven heterosexual
attraction without having problems with sexism etc. and exactly in the
same way as Klevius has been race blind - until, of course, a certain
point when feminist sex segregationists and "colored" race
segregationists beg for criticism. Not to mention religion which
combines all these dark forces in one. Check out if you are a Human
Rightsphobe, i.e. in the target line of Klevius criticism by comparing
your beliefs with Human Rights - especially the "negative" freedom from
impositions rights.
At the time when Einstein's most famous papers were written, he didn't
have easy access to a complete set of scientific reference materials,
although he did regularly read and contribute reviews to Annalen der
Physik. Additionally, scientific colleagues available to discuss his
theories were few. He worked as an examiner at the Patent Office in
Bern, Switzerland, and he later said of a co-worker there, Michele
Besso, that he "could not have found a better sounding board for his
ideas in all of Europe". In addition, co-workers and the other members
of the self-styled "Olympian Academy" (Maurice Solovine and Paul
Habicht) and his wife, Mileva Marić, had some influence on Einstein's
work, but how much is unclear.
Through these papers, Einstein tackles some of the era's most important
physics questions and problems. In 1900, Lord Kelvin, in a lecture
titled "Nineteenth-Century Clouds over the Dynamical Theory of Heat and
Light", suggested that physics had no satisfactory explanations for the
results of the Michelson–Morley experiment and for black body radiation.
As introduced, special relativity provided an account for the results
of the Michelson–Morley experiments. Einstein's theories for the
photoelectric effect extended the quantum theory which Max Planck had
developed in his successful explanation of black body radiation.
Despite the greater fame achieved by his other works, such as that on
special relativity, it was his work on the photoelectric effect that won
him his Nobel Prize in 1921: "For services to theoretical physics and
especially for the discovery of the law of the photoelectric effect."
The Nobel committee had waited patiently for experimental confirmation
of special relativity; however, none was forthcoming until the time
dilation experiments of Ives and Stilwell (1938),(1941) and Rossi and
Hall (1941).
So Einstein's special relativity was fertilized outside academic peer review and experiments.
This is the reason it was able to avoid academic bias.
Timeline:
Before he got his PhD Einstein published everything of importance for
his reputation, i.e. four short papers in 1905 in not peer reviewed The
Annalen der Physik. One, about the photo electric effect, rendered him
the Nobel Prize. However, the papers on special relativity, mass-energy
equivalence, and the Brownian motion, together made the foundation for
what we could call an Einsteinian paradigm shift. Moreover, the
mass-energy equivalence paper formed the basis of his general
relativity, which was published ten years later in an obscure magazine
after being dismissed by more prominent ones.
1905 Einstein’s “annus mirabilis”. He publishes four groundbreaking
works in the “Annalen der Physik”, which revolutionize the basics of
physics around 1900. One of his works, Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter
Körper (“On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies”), contains the special
theory of relativity. In another work he deduces the famous formula E =
mc2.
In April Einstein hands in his work Eine neue Bestimmung der
Moleküldimensionen (A New Determination of Molecular Dimensions) as
dissertation at the University of Zurich and it is accepted at the end
of July.
Zur Elektrodynamik bewegter Körper (On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies)
1906 In the middle of January Einstein is awarded a doctorate by the
University of Zurich and in April he is promoted to be a second-class
technical expert at the Patent Office.
1907 Einstein starts to think about the general theory of relativity and
discovers the principle of equivalence of mass and energy for
continuously accelerated systems. His application for the doctorate is
rejected by the University of Bern as his doctorate paper is not
sufficient.
1908 Through handing in a new dissertation, Einstein is awarded the
doctorate at the University of Bern and becomes a private college
lecturer. At the end of the year he holds his first lecture.
Talking about bias etc.,Klevius wrote:
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Japan makes the world's top technology - yet Europe gets the press! Why?
Why is the media shouting FIRST EVER when a bunch of European countries try to copy what Japan did a decade ago?!
Nissan rocket no. 1 with the Hayabusa robot
Nissan rocket no. 2
With a lap time of 7 min 8 sec Nissan GTR is the fastest, (non-hybrid*) globally-homologated road car around the world's most famous race track Nurburgring in Germany.
The old GTR was the first car to go under 8 minutes at Nurburgring.
* i.e. using a battery and Japanese hybrid technology to get extra power for the short time the ride lasts.
A Nissan Skyline* GTR ATESSA 4WD (2700 cc 6 cyl 280-1600 hp) from the 1990s - the Japanese legend that Lambourghini Gallardo (5000 cc) was aimed to beat - more than a decade later! But consider huge difference in quality! The old Skyline GTR has the world record for legal cars abt 350 km/h on a German (!) autobahn (unofficial >380 km/h)!
What all GTRs have in common compared to non-Japanese super cars is superior quality. Already in the 1990s a Porsche CEO admitted that they can never achieve the same quality level as the Japanese.
