From: David Lynch <dnl1960 at yahoo.com>
To: Robert L. Crowther <rob at discovery.org>
Cc: Jessica M. Liddle <jessical at discovery.org>; Kelly J. Unger <kunger at discovery.org>; Matt Rosenberg <mattr at discovery.org>
Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2008 at 11:12:32 AM EST
Subject: Foveon's "silicon eye"

Robert,
 
Please pardon my interruption into your busy day.

A long strange series of coin incidences have lead me to you. More specifically what brings me to the Discovery Institute is the movie called a flock of dodos. The presentation clearly makes the point that birds of a feather flock together.
 
Be the bird that of Science or Religion, each group of creatures tend to stand together no matter what new information is presented.  The more one ruffles the feathers, the more fundamental Science and the more extreme Religion reacts to concepts outside their knowledge base.
 
When Mary Shelly wrote Frankenstein, a woman could not publish a book. In her time, the thought of using body parts from the dead was heretical. As time passed, technology granted us the ability to place dead body parts in the dying. Today the use of body parts is an expectation.
 
With the utmost respect to Mary Shelly, I am about to present to you a concept that fits the Frankenstein, heretical, normal, expectation model. An idea that is outside the reach of Science and beyond the grasp of Religion.
 
Using the logic of Socrates, the force of Newton, and the energy of Einstein, I have created an equation for a moment of time. I call the equation a KnoWell. It is beyond the reach of Science and outside the grasp of Religion.

http://www.lynchphoto.com/avignon
 
The complexity of the above simple equation was derived from the below base artistic expression.

http://www.lynchphoto.com/elohim
 
Like Mary Shelly, most likely my concept will not be realized until long after I am dead. The KnoWell will bridge the gap between Science and Religion. It just may not do it before we pilfer our resources, heat up our atmosphere, and end life as we know it. Forcing us to genetically alter our species into one of those ETs that people report seeing. Could be like Mary Shelly, people are seeing the future human race as an ET...
 
How could Science be so wrong? The mistake is simple. Since Big Bang and Evolution are outside the reach of the Scientific process of a hypothesis, an experiment, a data set, and a conclusion, Science has turned to mathematics to fill in the gaps. Ego has them so confident in their findings, but there is just one simple mistake. As their tool of discovery. they chose to use the number line with a zero smack dab in the middle.
 
Since the universe is made of atoms, the zero state cannot be reached. There is "no" nothing. To complicate the matter, pun intended, the ends of the number line has infinities. Again since the universe is made of atoms, there cannot be an infinite anything.
 
Above are the two simple mistakes that have lead the "equationist" using their silicon eyes to the BLeaf of a black hole on the negative infinity side, a white hole on the positive infinity side, and a big bang at the zero. Below I try to explain this concept to a leading physicist.
http://www.lynchphoto.com/bars
 
In the above link, I explain how Einstein's energy equation, ((T(+l+w+h)c^2), would be written in relation to the KnoWell. (((P(+l+w+h)c)*((F(-L-W-H)c) .. KnoWell, I, Split the photon. Particle on the left, and Wave on the right. Below is a letter to John Hutchison using the KnoWell to describe his levitation effect to him.. He says, "thank you this could be..." Keywords This Could Be.
http://www.lynchphoto.com/hutchison
 
Since birds of a feather are clocking so close together, I must learn to live with the ridicule of Science and the threats of Religion. So that my equation has a chance to survive, I have given out hundreds maybe a thousand copies to people. Below is a small list of those that have a hand drawn KnoWell.
http://www.lynchphoto.com/gifts
 
I respect greatly what your mission statement says you are trying to do.. May we stand together an change the world.
 
Thank you,
David Noel Lynch