Sunday, January 22, 2017

Threads

 
 
Readers of this blog will know that it has (sort of) fallen in a heap recently.  Reconstruction is proving difficult.  That's because after having been writing for a number of years I still haven't worked out exactly what it is really about.  And in turn that's because it's been spilling over into areas that maybe it shouldn't if streams of consciousness are to be curtailed.

It's really a few issues in one, wrapped around the debunking of Plate Tectonics and its replacement with Earth expansion, what it's like to take on such an enterprise, and how it leaves you more than a little cynical about consensus in science (our so-called truth-teller).  And indeed about consensus in general.  If a worldful of it (consensus) can get it so wrong, then what might that mean for the value of other institutional and scientific constructs that are offered to the public by so-called 'intelligences', .. e.g., the bad behaviour of the banking and business worlds, political failure of governments re. tax reform and offshore tax havens, the many hypocrisies and expediencies re. the negotiation of human rights, the 'security' offered by militarism (v. trade), .. and of course the multi-headed hydra of the Trump Phenomenon that has surfaced as a result of the failing struggle against virtually all of the above. [Added, 20171113]

My own work of replacing Plate Tectonics with Earth expansion was essentially completed ~ mid 2000's.  Once it's pointed out that the Earth's surface is 2/3rds mantle breaking through a retrofittable 1/3 crust - and it's pretty obvious what that must mean (about a once-smaller Earth) -  then other than some mechanistic detail there's not a lot to say about it.  It's a bit like how a child's cryptic understanding of day-and-night obviates the need for recounting a great deal of historical backstory, and the way that things generally can spill over into having unseen consequences - although if you wanted to write a book about such things, you could.  Like :-

 "Now children, .. who can tell me why there is day and night?" and the teacher's pet in the back row says, "Yes-sir / me-sir (/three bags full sir) - it's because the Earth is rotating, sir",   and you say, "Yes, thank you, pet.  That's very good".

"Ma.a.am, .. the teacher called me his 'pet'."
"Oooh!  Did he now!"

(=>  50 more shades of grey ... )


But  what we *do* want to write a 'book' about is on the quirky difference between Plate Tectonics and Earth expansion, how small this is, and how the cohorts of consensus P.T. and their acolytes have knowingly mobilised to quash interest in this difference for self-serving ends when it should have been *the* focus of research in Earth science allowing a light to be shone on the question that lies at the heart of physics - namely what is mass, and how (in the case of the Earth) it is manifest as the material stuff  of the mantle.  The question has been ignored by a worldful of Earth scientists and their media cheer squads alike allowing half a century of schoolchildren and students to be led up the garden path, much to to the detriment of the funding public and to the disgrace of science as a whole.  And if that doesn't get your dander up, then nothing will, because institutional bad behaviour needs illuminated and crushed wherever it occurs.



Of course what the child says is perfectly true.  And if the radiation from the sun is included then there isn't much more to say on the matter - at least from a wysiwyg point of view.

But what if the child lived long ago and didn't know what we know today about the Sun in the morning and the Moon at night - and rotation and all that?  History tells us there would be all sorts of answers, particularly regarding that bit about the Sun coming and going.  And what, then, about the seasons fitting in the picture?  And even more particularly if the whole socio-political backstory was added in.  I mean 'day-and-night' can find itself at the heart of a whole lot of things that should be discriminated more than perhaps they are.  Or perhaps rather we should say that there are a whole lot of things that are connected in ways we do not properly understand, that if we did then life would be a whole lot simpler.  (dominoes)

What the kid just said in four or five words you could write a book about, .. about the science and the people doing it and the related religious slaughter that happened.  But where would you begin?  With day and night? .. Earth's rotation?  Or perhaps with gravity.  With so many interwoven threads and themes the whole thing gets to be like a symphony, but a symphony that sounds and harmonises all at once - like a standing wave.  Or maybe more like a love story :-

"Say it loud and there's music playing,
Say it soft and it's almost like praying."

