Worlds in Collision (1950) and Earth in Upheaval (1955) set forth the evidence and arguments for Immanuel Velikovsky’s pioneering, controversial theory that Venus emerged from Jupiter as a comet and repeatedly approached Earth, causing the Bronze Age catastrophes. Kenneth J. Dillon and Stephen J. Dillon discuss these books and the Scientific Rejectionism that stigmatized Velikovsky, thwarting a full, balanced assessment of his theories ever since. See also https://www.scientiapress.com/revised-venus-theory.
10-05 ver.3.mp4
Tags: Bronze Age catastrophes, Earth in Upheaval, earth science, history of science, Immanuel Velikovsky, interpretation of myths, planetary science, scientific rejectionism, the Reversing Earth, Worlds in Collision
In his Worlds in Collision (1950), pioneer scientist Immanuel Velikovsky put forward a theory that Earth had inverted during the Bronze Age Catastrophes; but many scientists considered his proposed electromagnetic cause unpersuasive. In 1982 British physicist Peter Warlow, otherwise a Velikovsky supporter, presented a gravitational explanation. Here Stephen J. Dillon and Kenneth J. Dillon of Scientia Press discuss Warlow’s The Reversing Earth (1982) and its role in the debate over Velikovsky’s theories and findings. See also https://www.scientiapress.com/theory-of-the-reversing-earth.
13-05 ver.2.mp4
Tags: Bronze Age catastrophes, catastrophism, Immanuel Velikovsky, inversion of Earth, Peter Warlow, scientific rejectionism, the Reversing Earth, tippe top
This is a presentation by Kenneth J. Dillon at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, Petaluma, California, on November 30, 2016. See also the video at https://vimeo.com/196130652.
Tags: Biophotonic Therapy, consciousness, dermal-optic photoreceptor, history of science, Immanuel Velikovsky, magnetoreceptor, medicinal bracelets, psi, scientific rejectionism, skeptics, Theory of the Red Blood Cells, UBI