12/23/2020

Wine and Cheese


Diet Modifications, Including More Wine and Cheese, May Help Reduce Cognitive Decline

Summary: A new study reveals the impact of diet on cognitive health as we age. Researchers found cheese consumption had neuroprotective effects against cognitive decline. Daily moderate consumption of red wine was associated with improvements in cognitive function.

Source: Iowa State University

The foods we eat may have a direct impact on our cognitive acuity in our later years. This is the key finding of an Iowa State University research study spotlighted in an article published in the November 2020 issue of the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease.

The study was spearheaded by principal investigator, Auriel Willette, an assistant professor in Food Science and Human Nutrition, and Brandon Klinedinst, a Neuroscience PhD candidate working in the Food Science and Human Nutrition department at Iowa State. The study is a first-of-its-kind large scale analysis that connects specific foods to later-in-life cognitive acuity.

Willette, Klinedinst and their team analyzed data collected from 1,787 aging adults (from 46 to 77 years of age, at the completion of the study) in the United Kingdom through the UK Biobank, a large-scale biomedical database and research resource containing in-depth genetic and health information from half-a-million UK participants. The database is globally accessible to approved researchers undertaking vital research into the world’s most common and life-threatening diseases.

Participants completed a Fluid Intelligence Test (FIT) as part of touchscreen questionnaire at baseline (compiled between 2006 and 2010) and then in two follow-up assessments (conducted from 2012 through 2013 and again between 2015 and 2016). The FIT analysis provides an in-time snapshot of an individual’s ability to “think on the fly.”

Participants also answered questions about their food and alcohol consumption at baseline and through two follow-up assessments. The Food Frequency Questionnaire asked participants about their intake of fresh fruit, dried fruit, raw vegetables and salad, cooked vegetables, oily fish, lean fish, processed meat, poultry, beef, lamb, pork, cheese, bread, cereal, tea and coffee, beer and cider, red wine, white wine and champaign and liquor.

Here are four of the most significant findings from the study:

  1. Cheese, by far, was shown to be the most protective food against age-related cognitive problems, even late into life;
  2. The daily consumption of alchohol, particularly red wine, was related to improvements in cognitive function;
  3. Weekly consumption of lamb, but not other red meats, was shown to improve long-term cognitive prowess; and
  4. Excessive consumption of salt is bad, but only individuals already at risk for Alzheimer’s Disease may need to watch their intake to avoid cognitive problems over time.
This shows wine and cheese
Participants also answered questions about their food and alcohol consumption at baseline and through two follow-up assessments. Image is in the public domain

“I was pleasantly surprised that our results suggest that responsibly eating cheese and drinking red wine daily are not just good for helping us cope with our current COVID-19 pandemic, but perhaps also dealing with an increasingly complex world that never seems to slow down,” Willette said. “While we took into account whether this was just due to what well-off people eat and drink, randomized clinical trials are needed to determine if making easy changes in our diet could help our brains in significant ways.”

Klinedinst added, “Depending on the genetic factors you carry, some individuals seem to be more protected from the effects of Alzheimers, while other seem to be at greater risk. That said, I believe the right food choices can prevent the disease and cognitive decline altogether. Perhaps the silver bullet we’re looking for is upgrading how we eat. Knowing what that entails contributes to a better understanding of Alzheimer’s and putting this disease in a reverse trajectory.”


Willette and Klinedinst acknowledge the valuable contributions of the other members of the research team: Scott Le, Colleen Pappas, Nathan Hoth, Amy Pollpeter and Qian Wang in the Iowa State department of Food Science and Human Nutrition; Brittany Larsen, Neuroscience graduate program at Iowa State; Yueying Wang and Li Wang, department of Statistics at Iowa State; Shan Yu, department of Statistics, University of Virginia; Karin Allenspach, department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences at Iowa State; Jonathan Mochel, department of Biomedical Sciences at Iowa State; and David Bennett, Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center, Rush Medical Center, Rush University.