Trying to unravel structure in a story of symphonic proportions is not easy.  It's the same with Earth expansion and the resonance that gives it dimension.  What is the thread, the lead-in, when every part of the whole is as relevant as the next?  And if it were to be strung out as a story, what would be the theme that moves it along?  And what too might be the take-home message - the 'codec' so to speak?  A story that you can sum up in (literally) three words, ["EARTH IS EXPANDING"] is hardly one to write home about.  Extending it to five bullet points makes it a bit more like the bible, but if it is much more than that then it's not long before you find yourself in over your wellies, particularly if the omissions ("the biggest lies of all") that Plate Tectonics is rife with, are added.  What are the facts, what are the implications, and how do you reconfigure your world view when you get home and discover that our most revered truth-teller (science - with its inbuilt safeguards of peer review to ensure consensus validity) (check) (well, Earth science at least) has been leading us up the garden path for the last half century?

That's where it spills out into needing a few books, not just one, and is the reason why I'm having difficulty working out how to revise my old first draft, because I'm really not very sure what it is all about, really, .. the first book or the last one, .. or where to put divisions between them, .. or even if there are divisions..  It's moved on somehow since its geological inception to include a backstory that has little to do with the original bullet points, but is discovered nevertheless to be highly relevant to the intention of writing about it.

They do say, "ignorance is bliss", and there is more than a little truth to that because understanding things can be a fraught business.  Think back to school days.  The kid answering the above question only knew the answer because somebody told him.  But if he had to work it out for himself then he'd have much mileage to cover even before beginning to ask the question, much less answer it, as indeed people of earlier times had to do (and suffer onerous consequences on account of their curiosity).

In an earlier attempt to deal with this potpourri to "work it out",  .. I came up with a header -  "The Meaning of Life and Everything" to signify the connection between science and religion and the narrow difference between navel-gazing about our place in the world (religion) and examining the world itself (science).  And scribbled along in that direction for a bit. (links) [1] [2] [3] +

That was the first divergence. The second one followed shortly after with a variation titled, "The Pathology of Connectedness", ['the' (definitive) one only @ 20170514] as perhaps signifying a better way of describing the religious part generally, the situation of the individual in the group,.. how the group gets constructed then works to deny the volition of the individual (/'heretic'), and the caution that the individual must exercise when confronting the group about anything that might seriously disturb its equilibrium.

Or perhaps closer, .. "The Pathology of Consensus", .. the inbuilt flaw in society that produces dissent from the crowd mentality - namely any inherent societal corruption that causes people who have the placement and the potential and the capacity to subvert consensus equilibrium - leading to (as Margaret Thatcher famously said, "There is no such thing as society") its breakdown that we are seeing at the present day and the backlash in the rise of extremism ', fundamentalism and 'terrorism', and what might arguably be called the coming of age of popular culture ("populism"), namely the appeal to the individual, tribalism and schism as is embodied currently in the Trump phenomenon,  rather than to the group, society and cohesion.

Kicking it off (long before the divisiveness of Donald Trump) was a train of thought highlighting the nexus between science and religion and the guaranteed isolation of the transgressor of both.  The rubric of the whole goes under the tribal mores of society generally, .. the rise of I.S. being a case in point.  And even now as I write there's Marine Le Pen in France seconded by Gert Wilders in Holland latching on to Trump's proposal for a "Patriots Day", thereby resurrecting that bugbear of European tribalism much beloved of the far right - the fetishisation of gratuitous nationalism.  A kind of gastrulated insecurity that turns itself inside-out and reforms as some malevolent genie that draws its energy from the fears and discontent of the collective that magicked it into reality. Tribalism masquerading as societal cohesion - "If you are not with us, you are against us."

So what is it (this blog) all about?

