
CURRENT PARADIGM
Energy is viewed within the current paradigm as an
inherently limited property of the universe. Its
motions and economy are assumed to be governed by
self-limiting functions, while the anomalies are left
unexplored. However, it is in these anomalies we are
finding exceptions to the heretofore 'established'
laws of physics.
Science has evolved from experimental beginnings, and
in order to reconcile the findings of early
scientists, a common theory was adopted. This is most
particularly centered around the 2nd Law of
Thermodynamics which, as currently applied,
pre-supposes the Universe to suffer from a condition
known as 'entropy'. It surmises, despite much
contradictory evidence, that energy can never appear
at any one point in space without being drawn out of
another. The theory rules out the existence of a
'perpetual motion' machine that could power itself
without depleting its source of power.
The 2nd Law's Primary tenet, simply stated: "All
energy is converted from one form to another, never
created or destroyed."
The gross assumption implicit in the 2nd Law rests on
the premise that the Universe, as a whole, is an
"isolated system" into which no (as yet unmanifest)
energy can flow. This is indeed an assumption based
upon purely metaphysical constructs. If empiricism is
the guiding philosophy of science, how can such an
unfounded assumption be so religiously adopted by the
so-called rationalists who champion it?
It appears most of these conclusions are based on a
consensus reality that mirrors the past 200-years of
early industrial development. As all inventions
to-date have been largely inefficient and consumptive,
there is no precedent in science for the advent of
'New Energy' -- pollutionless, totally renewable, free
energy from space. Numerous examples of such
technology now exist that cannot be reconciled with
the prevailing theoretical constructs.
All that awaits is a scientific renaissance that can
transcend 'the known' and admit another paradigm.
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