I am going to make a bold statement: This book, The IMPACTS Dynamic–Working Against Dispersal in Human Society and Across the Universe, will answer more questions about how the world and universe work than any book ever written. It will explain the connectedness of more disciplines that any other book. My goal has always been to find the lowest common denominator–the formula–that would explain as much about universal processes as possible. I believe that this book comes closer to that than anything written so far.
Don’t look at a person’s credentials when trying to determine what he or she can do. Almost all truly significant discoveries have come from people who “did not fit the bill” or who labored from a demonstrably “underdog” position. In this book, I explain why that is the case. Change comes from the periphery–in the human world and the universe at large, and there are clear reasons for it.
“They” say that you should not talk about your own accomplishments–that you should let others do it for you. Then your accomplishments and you have more credibility. In other words, wait for someone “bigger and stronger” to confer importance on you and what you have done. But that “importance” may not be forthcoming if your work is not within the existing paradigm, which this is not. My attitude is this–if you have something important to say and others are not ready to see the value of it, say it anyway and tell the world how important it really is. The discoveries I have made have the potential to reorient human thinking in a more positive direction.
I have read thousands and thousands of pages in my research from every possible angle as it relates to human civilization, and that includes the science of the universe. I am very confident that what I have written is groundbreaking and “accurate” though I recognize that “accurate” is extremely relative. Let me put it this way–it is far more accurate than what we currently have.
Usually, this is the process. We learn a little, then we learn a little more, as we continue to expand our circle of knowledge and our view of reality. I am going to skip steps, not in the process of discovery, but in the speed of discovery. Learning about how the universe works doesn’t have to be slow and laborious. It can be quick and exciting–if you are ready for a new view. Actually, the picture doesn’t change one iota, but what you see when you look at the picture will be totally different.