ZPE_Logo
  
Search        
  Create an account Home  ·  Topics  ·  Downloads  ·  Your Account  ·  Submit News  ·  Top 10  
Mission Statement

Modules
· Home
· Forum
· LATEST COMMENTS
· Special Sections
· SUPPORT ZPEnergy
· Advertising
· AvantGo
· Books
· Downloads
· Events
· Feedback
· Link to us
· Private Messages
· Search
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· Surveys
· Top 10
· Topics
· Web Links
· Your Account

Who's Online
There are currently, 150 guest(s) and 0 member(s) that are online.

You are Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here

Events

Hot Links
Aetherometry

American Antigravity

Closeminded Science

EarthTech

ECW E-Cat World

Innoplaza

Integrity Research Institute

New Energy Movement

New Energy Times

Panacea-BOCAF

RexResearch

Science Hobbyist

T. Bearden Mirror Site

USPTO

Want to Know

Other Info-Sources
NE News Sites
AER_Network
E-Cat World
NexusNewsfeed ZPE
NE Discussion Groups
Energetic Forum
EMediaPress
Energy Science Forum
Free_Energy FB Group
The KeelyNet Blog
OverUnity Research
Sarfatti_Physics
Tesla Science Foundation (FB)
Vortex (old Interact)
Magazine Sites
Electrifying Times (FB)
ExtraOrdinary Technology
IE Magazine
New Energy Times

Interesting Links

Click Here for the DISCLOSURE PROJECT
SciTech Daily Review
NEXUS Magazine

Reader reaction was 'perpetual' and emotional
Posted on Tuesday, February 26, 2008 @ 21:21:48 UTC by vlad

Devices Feb 25, 2008 04:30 AM

After his recent story on Ottawa-area inventor Thane Heins, reporter Tyler Hamilton's inbox was flooded with email.

The criticisms:

Many readers didn't like – actually, "angrily condemned" – the fact that the term "perpetual motion" was used in the story as a possible description of this phenomenon. The story also alluded to the fact that Heins, 46, a trained chef who dropped out of college and is mildly dyslexic, suspects he has broken a law of physics.

Here's a sample of comments:



"I'm sick and tired of the lack of critical evaluation of scientific reporting. You made a boring story interesting to the ignorant populous by saying perpetual motion. You are unethical and are at the front of the problem. This is why nut jobs don't believe in global warming, evolution and medicine."

"If you had any understanding of the rigour of the scientific method, you would recognize the folly of such half-baked claims as made by the inventor of this latest machine. Such articles add fuel to the religious fundamentalists who grossly misinterpret science to justify such monstrous ideas as `intelligent design' and creationism."

"You have a degree in journalism, don't you?"

"A story like this is more appropriate for an April 1st publication."

Hamilton responds: "The story was never presented as a science feature. It appeared in the business section as a profile of a man who is struggling to build a business out of an invention that nobody is able to clearly explain, including an electromagnetic expert at MIT, or is willing to believe. His marriage is broken. He's strapped for cash. He's driven, with help from the University of Ottawa, to earn credibility for his invention and prove his skeptics wrong.

"Most of all, he's presented as a sympathetic figure up against a rigid world of scientific consensus. Whether Heins is right or wrong, the question is whether his story – and his claims, no matter what you think of them – deserves to be told."

The skeptics:

These folks weren't as dismissive. They were more constructive, or simply unimpressed. Some questioned the accuracy of the tools Heins is using to measure the effects he's observing. Others understood it as a hysteresis effect. Some poked fun at hints of perpetual motion, but still saw value in the creation.

"I think that it is a brilliant experiment. Although it does not provide `free' energy, and it may not even provide a way to spend energy more economically, it could still be very useful."

"Why not focus on the real benefits in terms of energy efficiency rather than making it look like some crackpot's claim that he violates thermodynamics?"

"I am willing to meet him and see his innovation, and will try my best to explain for him what is happening. I am trying to keep an open mind, but he is damaging his life, his reputation, and he needs some help."

The supportive:

Most of the email was positive. Students, amateur scientists, technology professionals and average readers alike were genuinely impressed with Heins' determination in the face of doubt. Are they the "ignorant populous" as some critics believe? Perhaps. But maybe they're just willing to believe that the world as we know it is not fully discovered or explained. They're willing to hold out hope. And dozens wanted to contact Heins directly to see a demonstration, collaborate, or help him raise money for further research and validation.

"I would like to express sincerely my respect for people who are not afraid to experiment like this. A lot of interesting and very useful technologies have been invented in basements by people like (Heins)."

"Mr. Heins is to be applauded for his intestinal fortitude both for sticking at it and for taking the chance to be proven wrong."

"I believe we sometimes miss things because we are constrained by the notion that we already know everything there is to know. The truly great minds of the world always challenge the status quo."

Source: http://www.thestar.com/Business/article/306530

First story: Turning physics on its ear


 
Login
Nickname

Password

Security Code: Security Code
Type Security Code

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

Related Links
· More about Devices
· News by vlad


Most read story about Devices:
Overunity magnet motor released !


Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad


Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly


"Reader reaction was 'perpetual' and emotional" | Login/Create an Account | 3 comments | Search Discussion
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

Re: Reader reaction was 'perpetual' and emotional (Score: 1)
by Veryskeptical on Wednesday, February 27, 2008 @ 10:36:21 UTC
(User Info | Send a Message)
This is an age in which traditional religious belief is no longer persuasive to many. But also an age in which the desire for religious certainty is very strong as evidenced by the rising intensity of fundamentalist religious practice in recent decades. The desire to have something to guide action that is authoritative and "true" commands the attitude of many.

