Intelligent examination of intelligent design
The organizational complexity of a brick house is much greater than the organizational complexity of a brick. One could conceive of a scenario where a bunch of bricks might possibly come into existence naturally…but not a brick house. The fundamental “bricks” of which everything in the universe is constructed are resonant fields. Their operation reveals many interesting things that settle many arguments. In fact, it is that very fundamental operation of resonant force fields that allows us to find some natural bricks, but will forcefully prevent brick houses from coming into existence naturally. It is these basic force-field-upon-force-field interactions that forcefully prevent biologic evolution from occurring…for the same reason that silicon has been rolling around on the beach much longer than living things, yet it took Intel to build a Pentium!
Einstein died in 1955, five years before the invention of the laser, the one tool he would have needed to finally complete his intuitive explanation of the universe. Had he lived a little longer, no doubt, today’s advanced “Theory of Everything” would have been called “Einstein’s Resonant Field Theory” rather than “Hait’s Resonant Field Theory.”
The book Resonant Fields, the Fundamental Mechanism of Physics explains in easy-to-understand language how that fundamental mechanism manufactures and governs all that we observe, and what’s more, it’s intuitive, just like Einstein wanted.
The fact that its logical examination of the way the universe works stirs up controversy—because it shoots down some people’s pet theories—is no surprise. Galileo, Newton, and Einstein faced the same kind of emotion-based responses. It’s common for people to resort to emotion when they find themselves unable to dig up enough provable facts to prop up their wobbly theories. So they resort to character assassination of the scientist in an effort to divert attention away from the science…especially if their livelihood has received major funding based on a suddenly-obsolete hypothesis.
They did it to Einstein as he was fleeing the hard-core evolutionists. They put together 100 professors to say that Einstein’s work was “Jewish science,” which in their eyes meant that it was religious, and therefore, faulty. Upon arrival in America, Einstein simply said, “If I’m wrong, it takes only one professor.”
As the Resonant Field Theory starts off where Einstein left off, and brings our understanding of how everything works closer to completion, I can rightly say that, “If Hait is wrong, it takes only one professor.”
The book on resonant fields is an easy-to-understand physics text. It is not a religious book! In fact, in all of its 493 pages, it alludes to religion only once, in saying that the ‘He-did-it-all-in-six-24-hour-days hypothesis is also not supported by the empirical facts.’
So, whichever side one is on in the “Intelligent Design” debate, if he has yet to read the resonant field book cover to cover, then he has some homework to do!
The Resonant Field Theory is a fresh approach, not based on tradition, or religion, but on the facts of physics that have been demonstrated over the past four centuries. The universe does not function from random uncertainty, but from pseudorandom, deterministic field interactions that always get it right, and never forget how to do it. It is the reason we can use mathematics to describe how things work. It’s how we can show that the things observed do not occur by means of illogical, bizarre or magical occurrences. They happen deliberately.
Learn more about Intelligent Design, read the exciting e-book: Resonant Fields, the Fundamental Mechanism of Physics, Made Easy To Understand, available online at www.coolscience.info. Everyone needs to read this book for, whichever side of the controversy you are on, you can bet your competition will have done their homework! (© 2005 by CoolScience)