a reply to:
Arbitrageur
The fundamental error is this debunking piece of misrepresentation and nonsense is the assumption that Besant and Leadbeater described atoms. As
Stephen Phillips proved, what they paranormally observed was not these but the result of condensation of a quark-gluon plasma briefly created when,
unknown to them, their focussing on atoms caused pairs of atomic nuclei to collide. This explains the amazingly high degree of correlation between
their detailed accounts of the 111 "atoms" that they reported.
Dobbyns' comment on Phillips' research paper published in the Journal of Scientific Exploration and quoted in McBride's article:
"This is an invalid mode of argument. By accepting apparent successes as given, while explaining away failures by invoking new phenomena for which
there is no other positive evidence, one can support any theory whatsoever.[D1 p. 528]"
is an inaccurate representation of Phillips' analysis that is typical of Dobbyn's appallingly sloppy and distorted critique of his research paper.
First of all, Phillips pointed out in his two books:
smphillips.mysite.com...
and
smphillips.mysite.com...
(ch 1-4)
smphillips.mysite.com...&%20superstrings%205-6.pdf
(ch. 5-6)
that he found NO failures in the sense that Besant and Leadbeater's account was inconsistent with both nuclear physics and quark theory, once one has
freed oneself away from the assumption that they had described atomic nuclei (something McBride fails miserably to do, thereby making all his
criticisms of their work irrelevant). The minor discrepancies between a few details and theoretical expectation, based upon facts about atomic nuclei
and quarks, were plausibly explainable in terms of occasional, random errors of observation (human beings CAN make mistakes). The fit to the large
volume of data was statistically significant (p less than 5%). Secondly, Phillips did NOT invoke "new phenomena" to explain these supposed failures
(actually, non-existent!). All he did was the normal scientific procedure of showing that the few small deviations from his theory's prediction fell
well within the statistical range of random errors of observation. Dobbyn's comment is totally invalid and is typical of the scientifically inaccurate
and illogical judgements that he made in his critique. Phillips' research was accepted by a Fellow of the Royal Society, a Nobel Prize winner in
Physics, the associate director of an Indian government nuclear research institute and the Minister of Science in the Indian government, who was a
distinguished scientist. They would simply laugh at the nonsense expressed in the "Serious Scientific Lessons ..." Even its title was wrong! Besant
and Leadbeater did NOT make "direct observations of atoms", despite their claim to do so. Instead, they remote-viewed subatomic particles (quarks,
subquark/superstrings) in dibaryons such as the deuteron and in compound nuclei that were created from pairs of atomic nuclei during the stage of
preparation prior to sharp images becoming visible to their micro-psi vision. They never described the modern picture of the atom for the simple
reason that they were studying an object formed from the nuclear fusion of two nuclei. The incorrect title is typical of the inaccurate discussion
carried out by McBride in his article. His analysis and conclusions assumed that the "micro-psi atoms" that Besant and Leadbeater described were
single atoms. Phillips proved beyond a shadow of doubt that this was not the case. Hence, McBride's conclusions are wrong because they were all based
upon a completely wrong assumption that he stuck to throughout his article, even though he was familiar with Phillips' books, which proved that it was
wrong, or at least their basic conclusion! His statement:
"N.B. this evidence is non-scientific because it involves exclusively past observations and makes no testable prediction for the future"
is also wrong because Phillips' research made many predictions that CAN be tested in the future, one of which is that quarks are not fundamental but
composite objects that are composed of three E8xE8 heterotic superstrings. Indeed, as Nobel Prize winner Professor Abdus Salam commented to Phillips
when he gave his support to Phillips' paper predicting the existence of subquarks and published in 1979 in
Physics Letters, his derivation of
the experimentally observed t^(-2) behaviour of the proton's electromagnetic form factor (F(t) as the modulus of t approaches infinity IS evidence of
quark compositeness.
I would advise people here not to take seriously the article linked to above. It made a fundamentlaly flawed working assumption about the ESP
obervations of Besant and Leadbeater, which means that its negative conclusions are equally flawed and not to be trusted (McBride is a chemist, not a
professional particle physicist, as Phillips has been). If you want to examine for yourselves the REAL evidence (not even discussed in McBride's
article!) for clairvoyant observation of subatomic particles (again note: NOT atoms, as McBride mistakenly assumed), visit the pages on Phillips'
website at:
smphillips.mysite.com...
and
smphillips.mysite.com...
where he reveals the amazing degree of correlation between the observations made for the first 20 elements in the Periodic Table and the
quark/subquark composition of pairs of atomic nuclei of these elements (the analysis is extended to 56 elements in his second book). If you have the
knowledge and ability to follow all the details, you will come to no other conclusion than that Besant and Leadbeater did, indeed, remote view not
atoms but all the subatomic particles making up pairs of their nuclei. Of course, if you are so biassed towards ESP and the paranormal that any such
evidence will always mean nothing to you, then you will still go on bleating about the impossibility of it. If so, just remember: in science, evidence
always trumps personal ideology.
edit on 2-2-2020 by micpsi because: (no reason given)