Without careful observation and experimentation to shape and inform it and modify it ruthlessly scientific theory is just another set of explanations of the world which may be used to found new religions. Any who believe that all the answers have been found are not in the business of science but of religion.

The scientific enterprise due to its successes in explaining the world in the past is in danger of being coopted by those both within and without the scientific community who believe explicitly or implicitly that all the really important experiments have been done. All that is left is the application of received theory to real world problems. These people are not scientists but politicians and priests. People who wish to appeal to established truth to justify social action. Such people need certitude. The possibility that trillions of dollars will be committed to some action, global warming and CO2 abatement, for example, and soon thereafter the scientific justification for it might collapse under further observation is intolerable. It destroys their credibility and authority.

Science in our age needs to commit more to experimental observation than theoretical construction. Theorists have been in the driver's seat too long. They have provided far too many fanciful explanations of reality to tolerate and have provided the grist for the religious mill which endangers the scientific enterprise. There must arise better methods for recording and distributing experimental and observational results from all sources. And to take such observations seriously!




Re: Reader reaction was 'perpetual' and emotional (Score: 1)
by nursemike on Sunday, March 02, 2008 @ 06:52:46 UTC
(User Info | Send a Message)
i would like to find out how the meeting went at MIT and where he is withe his invention. Does anyone know?



The next great Canadian idea: Peripiteia generator (Score: 1)
by vlad on Monday, July 14, 2008 @ 22:14:34 UTC
(User Info | Send a Message) http://www.zpenergy.com
Sharda Prashad
From the July 21, 2008 issue of Canadian Business magazine

More than 200 ideas were submitted for our second Great Canadian Invention Competition. While judging continues, we present three of the more intriguing entries and the brains behind them.

Perepiteia generator
Thane Heins /// Almonte, Ont.


Thane Heins could be a dreamer, a crackpot, a genius or all three. He wants to stop the war in Iraq and believes that his creation “in the right hands…will save lives.” His creation? A generator that produces energy in an isolated system, something that some say is a perpetual motion machine, although Heins carefully distances himself from such statements. “We can only say what we can show, and we can only claim what we can prove,” says Heins. “And (the generator) violates the law of conservation of energy.”

That law states new energy cannot be created in a closed system, and Heins’s claim to have broken it has thrust the 47-year-old from Almonte, Ont., into the spotlight. Heins’s generator, called Perepiteia, is an electromechanical device that uses wire coils and magnets. When the generator is attached to an electric motor, both the Perepiteia generator and the motor simultaneously accelerate. And when a load—say, a light bulb—is attached to the generator, power to all three accelerates. Heins calls the phenomenon “regenerative acceleration,” and its application could be used in an electric car, where the battery would recharge both when applying the brakes and when stepping on the accelerator.

It sounds a lot like perpetual motion, a label that caused Markus Zahn, an MIT professor who has examined the generator, to distance himself from Heins, and caused much speculation about the invention’s legitimacy in blogs and chat rooms. The online community has reacted with both unabashed skepticism and support for the underdog, a college dropout who used to work as a painter and chef. YouTube videos of Perepiteia have been viewed thousands of times.

Among Heins’s fans are Riadh Habash, an engineering professor at the University of Ottawa, where Heins has his lab, and investor Kevin Thistle, president of the Angus Glen Golf Club in Markham, Ont. Thistle gave Heins a $50,000 initial investment when they met three years ago, and continues to fund miscellaneous expenses such as travel. “He’s just so passionate about it, that’s what sold me on it,” says Thistle, who positions his investment as a way of diversifying a portfolio that includes Research In Motion, Royal Bank of Canada and real estate. “I feel no risk, because I know it works.”

Part of Heins’s commitment to Perepiteia comes from his belief that “first and foremost I am an artist,” and his need to create something. But Heins didn’t set out to be an inventor. He wanted to be a wildlife painter, but ended up taking electronics at college, completing chef school and owning a restaurant. Eventually, Heins ended up being an inventor, starting Potential Differences Inc., to run his Perepiteia venture.

Heins’s dedication has taken a heavy personal toll. He divorced and lost custody of his two daughters for being unable to pay child support. “I understand how the soldiers in Iraq feel when they don’t get to see their kids.” He now works seven days a weeks, between eight and 12 hours each day on his invention. “This technology should be mainstream,” Heins says.

Source: http://www.canadianbusiness.com/innovation/ [www.canadianbusiness.com]




 

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2002-2016 by ZPEnergy. Disclaimer: No content, on or affiliated with ZPEnergy should be construed as or relied upon as investment advice. While every effort is made to ensure that the information contained on ZPEnergy is correct, the operators of ZPEnergy make no warranties as to its accuracy. In all respects visitors should seek independent verification and investment advice.
Keywords: ZPE, ZPF, Zero Point Energy, Zero Point Fluctuations, ZPEnergy, New Energy Technology, Small Scale Implementation, Energy Storage Technology, Space-Energy, Space Energy, Natural Potential, Investors, Investing, Vacuum Energy, Electromagnetic, Over Unity, Overunity, Over-Unity, Free Energy, Free-Energy, Ether, Aether, Cold Fusion, Cold-Fusion, Fuel Cell, Quantum Mechanics, Van der Waals, Casimir, Advanced Physics, Vibrations, Advanced Energy Conversion, Rotational Magnetics, Vortex Mechanics, Rotational Electromagnetics, Earth Electromagnetics, Gyroscopes, Gyroscopic Effects

PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.