Good evening, good evening, and welcome back to the show.
Now, for those of you who haven’t been in attendance previously, I would recommend you stop watching altogether. We have already covered a number of complex topics that are crucial to understanding what I am about to present. If you have no prior understanding of history, please stop reading, watching, or listening now.
The early images we received from Euclid defined a new age in our understanding of human psychology. This was some four hundred years ago, I remind you - a point in time in which these images were being put to various purposes, and subject to examinations by a number of individuals who studied the discipline of “science” - the field we now refer to as human psychology. As we have discussed, these tests were thorough, intrinsic, and dependent fundamentally on an element of magnification. That is to say, we were, for lack of a better phrase, “zoomed in.” And what does zooming in give you? A fragment of the picture.
So we went through the various societal changes that any casual historian is familiar with: the Awakening, the Information Wars, Stabilatory Economics, eventually culminating in The Great Devolution. There is a reason that technology today is much the same as it was two hundred years ago, and there is a reason that most services now come with a “surprise me” button. This is what the first images from Euclid began to teach those early ‘scientists’: they didn’t want answers. They were far too zoomed in for that. Really, what they wanted, was to be surprised.
This was the beginning of the transition towards human psychology. When the photographs were taken, they were taken with the intention of explaining Perchance, or, as we then referred to it, “dark matter”, or “dark energy.” Those studying science at the time had invented these terms as random descriptions of forces we did not understand. Remember, this really was a long time ago. We’re talking pre-Awakening, pre-Devolution Earth. Before Moises F. Philopp pioneered the field of human psychology, as we understand it today. Those photographs were, really, the birth of Perchance. Until that point, we still assumed there was something unknown about the universe, rather than something unknowable.
But it really was this telescope that began the process. Looking so far into space and making endless, conflicting guesses about why this was there, and that was that. In the first three decades since Euclid’s launch, seven-hundred-and-eighty-two different theories concerning the workings of “dark matter” were academically recognised (and this doesn’t account for the number of theories circulating the internet at the time, probably in the thousands). You can imagine the conflict this landed us in before Philopp coined the term “Perchance.” Of course, there was significant resistance, in the form of the wars we have already covered; the endless controversy over the correct scientific theory. Complex and violent events were, in essence, the rebellion against the establishment of human psychology. It is easy to forget this relationship, when studying these events in isolation, and even easier to forget the humble Euclid telescope, and the photographs that began it all. But without such intense zoom we never would have started the process. We never would have ironed out the kinks. Science would never have evolved into human psychology, and, obviously, we never would have been able to make this broadcast.
…
I hope you are all having a good evening, and that you have enjoyed the show.
read the original story (BBC News):
Euclid telescope: First images revealed from 'dark Universe' mission - BBC News
The views expressed in this publication do not reflect the views of the author. The stories themselves are based on imagined events. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is fictitious and should not be taken as representative.
HAS MAN EVER BEEN TO THE MOON!? Over the years that has sprung up in my mind and it raises real questions. Why is there no Butlins there!? Why no pleasure trips for the multi rich!? One of the moments I questioned this I was in PETER PAN LAND ( Kirriemuir ) and walking along a road and came to a side street that was named THE MOON!? Just by chance there were two young ladies coming along and I said would one of you stand on top of the road sign! Top of sign was only about a meter at most from pavement if not less, so one young lady agreed and with a hand up there she was-----THE FIRST PERSON TO STAND ON THE MOON!? The young lady worked in the Royal Bank of Scotland in Kirriemuir. I got a copy and sent it to the bank, when the lady showed it to other workers in the bank one lady said oh that is distant family of mine. My mother was from the Kirrie' area---Sma world eh.--------true story!
400 billion suns in our galaxy and perhaps 2 trillion galaxies in the universe.I knew Moises would figure it out....eventually