Sounds like a typical feat. Useful, accurate or original? Not an amazing feat on its own. Sounds like a typical feat. Sounds like a typical feat. Sounds like a typical feat. Blueprints for a house and a shopping plaza... Sounds like a typical feat, but a very vague one. This kind of stuff also bothers me: This is pulling trippy-sounding parts out of scientific findings that are based in experiment and observation. It takes a creative mind to create some brilliant hypotheses, but this paragraph indicates endearment, not understanding. This is artistic license. Finally, this drives me nuts: No. Going to the moon is infinitely more interesting and rewarding. I am all for allowing people to take psychoactive drugs, but I think it's dishonest to put it on such a pedestal. I'm sure that if alcohol was such a forbidden fruit, endless arguments about its transformative powers could be made.a mathematical theorem for NOR gate circuits
a conceptual model of a photon
a linear electron accelerator beam-steering device
a new design for the vibratory microtome
a technical improvement of the magnetic tape recorder
blueprints for a private residency and an arts-and-crafts shopping plaza
a space probe experiment designed to measure solar properties.
Though scientists are more typically seen as killers of myth, not its creators, Einstein and many of his more visionary contemporaries sound as trippy as any of yesterday’s mystics. They say that the time-space continuum warps like the surface of a trampoline. They say that we are stardust. That there is no “in the beginning.” That things are not things at all, but relations. That the observer tweaks the observed, at least on a sub-atomic level, just by observing.
Under the right circumstances, these psychic dérives are far less dangerous than, say, a lunar landing, and may ultimately prove as rewarding, if not more so.