About this cognition and diet research news

Source: Iowa State University
Contact: Auriel Willette – Iowa State University
Image: The image is in the public domain

https://neurosciencenews.com/cheese-wine-cognition-17408/

62 Camden Mews

 

62 Camden Mews

ARCHITECT’S – Mews Project Profile

Name of project

62 Camden Mews, NW1 9BX

Project description Ted_Sketch

Construction of two storey mews property on empty site at 62 Camden Mews, NW1 9BX in the London Borough of Camden. This is a part closed and part open plan house.

The closed plan sections are solid having a brickwork surround to reflect their use. The open plan sections are more lightweight, being constructed in softwood (deal) with cedar cladding to give the feel of a ‘greenhouse’ structure.

Client

In 1960 Ted Cullinan – the founder and chairman of Cullinan Studio who are a large Architectural co-operative based in Islington – purchased a site for the construction of his own Mews house. The site in North West London was semi-derelict. It had been used for light industrial purposes of a number of years. There were just two trees and an Anderson shelter.

Ted’s contact details are listed below.

Budget

Originally the site cost £2000 and the construction cost was £4000. Timbers were salvaged from an army camp he was then working on.

The value is now estimated at £1.5 million.

Design inspirations

The house uses solar principles whereby lights defuses down using the angle of the sun’s rays to enter the structure. The design provides most of the light at the top and lesser light through restricted windows to the lower floor. The top floor is used for the living rooms and the lower floor for the bedrooms.

The concrete and timber construction is designed to reflect the lightness of Open Plan to the top floor. The brickwork expresses the function and solidity of the closed lower floor layout.

At the time of construction Ted was dealing with 1950’s CLASP schools which were Cubist in style and have no overhangs. Ted learned the value of the overhangs and incorporated these into his building.

The other houses he built at the time (1960’s) were in California and in Hampshire. These were built along similar principles which all aimed to achieve most gain from the sun.

Project notes and timeline

Having purchased the site two years earlier, works started in 1962 allowing occupation by Ted and his family in 1964. The house was still a work in progress at that time and even today further works – such as the installation of triple glazing – are being carried out.

The property was completely redeveloped and this was allowed because there were no other buildings there. It is now a conservation area.

Ted did most of the work himself with the help of friends; initially he did not do the electrics or plumbing. He became adept at plumbing but left all the electrical works to others. Now past the official retirement age and whilst still active as an Architect he is no longer active in construction.

Technological appraisal and review

Camden Mews runs behind the very grand buildings of Camden Square and it is near council flats which gives it a good social mix. Ted considers that properties should follow the scale and structure of the social mix, and all properties should remain open to one another to avoid the wealthy cutting themselves off.

Ted’s philosophy is to try and get the best building on a site, but not necessarily get the best value. He aims for overall efficiency and to establish a good plan inside and outside for living. Mews are small scale world within a large-scale world and should be treated accordingly.

Ted’s view is that any progressive architecture eventually becomes adopted by others. Whilst it may be resisted initially, ironically the same powers subsequently apply red tape to preserve it.

Ted would like to see a green future for the Mews, within an urban context, with application of his principles of solar gain. Ideally he would like Mews properties to be partially self-sufficient and would encourage Mews owners to grow vegetables on the roof or other parts of the property, and use soil or other natural materials to insulate their Mews.

Drawings, photos and other details

Camden Mews - Before

Camden Mews – Before

Camden Mews Construction

Camden Mews Construction

Future Mews projects

Ted is not involved in any basement projects, and surprisingly has not been involved in other Mews houses until recently.

He is now building 4 Mews at 87 and 89 Camden Mews, opposite his Mews. This project uses a 50 foot wide site which will be divided in half to create 2 Mews per 25 foot wide site. As previously he will apply solar principles, which means he can then build them in south-west direction and therefore optimise the benefits of the sun on the site.

