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Thomas Campbell is a former NASA physicist who developed his Theory of Everything—unifying quantum physics & consciousness. (1 Viewer)

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Very interesting and fascinating interview with a former NASA physicist who says that all his claims he has tested & backed up with verifiable scientific experiments
 




Very interesting and fascinating interview with a former NASA physicist who says that all his claims he has tested & backed up with verifiable scientific experiments

Guy is an idiot.
 




Very interesting and fascinating interview with a former NASA physicist who says that all his claims he has tested & backed up with verifiable scientific experiments

Dearly family...we are gathered here to day to celebrate the life of our dear beloved brother who logged out just three days ago...
 
Seriously though with AI and quantum computing coming online it seems like its only a matter of time before we can cause virtual people to exist in the virtual universe that already exists.
 
Well, if we’re living in a virtual reality, I don’t think I want to meet those who invented it.

Some really sick shit they’ve decided to put as part of the programming.

Childhood cancers?
Wars?
School shootings?

That’s some twisted minds that would say “yeah, let’s add THIS to their virtual world for funsies”
 
Grok:

Thomas Campbell is a physicist and consciousness researcher best known for his work on "My Big TOE" (Theory of Everything), a trilogy of books published in 2003 that aims to unify physics, metaphysics, and consciousness. Born on December 9, 1944, Campbell earned a B.S. and M.S. in Physics and pursued Ph.D. work in experimental nuclear physics, focusing on low-energy nuclear collisions, though he did not complete the doctorate. His professional career spans significant roles in science and technology, including work as a systems analyst with U.S. Army technical intelligence, over 30 years in the U.S. missile defense community as a contractor for the Department of Defense, and a stint at NASA within the Ares I program, where he assessed risk and vulnerability to ensure mission success.

In parallel with his scientific career, Campbell explored altered states of consciousness, beginning in the early 1970s with Robert Monroe at what would become The Monroe Institute. There, he contributed to developing "Hemi-Sync" technology, which uses binaural beats to induce specific states of consciousness. This experience heavily influenced his theory that reality is a virtual simulation driven by consciousness, not matter—a concept he argues resolves paradoxes in quantum mechanics and aligns with phenomena like entanglement and the observer effect.

Campbell’s "My Big TOE" posits that
consciousness is the fundamental essence of existence, with the physical universe as a virtual reality designed for conscious entities to evolve by reducing entropy (disorder) and fostering love and cooperation. He has proposed experiments to test this simulation hypothesis, detailed in a 2017 paper, and has collaborated with institutions like California State Polytechnic University through his nonprofit, the Center for the Unification of Science and Consciousness (CUSAC), to conduct these studies.
 
Well, if we’re living in a virtual reality, I don’t think I want to meet those who invented it.

Some really sick shit they’ve decided to put as part of the programming.

Childhood cancers?
Wars?
School shootings?

That’s some twisted minds that would say “yeah, let’s add THIS to their virtual world for funsies”
Just for perspective, despite the bleak picture you paint, I don't see billions of people jumping off buildings to escape this hell hole. There is also many pleasures and simple joys of life. The joy of finding the love of your life, raising children, eating spaghetti. Too many to list.
 
Seriously though with AI and quantum computing coming online it seems like its only a matter of time before we can cause virtual people to exist in the virtual universe that already exists.

No virtual universe exists.
 




Very interesting and fascinating interview with a former NASA physicist who says that all his claims he has tested & backed up with verifiable scientific experiments

Too bad he couldn't Imagine an original name for his unification theory.
 
Well at least this is in the right sub forum.

"Remote viewing, precognition & out-of-body experiences are real. Anyone can develop them by developing their intuition & intent."

So then we can expect to see him do some accurate remote viewing? I mean anyone can do it. Figure he'd be on it.
 
In the world of pure mathematics there are two roles. 1) The mathematician who finds interesting unsolved problems or conjectures and 2) the mathematician who solves (or proves) them. You cannot do 2) unless 1) is well defined. This guy is trying to do 2) without doing 1). For example, Do we even need an alternate universe? And what exactly are we trying to solve?
 
In the world of pure mathematics there are two roles. 1) The mathematician who finds interesting unsolved problems or conjectures and 2) the mathematician who solves (or proves) them. You cannot do 2) unless 1) is well defined. This guy is trying to do 2) without doing 1). For example, Do we even need an alternate universe? And what exactly are we trying to solve?
Assuming there is an alternate universe as he suggested, why would our need factor into it?

It's a long interview but he goes over it in detail.
 
Well at least this is in the right sub forum.