I'm still not sure. Through the above-mentioned parallels of science and religion, and the attendant machineries of consensus, it found itself reflecting on the human condition generally, and thereby in a place that to be truthful was not altogether healthy.  While exploring the geology was fun, what wasn't fun was discovering thereby that 'malevolent genie' -  namely the straightjacket that consensus imposes on societal affairs - very necessary from one point of view, but highly problematical from another.

But illuminating nevertheless.  And so this trajectory, a wheel of sorts, has returned me to my original intention. If I can impart to the reader the alternative story to Plate Tectonics that Earth expansion offers in such a way that is interesting, then the purpose of this blog is served.  The 'text' is the geology.  The 'subtext' is the development of the consensus that serves to maintain its authority, and, by extension, the parallels that govern many aspects of human affairs, and colour the outlook of the individual (namely mine - that somehow I cannot divorce from the ostensible text).

I've tried to keep the subtext to a minimum, but no doubt it comes through.  I make no apologies for any cynicism that may appear however.  The whole thing is altogether a dastardly affair that should be referred to the International Criminal Court,  or at the very least your local Ombudsman, or perhaps with more effect to the teacher's pet in the back row who is being made to learn all 'this' (and other likewise) tripe. Institutions, those bastions of consensus legitimacy, by their misbehaviour have only themselves to blame if the public regards them with distrust.  And drawing attention to this by way of "customer feedback" doesn't hurt one little bit.  [repeat link in case you missed it]

Consensus then, like understanding already mentioned, is a fraught business, sandwiching and often making mincemeat of the individual.  By definition consensus is essential to normal science in the way it establishes the rules that enlarge the field.  But likewise by definition consensus hinders development into, and relevance towards, other fields.  Science of the 'cutting-edge' sort is typically an enterprise carried out by individuals and is indeed 'edgy', .. as is anything that causes the individual to take matters into their own hands in order to challenge what they see as 'corrupted' (/faulty), malpractised (consensus) norms (e.g. link).  Also.  [Heard as I write.]

-----------------

 At the present time there is no ready mechanism within mainstream science to explain the underlying cause for the increase in the Earth's size and accompanying mass.  Nevertheless the formation and deformation of the Earth's crust asserts that expansion is indeed happening, and that it appears to be closely tied in some as yet unknown way to gravity, rotation and electromagnetic force.  At the same time, classical physics is looking for a Grand Unified Theory that links gravity to electromagnetism.  And (after about 8 mins) apparently not getting very far.  It is as if both are talking past each other about the same thing while the Earth is in a state of slow explosion, illustrating the connection that no-one is noticing but is looking for.  In a sense it epitomises  society's blindness to certain inevitability if it continues "business as usual".

[Added 20170309 :-  Heavy stuff.  A call for everyone to get 'more real' about 'issues'.]

Could geology serve once again as an entry point to physics?   If so it is certainly one that both geophysics and physics are ignoring.  Readers might care to visit Gene Ellis's Blog for a view that might make the geological connection.  Possibly too there are other ideas on the periphery of the mainstream that could explain Earth's size increase.  

But quite apart from this and the nature of ancient worlds to be discovered in deep time, geology underpins our material well-being in the control it imposes on energy and material resources, our food security and the like, as well as having determined much of the course of human history.  Its bearing on civilisation is more indirect but is just as (or even more) relevant to our everyday lives.

So I think that's what this blog has come to be about - tribalism - the (dis/)connectedness of peoples seen through the lens of global geology.  It has spilled out well beyond the confines of its original intent but still remains (for me at least) solidly connected in the way it highlights caution in respect of human affairs.

However the leg-in to dealing with this "symphonic standing wave of the Meaning of Life" (/'love story' /pathology) remains problematical, so perhaps it is best just to let it unravel and speak for itself.  It is unfocussed but not undirected.  Its intentions are positive despite the temptation (not always resisted) to be cynical in the face of such a monolithic consensus founded on calculated denial and tribal self-interest as is illustrated by Plate Tectonics and sundry other societal monolithic consensuses in which the individual is mired - science, religion, killer-win (at all cost) 'sport', politics, government, judiciary, .. and so on.