Contact details

Ted Cullinan

CULLINAN STUDIO

5 Baldwin Terrace  

London  

N1 7RU

www.cullinanstudio.com

Gödel’s Constitutional Quarrel



Gödel’s Constitutional Quarrel

“The examiner was intelligent enough to quickly quieten Gödel and say ‘Oh god, let’s not go into this’ and broke off the examination at this point, greatly to our relief” — Oskar Morgenstern

Kurt Gödel (1906–1978) was the greatest logician who ever lived. At the age of 24, he revolutionized our understanding of the limits of epistemology — the theory of knowledge—by proving mathematically that all formal systems of logic are inherently incomplete. In a highly technical paper of 26 pages, Gödel showed how, no matter how comprehensive a system of rules, laws or axioms we devise, there will always be true and false statements which ‘fall through the cracks’, meaning they cannot be shown rigorously to belong to either classification. The consequences of his discovery spanned not only the foundations of mathematics, logic and philosophy, but indeed also spurred the development of the then-nascent fields of computer science, information theory and artificial intelligence.

Gödel’s Brilliant Madness

A meticulous man, perhaps the most meticulous man, Gödel arrived at his proof in the same way he arrived at most of his beliefs, by a combination of deep skepticism, rigor and, some say, pathological pessimism. Gödel would indeed spend the whole of his life in a battle against his two fiercest enemies: a morbid obsession with illness and death and, as a result, a poor physical health. A lifelong iophobe, Gödel feared nothing more than being poisoned, and so made sure to only eat foods prepared for him and tasted by his wife Adele. Having grown up in apartments in Vienna heated by coal and coke, he obsessed over what he called “bad air” and “gases”, packing up and moving several times and refusing for most of his life to sleep in places warmed by central heating.

Gödel had fled the Nazi regime in Austria in 1940 following Hitler’s Anschluss of his native country. A visiting professor at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, he spent the war years contemplating what he had experienced in Europe in an eternal — often times losing — battle against his own mind and its appetite for paranoid, cynical interpretations of reality.

Becoming an American Citizen

When the time came for Gödel to become an American citizen, he invited his friends Oskar Morgenstern and Albert Einstein to come along as witnesses to his citizenship hearing. A “very thorough man” according to his close friend Morgenstern, Dr. Gödel spent the months leading up to this hearing “informing himself about the history of North America by human beings”. For Gödel, such an inquiry would never have been complete without a sufficiently thorough study of all matters of American history, including the history of Native Americans, their tribes, the early settlers, the Civil War, Princeton, New Jersey, where “the borderline was between borough and the township”, “how the Borough Council was elected, the Township Council, who the Mayor was, how the Township Council functioned” and so on.

“I tried, to explain that all of this was totally unnecessary, of course, but with no avail”, Morgenstern later recalled in a memorandum. Gradually, as the months wore on, Gödel “proceeded to study American history, concentrating in particular on matters of constitutional law”. Morgenstern (who himself was an immigrant and took the same examination in 1944) “tried to convince him that such questions never were asked, that most questions were truly formal and that he would easily answer them; that at most they might ask what sort of government we have in this country or what the highest court is called”. Gödel nonetheless persisted, immersing himself deeper and deeper in his study of the American Constitution.

Oskar Morgenstern (left) and Kurt Gödel (right) in Princeton, New Jersey. Photograph likely taken by Albert Einstein (Photos: Courtesy of the IAS Archive)

A scientist held in the highest possible esteem by colleagues, Gödel was in the 1930s and 40s part of a close-knit community of scholars in Princeton, the likes of which the world has likely never seen before or since. The most famous scientist in the world, Albert Einstein, had arrived in 1933. He was closely followed by a group of Hungarian geniuses lead by John von Neumann (1903–1957), sometimes referred to simply as ‘the smartest person who has ever lived’. The assembly of European emigres in Princeton in the 1930s and 40s was indeed so dense that the resultant mixture of accents spoken around Princeton University would be colloquially known as Fine Hall English, for the building the department of mathematics was housed in at the time. All of them looked up to Gödel, perhaps even more so than to anyone else. Before his death, Albert Einstein (1879–1955) himself told Morgenstern that even though “my own work no longer meant much, that he came to the Institute merely … to have the privilege of walking home with Gödel”. von Neumann, who had been in the audience when Gödel presented his breakthrough 1931 paper, called him “absolutely irreplaceable”, “in a class by himself”, asking later — upon von Neumann’s nomination to full professor — “How any of us can be called professor when Gödel is not?”