* The new GTR has dropped the Skyline name. However, the basics are the same: 4WD and a small but powerful 6 cylinder engine.
Friday, April 5, 2013
Where's the star and where were you?
The illusion of a Universe
A ten billion year old supernova has been discovered. It means it died ten billion years ago, i.e. 5.5 billion years before our Sun was born.
The black area on the pic above corresponds to the white area on Klevius' Origin of Universe pic.
The light from the farthest objects detectable by Hubble and other cameras (incl. radio waves etc), i.e. more than 13 billion years ago, marks the end of our capabilities, not the end of Universe. Because there is no "end" or "beginning". These terms are oxymorons and semantically absurd.
So next time you take a look at the stars do consider what you don't see.
Monday, January 9, 2012
The ridiculous idea about "one god" hampers CERN/LHC
Universe doesn't have limits - nor is it endless
In my book Demand for Resources (Resursbegär1992:21-22) I pointed out not only the dangers of such a senseless "model" as "Big Bang" but also how this "model" is trapped in a "monotheistic" view demanding "creation", i.e. a "starting point". Not only is such a "starting point" conceptually impossible (apart from its very obvious other limitations, e.g. how do you "bang" in "nothing") but it also fatally misdirects research focus because it assumes "a universe" or "the universe" where there's only universe.
A time trip back towards the "Big Bang" would only reveal a continuing growth of neighboring "universes". The space/time continuum and warping would make the "Big Bang" model laughable.
To my surprise I've noticed how many decently minded people seem to have great difficulties understanding how the great distances and the great limitations caused by the speed of light constant, warps every effort to take even quite small thought steps, say for example only within our own tiny galaxy.
Cameras never lie - pictures do!
All space cameras, from our own eyes to the Hubble space telescope and its follow-ups, have in common that they don't take pictures of space but of themselves, i.e. photo reactions on the retina, CCD etc. These reactions are then interpreted by our knowledge. However, to describe such reactions as a picture of space is extremely misleading.Sunday, September 11, 2011
Origin(s) of Universe
Due to our human shortcomings we tend to entangle us with stupid concepts which then get a life of their own. These include not only e.g. irrational numbers but also such peculiarities as 'beginning', 'creation', 'existence', 'god' etc.
There can't be 'the', 'a', 'one' or 'many' in front of universe.
To understand this simple fact you just need to expore it by pinpointing the histories of light perceptions hitting "your world". Such light phenomenons may represent a "distance"* of everything from light traveling at 300,000 km/sec some fractions of a second to Billions of years. Moreover, some of them may be just side by side and with equal relative luminance. With this in mind then start it all over again, i.e. your theoretical mapping of "the Universe".
* If the source has moved or vanished when you perceive its light, then there i no real "distance" to be measured.
to be continued...
Some conventional views later to be commented by Klevius:
In astronomy and cosmology, dark matter is matter that is inferred to exist from gravitational effects on visible matter and gravitational lensing of background radiation, but that neither emits nor scatters light or other electromagnetic radiation (and so cannot be directly detected via optical or radio astronomy).[1] Its existence was hypothesized to account for discrepancies between calculations of the mass of galaxies, clusters of galaxies and the entire universe made through dynamical and general relativistic means, and calculations based on the mass of the visible "luminous" matter these objects contain: stars and the gas and dust of the interstellar and intergalactic medium.
According to observations of structures larger than solar systems, as well as Big Bang cosmology interpreted under the Friedmann equations and the FLRW metric, dark matter accounts for 23% of the mass-energy density of the observable universe. In comparison, ordinary matter accounts for only 4.6% of the mass-energy density of the observable universe, with the remainder being attributable to dark energy.[2][3] From these figures, dark matter constitutes 83%, (23/(23+4.6)), of the matter in the universe, whereas ordinary matter makes up only 17%.
Dark matter was postulated by Fritz Zwicky in 1934 to account for evidence of "missing mass" in the orbital velocities of galaxies in clusters. Subsequently, other observations have indicated the presence of dark matter in the universe; these observations include the rotational speeds of galaxies, gravitational lensing of background objects by galaxy clusters such as the Bullet Cluster, and the temperature distribution of hot gas in galaxies and clusters of galaxies.
Dark matter plays a central role in state-of-the-art modeling of structure formation and galaxy evolution, and has measurable effects on the anisotropies observed in the cosmic microwave background. All these lines of evidence suggest that galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and the universe as a whole contain far more matter than that which interacts with electromagnetic radiation. The largest part of dark matter, which does not interact with electromagnetic radiation, is not only "dark" but also, by definition, utterly transparent.[4]
As important as dark matter is believed to be in the cosmos, direct evidence of its existence and a concrete understanding of its nature have remained elusive. Though the theory of dark matter remains the most widely accepted theory to explain the anomalies in observed galactic rotation, some alternative theoretical approaches have been developed which broadly fall into the categories of modified gravitational laws, and quantum gravitational laws
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