Dissent from the views of Plate Tectonics began for me nearly half a century ago, but it is only recently once I had time enough to look into it that I've come to realise the extent to which it was indeed cobbled together by a cabal of self-confessed [their words (slightly paraphrased only) - not mine] "outsiders who didn't have a geological clue - and didn't need any",  and, because they apparently had no understanding of what they were seeing, denied what was staring them squarely in the face - namely that 2/3rds mantle and 1/3 continents make for a retrofittable smaller Earth, and, further, to resist falling into mental and cognitive acedia, concocted the most incredible Heath Robinson story imaginable in an attempt to deny what was plainly obvious - that what we see is what we get - an Earth that is getting bigger.

And perhaps right there is the theme I am looking for, .. capturing both the overture and the recitative foundational arc of vibration of this 'Standing Mexican Wave' because it so empitomises the source of my own (and probably that of many others) cynicism towards consensuses that purport to be authoritative but in reality are little more than groupthink that has contrived to get elected to populist say-so .. 
"Hey, everybody, .. Look!!" [Raises banner /waves hands] "Outsiders - No Geological Clue. Power to Peepul. .. Power to Patriots."]
[ Power to Oval leather and Vegemite. ] [and Marine Le Pen] [and Donald Trump] [and Brexit]

And so how did this 'Plate Tectonics' overtake the commonsense, wysiwyg fact of Earth expansion that was already developed?  On account of "No mechanism"? Not all all.  It was the power of "what's-in-it-for-me" prudence in the face of funding - and maintaining it. (Certainly not the societal value of the science - or there would be abundant record in the literature of the merits of the two ).  There is none despite S.W. Carey writing three books on the subject to encourage it.

And thereby is revealed root, tree, branch and die-back of societal cohesion as altruism (sacrifice) =>barter (as fair exchange) => money (regulated exchange) => its corruption ('ínterest' rates / futures /greed /offshore taxation havens /political collusion) => societal breakdown]
(Cause-and-effect, .. preordained, .. encoded in the dna of the seed.)

And if this young lady doesn't mind (too much) me making a point about the insistent beat of the seed and its 'whose-body-is-it-anyway' seedy intentions  ["Ask Baby" - as Life's representative)] (in its almost total disregard for the frailties and impermanence of the individual)  then we can explore what the Malibu connection might mean for The Pathology of Connectedness, vegemite and its link to oval leather that presages worship of an Expanding Earth over Plate Tectonics in the context of geological time and erosion. 


Anyway, .. follow this blog and see.  Why build your house upon a rock, when the beach offers so much more (?).

Geological time, erosion, people, the seed, .. and natural selection confusing the issue.

 🗽 Peepulpower = freedom (?)
 

=>  Related pages :-
Stephen Hurrell : Dinosaurs and the Expanding Earth.
Gene Ellis :  The Ionic Expanding Earth.
Jean-Paul Turcaud - Australia's Mining Pioneer.
James Maxlow :- Origin of Continents and Oceans.
John Elliston :-  The Origin of Rocks and Mineral Deposits.
Richard Guy :- Ancient shorelines and civilisations

4 comments:

Milu said...

"So I think that's what this blog has come to be about - tribalism - the (dis/)connectedness of peoples seen through the lens of global geology."

I'd still say there is merit in focus.

Your ideas about geology, as laid out in your ebook, are extraordinary, carved out and held up against all odds. That is remarkable. And although I am not qualified to emit a judgment about these ideas, I think there is true genius in them. This is my conviction. Even though it is a sketch or an outline, as you're saying yourself. And they're the result of independent enthusiastic work - without any institutional backing. Great work, great insights.

Threads. The Meaning of Life and Everything? The Pathology of Connectedness? Hmm. I think you just felt like talking about something else for a change, and then decided to do so. Hence the threads.

However, it is necessary, for important practical resons, to roll threads up tidily on spindles, or weave them into a tissue. Otherwise there is a risk of the whole thing ending up being a mess.

don findlay said...