The Hearing

Still several months ahead of his citizenship examination in 1947, Gödel was conferring with his friend Morgenstern with increasing frequency, when “then came an interesting development”. As Morgenstern later recalled, “He rather excitedly told me that in looking at the Constitution, to his distress, he had found some inner contradictions, and that he could show how in a perfectly legal manner it would be possible for somebody to become a dictator and set up a Fascist regime, never intended by those who drew up the Constitution.”

The Clarkson S. Fisher Federal District Court Building in Trenton, New Jersey

With him to the citizenship hearing he asked his two closest friends, Einstein and Morgenstern. His examiner was Judge Phillip Forman. As Morgenstern later recalled in a draft of a Memorandum from Mathematica entitled History of the Naturalization of Kurt Gödel (dated September 13th 1971):

Examiner: "Now, Mr. Gödel, where do you come from?"
Gödel: "Where I come from? Austria."
Examiner: "What kind of government did you have in Austria?"
Gödel: "It was a republic, but the constitution was such that it finally was changed into a dictatorship."
Examiner: "Oh! This is very bad. This could not happen in this country."
Gödel: "Oh, yes. I can prove it."

As Morgenstern writes, “Einstein and I were horrified during this exchange; The examinor was intelligent enough to quickly quieten Gödel and say “Oh god, let’s not go into this” and broke off the examination at this point, greatly to our relief”. Morgenstern’s notes from the day appear in his Memorandum from Mathematica on the subject of the “History of the Naturalization of Kurt Gödel”, dated September 13th 1971, available below:


Oskar Morgenstern (1902–1977)’s Memorandum from Mathematica, written September 13th 1971

Gödel’s Loophole

“One of the great unsolved problems of constitutional law” — John Nowak

Could a technical loophole in the constitution ever allow a dictatorial regime to emerge in the United States? Legal scholar F.E. Guerra-Pujol argues that if so, Gödel’s objection was likely with the “amending power in Article V, and so the logical possibility of “self-amendment”. His conjecture appears in the paper

  • Guerra-Pujol, F.E. (2012). Gödel’s Loophole. Capital University Law Review 41, pp. 637–673.

Article V

Guerra-Pujol (2012) argues that the “design defect” Gödel observed in the United States Constitution likely related to Article V, which describes the “process whereby the Constitution, the nation’s frame of government, may be altered.” The article in other words allows the people to change or amend the Constitution through a two-stage amendment process, which requires:

Article V Process of Amending the United States ConstitutionStage 1
A 2/3 majority approval by the House of Representatives
A 2/3 majority approval by the Senate
Stage 2
A 3/4 majority by the States

Crucially however, as Guerra-Pujol (2012) points out, although changes to the constitution through this process would be incredibly difficult to pass:

Article V does not prevent any change or amendment to Article V itself.

Was this Gödel’s observation which in theory might allow for a dictatorship to emerge in the future? If so, the weakness Gödel observed is the following:

If the procedural requirements of Article V may be amended, they may be amended "downward", that is, reduced or eliminated, making it easier to amend the Constitution in the future.- Excerpt, Gödel's Loophole by F.E. Guerra-Pujol (2012)

This, in turn, may over time increase the probability of a future amendment that allows for the emergences of a constitutional dictatorship.

After the Hearing

As Morgenstern writes in his memorandum, after the hearing: “We left, drove back to Princeton, and as we came to the corner of Mercer Street, I asked Einstein whether he wanted to go to the Institute or home. He said, “Take me home, my work is not worth anything anyway anymore”. […] Then off to Einstein’s home again”. As they reached Einstein’s home, the great man turned back toward Gödel and said:

Einstein: “Now Gödel, this was your one but last examination”

Gödel: “Goodness, is there still another one to come?”

Einstein: “The next examination is when you step into your grave.”

Gödel: “But Einstein, I don’t step into my grave”

Einstein: “That’s just the joke of it!”

A genius of relativity but perhaps not of comedy, that Einstein.

