World Science Database Home Scientists Abstracts Books Events Journals Experiments Topics Index More Find Login Scientists Interests Profession Websites Notables Countries World Map Recent Memorials Memorial More Mark Spann View count: 26 Spann, William Mark (Easy Link: http://www.worldsci.org/people/William_Spann) Independent Researcher Topics: Electric_Universe Interests: Electric Universe, Plasma Cosmology, Aether, Catastrophism, Planetary Science Nationality: USA Assumptions: The Universe is a Vast Electric Organism [attb. George Warder/1903]. It has an author : a Master Electrical Engineer of the highest order. The Universal design is fractal, non-expanding, infinitely scaled, self-sustaining, self-perpetuating, and of indefinite and indeterminable age. It is holographic, cohesive, and fluid (as opposed to "static" or "steady-state"). The Universe is clearly intelligently engineered such that its order, composition, and means of operations (by its designer) can be readily identified, recognized, and even appreciated by all sentient beings within its construct at all scales. The pervasive theme throughout the Cosmos is one of continual creation, whereby destruction, renewal, and re-ordering of its constituent parts is nothing more than a functional phase of its ongoing creation, and this Universal process is germane to its design. Catastrophism is Creation. (2011-03-13 20:31:15) Event Attendence: 2011-07-09 NPA Public Day 2 Public Day will attend 2011-07-08 Sagnac Awards Banquet Awards will attend 2011-07-06 18th Natural Philosophy Alliance Conference Conference will attend 2011-05-15 Gravity Group Video Conference will attend 2011-05-07 The Future of Science under an Electric Universe Paradigm Video Conference will attend 2011-04-23 Experimental Results In Measuring Atmospheric Electricity Video Conference 2011-04-16 Practicism: The Unifying Body of Understanding for Everything Video Conference 2011-04-02 The Natural Philosophy of the Electric Universe Video Conference Biography I began my interest in Cosmology and Catastrophism in 1975 at the tender age of 16 when my family moved to Decatur Georgia just a few miles from the Fernbank Science center, where I spent an inordinate amount of time at the planetarium events and rummaging through the science museum and exhibits. One day I met with the curator of the Museum with whom I'd gained acquaintance, to ask for advise on a topic or subject on which I might be able to write one single term paper to cover all three term paper assignments for my History, Science, and Sociology classes I had due that semester. He reached behind him and pulled from his bookshelf a rather tattered and yellowed paperback book, which he freely offered to me on the one condition that I never tell anyone where I got it. I thought the condition odd at the time, but I took the book and read it cover to cover in a matter of days. The title of that book was WORLDS IN COLLISION.