So then we can expect to see him do some accurate remote viewing? I mean anyone can do it. Figure he'd be on it.
He said the reported cost of $20 million for the 20-year project was minuscule compared to its value, and estimated that remote viewers saved the government about $240 million by helping find lost Scud missiles in the Persian Gulf War. Research has shown that remote viewing works 15 percent of the time or more, he said. "There is a huge percentage of intelligence collection systems that don't do as well."

The information provided by remote viewers, he reiterated, was never used without other types of corroboration. He said nearly every agency with an intelligence wing -- including the CIA, the National Security Agency, the Drug Enforcement Agency, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Secret Service, the Coast Guard and Customs -- employed remote viewers at some time or another.

On a typical workday, McMoneagle said, he reported to an old, leaky wooden barracks at Fort Meade, where he went into a one-person office. He sat at a desk with a typewriter and a mug of coffee. The cup said This End Up and had an arrow pointing the wrong way. He was then presented with sealed envelopes -- sometimes large brown ones, sometimes small white ones -- and he was asked to supply information about whatever was inside.

There might be a photograph of a person, and he would be asked to describe where the person was located. In that way, he said, he helped the Army locate hostages in Iran. He said he predicted almost precisely where Skylab was going to fall, 11 months before the spacecraft returned to Earth in 1979. He named the city in Italy -- Padua -- and described the second-floor apartment where Brig. Gen James Dozier was held hostage by the Red Brigades in 1981. The information arrived in Italy on the day Dozier was released.

Over the years, McMoneagle said, he was involved in about 450 missions. One of his favorites was in 1980, when CIA personnel captured a suspected KGB agent in South Africa. They wanted to know how the agent was communicating with the Soviet military. They put an envelope on McMoneagle's desk, and without knowing anything of the man, McMoneagle told the CIA that the man liked to use a small pocket calculator. The calculator turned out to be a disguised short-wave radio.

Last week he appeared on "Nightline" and on the ABC special "Put to the Test." "It's not like he handed me a perfect photograph of the location," said independent producer Ruth Rivin, of Elemental Productions, when asked about McMoneagle's performance. "Some of the descriptions were pretty remarkable," she said. "We followed all the scientific protocol laid out by Edwin May, a nuclear physicist {at SRI} who's been researching remote viewing for the last 20 years."


Washington Post: UP CLOSE & PERSONAL WITH A REMOTE VIEWER
 
Assuming there is an alternate universe as he suggested, why would our need factor into it?

It's a long interview but he goes over it in detail.
I’d love to see links to the scientific articles and observations on which these claims are based- so that we know it’s actually based on science and is not just wild speculation.

Even “scientists” have been known to do that.
 
Grok:

Thomas Campbell is a physicist and consciousness researcher best known for his work on "My Big TOE" (Theory of Everything), a trilogy of books published in 2003 that aims to unify physics, metaphysics, and consciousness. Born on December 9, 1944, Campbell earned a B.S. and M.S. in Physics and pursued Ph.D. work in experimental nuclear physics, focusing on low-energy nuclear collisions, though he did not complete the doctorate. His professional career spans significant roles in science and technology, including work as a systems analyst with U.S. Army technical intelligence, over 30 years in the U.S. missile defense community as a contractor for the Department of Defense, and a stint at NASA within the Ares I program, where he assessed risk and vulnerability to ensure mission success.

In parallel with his scientific career, Campbell explored altered states of consciousness, beginning in the early 1970s with Robert Monroe at what would become The Monroe Institute. There, he contributed to developing "Hemi-Sync" technology, which uses binaural beats to induce specific states of consciousness. This experience heavily influenced his theory that reality is a virtual simulation driven by consciousness, not matter—a concept he argues resolves paradoxes in quantum mechanics and aligns with phenomena like entanglement and the observer effect.


Campbell’s "My Big TOE" posits that consciousness is the fundamental essence of existence, with the physical universe as a virtual reality designed for conscious entities to evolve by reducing entropy (disorder) and fostering love and cooperation. He has proposed experiments to test this simulation hypothesis, detailed in a 2017 paper, and has collaborated with institutions like California State Polytechnic University through his nonprofit, the Center for the Unification of Science and Consciousness (CUSAC), to conduct these studies.


Replicated, double-blind, randomized trials on anesthetized patients have found Hemi-Sync effective as a partial replacement for fentanyl during surgery

No need for tariffs on Mexico and Canada, just clamp some headphones on the addicts and hit 'em with some banging binaural beats. Trumpstep.
 
Just for perspective, despite the bleak picture you paint, I don't see billions of people jumping off buildings to escape this hell hole. There is also many pleasures and simple joys of life. The joy of finding the love of your life, raising children, eating spaghetti. Too many to list.
And?
 

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