“With that he departed. I drove Gödel home. Everybody was relieved that this formidable affair was over: Gödel had his head free again to go about problems of philosophy and logic”. — Oskar Morgenstern


Written by

Editor-in-Chief at Cantor’s Paradise. Research Fellow at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.


12/22/2020

Make Contact With Parallel Universe


Researchers At Large Hadron Collider Are Confident To Make Contact With Parallel Universe In Days

 the astoundingly complex LHC “atom smasher” at the CERN center in Geneva, Switzerland, are fired up to its maximum energy levels ever in an endeavor to identify - or perhaps generate - tiny black holes.



 If successful a very new universe is going to be exposed – modifying completely not only the physics books but the philosophy books too. 

It is even probable that gravity from our own universe may “transfer” into this parallel universe, researchers at the LHC say. The experiment is assured to accentuate alarmist critics of the LHC, many of whom initially warned the high energy particle collider would start the top of our universe with the making a part of its own. But up to now Geneva stays intact and securely outside the event horizon.



No doubt the LHC has been outstandingly successful. First researchers proved the existence of the mysterious Higgs boson “God particle” - a key building block of the cosmos - and it's seemingly well on the thanks to revealing ‘dark matter’ - a previously untraceable theoretical prospect that's now believed to form up the foremost of matter within the universe. But next week’s experimentation is reflected to be a game-changer. Mir Faizal, one in every of the three-strong group of physicists behind this experiment, said: “Just as many parallel sheets of paper, which are two-dimensional objects [breadth and length] can exist during a dimension [height], parallel universes can even exist in higher dimensions.”



“We predict that gravity can leak into extra dimensions, and if it does, then miniature black holes are produced at the LHC. Normally, when people consider the multiverse, they think about the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics, where every possibility is actualized. This can not be tested so it's a philosophy and not science. this is often not what we mean by parallel universes. What we mean is real universes in extra dimensions. “As gravity can effuse of our universe into the additional dimensions, such a model may be tested by the detection of mini black holes at the LHC.”

“We have calculated the energy at which we expect to detect these mini black holes in ‘gravity's rainbow’ [a new scientific theory].”

“If we do detect mini black holes at this energy, then we are going to know that both gravity's rainbow and additional dimensions are correct."

When the LHC is fired up the energy is calculated in Tera electron volts – a TeV is 1,000,000,000,000, or one trillion, electron Volts. Up to now, the LHC has sought for mini black holes at energy levels below 5.3 TeV. But the foremost recent study says this is often too low.


Instead, the model forecasts that black holes might form at energy levels of no but 9.5 TeV in six dimensions and 11.9 TeV in 10 dimensions.


124 comments:

  1. ....What could go wrong? ;-;

    Reply
    Replies
    1. Lists 934,574,003,826,223,000,000,000. possibilities. ;-)

    2. Meh, what could go wrong with someone showing up who is burdened with glorious purpose?

    3. Since february 22, 2016, when i went to the hospital, i found myself in this other version of earth, or some kind of alternate reality, or a simulated version of earth where geography keeps changing. i don't know what this place is, but i know it isn't my home earth that was located at the outer edge of the sagittarius arm. Whoever wrote this article might sound like a writer for national enquirer, however this parallel earth situation is serious. The people at CERN have transferred many thousands of souls to this other earth in Orion.

    4. So.... You got here in 2016, but you have been on Blogger since 2008? :)

    5. the worlds screwed already, may aswell go full tilt

    6. Damn man! You’re and inter dimensional traveller and the news you bring is that the constant across our dimensions is the national enquirer? We really are doomed 🤣

    7. https://youtu.be/qORYO0atB6g

    8. I have a hammer and a nuke. What could go wrong?

    9. pretty interesting stuff really, recently i was outside pre dawn, i notice a very bright light, saying to myself wow waht a bright street light, the light became bigger and energetic, then several others appeared nearby ,then an outine of a structure, then light changed into a strange tangerine colour, then the structure vanished,just before dawn, like it stepped back into another demention,

    10. Patrik Glassel - Are you sure it wasn't a State Mental Hospital?

    11. A lot! What about if Even if a minute black hole is created it would swallow our universe,
      Scientists at CERN are Playing God and it’s INSANE!

