An Approach to Understanding Psychotronics

Abstract

Psychotronics refers to the interaction of mind and matter, and so to a union of physics and metaphysics. The author advances a fourth law of logic together with the first three Aristotlean laws of logic form a complete, closed metalogic encompassing both physics and metaphysics. A cluster of an infinite number of orthogonal 3-dimensional spatial frames, all containing the same single fourth dimension, or time axis, provides a framework onto which mind, matter, fields, being, life, and both physical and metaphysical phenomena can be fitted and precisely modelled. Thus metaphysics can be precisely modelled by, and related to, physics. A mind becomes a complete 3-dimensional physical world. From the model, constructs that model life, death, a biological system, psi, consciousness, inception, telepathy, psychokinesis, UFO's, God, and the collective unconscious can be taken. Materialization, dematerialization, and mind linkage also exist, as does a specific mechanism for tulpas (materialized thought forms). The two-slit experiment and the Hieronymus device are shown to involve the fourth law of logic. Feynman's criterion for a unified field theory is discussed. Hubbard's manifold theory of physics also derives the four-law metalogic.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 1976
Accession Number
ADA027866

Entities

People

  • Thomas E. Bearden

Organizations

  • System Development Corporation

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Advanced Electronics

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Boundaries
  • Charged Particles
  • Electric Fields
  • Electromagnetic Fields
  • General Relativity
  • Gravitational Fields
  • Identities
  • Mathematics
  • Parapsychology
  • Physics
  • Probability
  • Quantum Mechanics
  • Relativity Theory
  • Special Relativity
  • Three Dimensional
  • Two Dimensional
  • Unidentified Flying Objects

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Quantum spin resonance or Electron Paramagnetic Resonance spectroscopy.
  • Theoretical Analysis.