  2. 2020... October, don’t let us down!

    Reply
    Replies
    1. If there's one thing we've learned, 2020 is capable of *anything*.

    2. Yeah, great year for multidimensional experiments.

  3. http://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html

    This is a copy pasta of this article from 2015

    Reply
    Replies
    1. I thought this was old.... also note it was before the 2016 election and appears to have fucked our timeline all to hell......... lol

    2. and that one was a copy paste of another article from 2015:
      https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/565315/Scientists-at-Large-Hadron-Collider-hope-to-make-contact-with-PARALLEL-UNIVERSE-in-days

    3. This is depressing lol just tweaking old news for 2020 😂 just sucks. Calgon take me away haha

    4. That's it! They have discovered how to travel back in time!

    5. Perhaps many would be best served if 2020 was simply deleted and the universe restored from off-site backup taken last Oct or Nov..

  4. Fascinating news, but the translator needs more coffee! "Effuse of our universe" "next week’s experimentation is reflected to be a game-changer" "well on the thanks to revealing ‘dark matter’ - a previously untraceable theoretical prospect that's now believed to form up the foremost of matter" "the high energy particle collider would start the top of our universe with the making a part of its own"

    Reply
    Replies
    1. What's the original language?

    2. I have been here before. Same damn problem.

    3. I have been here before. Same damn problem.

    4. Don't you recognize Klingon when you see it?

    5. Who wrote this? It's badly written or translated

    6. Agreed, either bad translation, or bad editing. Not science journal quality. Please.

    7. And a repeat of a 2015 article.. time-travellers?! 😏

  5. Proofread your writing because this article is trash.

    "The experiment is assured to accentuate alarmist critics of the LHC, many of whom initially warned the high energy particle collider would start the top of our universe with the making a part of its own."

    "and it's seemingly well on the thanks to revealing ‘dark matter’ - a previously untraceable theoretical prospect that's now believed to form up the foremost of matter within the universe."

    "But next week’s experimentation is reflected to be a game-changer."

    "Instead, the model forecasts that black holes might form at energy levels of no but 9.5 TeV in six dimensions and 11.9 TeV in 10 dimensions."

    Reply
    Replies
    1. It's a tweaked copy-paste from http://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html looking to snag click-baity views.

    2. AI doesn't proofread. This is procedurally generated imho; the syntax errors aren't iterative,so english as 2nd lang is less likely. The stochastic grammar mistakes are so wrong, they are incoherent, nonsensicle and divergent so I don't see it as a blogger with nascent taxanomic or etylogic comprehension or bereft of native cogniscence.
      Dollars to donuts is a new deepdream-esque brute force associative preditive clickbait crawler algorithim with 2nd-aryEnglish editorial oversight.

    3. I bet you’re a hit at parties!

  6. I think this website is very amusing

    Reply
  7. These articles are written by artificial intelligence....

    Reply
    Replies
    1. To me or appears to be the result of machine translation.

  8. Artificial stupidity, perhaps.

    Reply
  9. Obergruppenfuhrer John Smith and Barnabus Collins are eagerly awaiting the results of this parallel universe experiment.

    Reply
    Replies
    1. I can prove the above is true, as I AM one of the universes that Cern released into the Multiverse of which y'all are all a part. I will accept donations at PayPal of $100 USD each for being nice and not destroying ALL y'all's little ol' inferior universe where everybody lives and has being.

    2. I don't want my universe destroyed: so where do I send the $100?

    3. Freedom only costs a buck o five

  10. Who is the author of this article? Also, who is being quoted? There are numerous quotation marks, but no source is cited. Only a farce would be published this way, or a so-called "practical joke."
    And, there's no way to sign this comment other than this: - Paul Freedman

    Reply
    Replies
    1. Total crap first published five years ago by a British tabloid. It awsn't even the first of April!
      https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/565315/Scientists-at-Large-Hadron-Collider-hope-to-make-contact-with-PARALLEL-UNIVERSE-in-days?fbclid=IwAR2chR9VGw1h1EjF9ecMRSuATCEDOw7XMvadl71lTj3wwVTo28V-1I9NN0s

    2. Because it's all a bullshit. Rewriting physics and philosophy? Come on, no scientist will say this pompous words, not even as a joke. Parallel universes? That's not even a theory, it's only an untestable and unfalsifiable hypothesis, not something worth testing.

    3. Parallel universes absolutely is a theory.

    4. Some of you people better wake the fck up.....Even Hawking warned against everything that CERN is doing. Creating new, alternate, past timelines will be catastrophic. 🤨👿

    5. I remember him warning us! I agree with You!

  11. How dare you copy/paste this from years ago as if it's breaking news! You have no integrity. Honestly, shame on you.
    http://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html

    Reply
  12. why is this just copy and pasted from 5 years ago?
    https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/565315/Scientists-at-Large-Hadron-Collider-hope-to-make-contact-with-PARALLEL-UNIVERSE-in-days

    Reply
  13. Mini black hole is said as if that’s supposed to mean something. What’s a mini black hole, more gravity than other locations?

    Reply
    Replies
    1. You really are out of your element here, you realize that I presume? This is science...shop class is down the hall to the left.😉😈

  14. Can they check on parallel universe me? If Parallel universe me is doing better than me I want to know where he went right. If doing worse than me I have oodles of advice for parallel universe me.

    Reply
  15. I think you need to make it clear that this is not an original article, and in fact appears to be plagiarized from a 5 year old article: http://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html

    Reply
  16. perhaps the black hole worked and this is the now article from then?? 🤣

    Reply
    Replies
    1. What if the black hole we cause is what created our universe in the past and we are just seeing the beginning of us? If we stop it, we never existed, if we let it continue...

  17. THIS IS AN OLD ARTICLE,

    Reply
  18. "the high energy particle collider would start the top of our universe with the making a part of its own"

    wat

    Reply
  19. So, you copy/pasted a crazy pseudo-scientific article from 2015?
    Wow, so... scientific. Skepticism and critical thinking at their best.
    This is Deepak Chopra level of bullshit-ery.

    Reply
  20. Can I borrow this to go back 4 years and "fix" something?

    Reply
  21. How about an editor??? after a couple paragraphs I gave up it was that bad....

    Reply
  22. How about an editor??? after a couple paragraphs I gave up it was that bad....

    Reply
  23. I'll take "Things that should wait till next year" for $500, Alex

    Reply
  24. So I don't need to bother to have my will notarized?

    Reply
  25. Ondt eblieve veryetighg ouy htnik.

    Reply
    Replies
    1. Clearly it was a disaster. All of the timeline is distorted and this is obviously the twilight zone...

  26. What is the native language of this article's author? Much of this does not make sense in English. Was this text an experiment in computer-generated language?

    Reply
  27. I just hope I’m a f***** billionaire in the parallel universe !

    Reply
  28. I hope they won't get the whole planet Earth into a black hole, then we are in trouble.

    Reply
  29. Don't forget to carry a towel.

    Reply
  30. no they will not make contact with a parallel universe, because nothing interesting like that ever happens in this world. Because this world is chronically boring.

    Reply
  31. So much money spent when we had the answer all along. It is fourty two.

    Reply
  32. Do you want and interdimensional war? because this is how you start and interdimensional war.

    Reply
  33. Why does this article have such strange wording? Some of it doesn’t even make sense. I swear, any idiot can type a bunch of meaningless crap into their laptop & it’s forever out there for the whole world to “enjoy.” At least make sense for Gods sake.

    Reply
  34. For articles written in English, maybe you should pay writers who actually know how to write the language instead of the contractor with the lowest bid. The writing in this article is abhorrent and makes me not want to read anything else on your site.

    Reply
    Replies
    1. Wow. AND plagiarized word for word from another site. Not even a recycled article of your own.

      http://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html

      Yeah, I won't be back.

  35. This entire article, and the images, were first posted in October 2015. Still an interesting subject.

    Reply
  36. Not parallel universe but underworld universe , universe of dangerous tied devils , they want to set them free to the humanbeings

    Reply
  37. Star Labs!!!!!


    Don't forget to carry a towel

    Reply
    Replies
    1. Yes. Especially if your name's Arthur Dent.

    2. Love this comment lol

  38. Can you get a message to my parallel self
    If you meet a girl name Wendy run for the freaking hills. Hahaha

    Reply
  39. I thought a TeV was that thing I saw in motel rooms, that one with sounds coming out of it and moving pictures showing doing inane stories and unwatchable drivel. I'd give up after a few minutes--one hundred channels and nothing to watch. But this sounds dangerous; it's bad enough they have the National Enquirer in other universes. If only they had the London Daily Mail.. Could the world end if these guys make contact with another universe? Would "The Littlest Hobo" and "My Mother the Car" be running on every TV? A Jerry Lewis Marathon on Netflix? JUST DON'T!!! Too much risk--it could be The End of Civilization as We Know It..

    Reply
  40. So many grammatical errors in this article.
    I could hardly finish reading it.

    Reply
  41. As I have said before hire a proofreader.

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  42. Now you do remember something about the Tower of Babel. don't you?? Or were you asleep that say in Sunday School? Well, just in time for the election...

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  43. Thankfully I’m in my eighties and have had a wonderful life so carry on.

    Reply
  44. Can this wait until after Friday, I’ve got a hot date...

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  45. They seek to bring in the fallen Angels and their Nephilim offspring, and fight
    with the giants against the gods at the end of time....or, they could just chill
    out and have a beer, man.

    Reply
  46. Are these guys responsible for the Mandela effect? Been wondering about that.

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    Replies
    1. I've read in a few places that we got knocked off our timeline back in 2012 due to Cern. And truly, everything does seem to have gone to absolute shit since then. I would love more credible info on this myself.

    2. Me too! I swear it happened!

  47. Who cares about this stuff when you can't even decide what to eat for dinner.

    Reply
  48. Give them a link to this movies ASAP........
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justice_League:_The_Flashpoint_Paradox

    Reply
  49. Will Pork Scratchings taste better in this new place?

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  50. "Make Contact With Parallel Universe" Really? How is this "science"? I can't believe a site devoted to science would publish this crap. How about discussing what the collider actually does and the actual science behind it.

    Reply
  51. RAPTURE EVENT cover up story , oops we accidentally open up a small black hole ⚫ and it suck up all those people , oops it's a gravity leakage from our universe to a parallel universe , note : gravity pulls us down to earth , black holes suck matter and light , black holes have massive gravity that suck in matter, oops we are made of atoms - electrons which are matter.⚫🌀🤔

    Reply
  52. Soon after they contact a parallel universe they will discover that we live in bizarro world.

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  53. WHY the hell did they just copy an article from 2015??? https://physics-astronomy.com/2015/10/researchers-at-large-hadron-collider.html?fbclid=IwAR3MPVS9p41Ltjfu5P139jS18yPNz7Qkr4XkW5euGBrGJFOxlwKOBVo97PM

    Reply
  54. @synesthesia
    that is a very good and important question

    Reply
  55. https://www.express.co.uk/news/world/565315/Scientists-at-Large-Hadron-Collider-hope-to-make-contact-with-PARALLEL-UNIVERSE-in-days
    Please compare this article sentence by sentence. DO NOT share this article!

    Reply
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    General Contractors Agoura Hills

    Reply
    Replies
    1. SO - like - what happened? Texas is still here. I was wondering if any of the other billions of people of Earth get to have a say in whether tiny black holes are created on our planet or we just all have to go along to get along? And damn the torpedoes?

  57. *half-life theme intensifies*

    Reply
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    Regards:Home Addition Northridge

    Reply
  59. Usually I never comment on blogs but your article is so convincing that I never stop myself to say something about it. You’re doing a great job Man,Keep it up.
    Regards: Home Addition Thousand Oaks

    Reply
  60. WTF!??! I wish they would make up their minds.....

    They just spent almost $20 Billion to keep out illegal Aliens and now they want to spend Trillions on building a door...???   

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    Science world