*Merit in focus.*
Yes, of course. .. But it's not the facts (/'bricks'), it's the context (/'cement'' and the structure of organisation /experience /'Eureka'). Nice of you to say so, Michael, but no genius here - just simple observation + common sense. However
http://www.crank.net/geology.html (Earth expansion = my old indigo site.)
Einstein summed it up (somewhere), "I just stick with the problem longer." Most academics don't have time for that. Difficult problems anyway are money in the bank. There's more to be gained by fiddling with them, than by solving them (especially when the solution probably means discarding most of earlier efforts). (Besides, what do you do for an encore?)

*Talking about something else for a change*
:)) Exactly. It's realising what Mandelbrot says about the messiness of life and the common theme of the underlying mathematics guiding its equilibration (what Churchill observed about democracy being the worst form of government -
https://tinyurl.com/y4255bps
Democracy at least tries to equilibrate unrest in a way that involves the people and tries to improve the common lot. . Despotism simply tries to suppress it and plays on people's weaknesses of apathy and boredom and ease of manipulation to remain in power - and usually tries to fix the voting system (one candidate) / (Ivanka's voting machine patents)
https://tinyurl.com/y5gon2se
(Haven't explored this but I see no follow-up on it in the current press with the election looming, only the crude attempt at appointing Dejoy (the competition) in charge of the postal service, and removing sorting machines. (Removing or (in the future) replacing, what's the difference?).

All sorts of parallel threads run through life, not many of them for the better, which is why The Golden Rule' survives and is upheld as a guiding light. Also in a poem by Scotland's Bard :- "Oh dear God the giftie gie us, to see oorsel's as ithers see us.") appropriately enough "To a louse.")https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/louse-seeing-one-ladys-bonnet-church/
(In church, sitting behind her, and watching it crawl on her shawl
Maybe better as voice
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--57WIu0FoY
But I doubt it. I can hardly understand him, but then much of old Scots is from German and Dutch. It's a reminder to me how quickly a language is lost in the "going forward" of generational change.

Analogy is a powerful trope. Voting for Trump is like voting for Plate Tectonics (and amnesia).

*Weaving (and ducking)* :))
I haven't forgotten your geological questions (later).

Milu said...

» But it's not the facts (/'bricks'), it's the context (/'cement'' and the structure of organisation /experience /'Eureka'). «

Yeah, well, the structure of organization manifest in your ebook and on your blog is very personal, freely mixing and linking topics, style and attitude. Requires an open-minded reader. (The others won't bother to read anyway.) I cannot say whether the guerrilla approach is detrimental or beneficial to understanding because I lacked the prerequisite geological knowledge and had to look up lots of things. I often found myself thinking that a more conservative and establishment-friendly style would make it more palatable to readers in academia. But then you're talking to the student and not to the teacher. Opposition in style as well as in doctrine. Why not.

» Democracy at least tries to equilibrate unrest in a way that involves the people and tries to improve the common lot. . Despotism simply tries to suppress it and plays on people's weaknesses of apathy and boredom and ease of manipulation to remain in power - and usually tries to fix the voting system (one candidate) «

As we can clearly see every day now with the Corona scamdemic, democracy - the name given to designate systems characterised by plutocracy (wealth), kryptocracy (secrecy), kleptocracy (thievery), pseudocracy (lies & deceit) - this so-called democracy works by dividing the people into opposing groups, by lieing and deceiving in preference to beating and jailing (which are not, however, off limits if push comes to shove), and by celebrating fake power shifts between parties and people which all have to obey the same systemic constraints in order to be admissible. JFK thought he wasn't bound by those constraints and see what they did to him.

» Voting for Trump … «

I wouldn't vote for him either because I'm convinced that he'll be appointed regardless of the actual vote … :) The electoral circus is just a show to mentally involve the masses (the part of them that has such desires) in order to sustain their faith in the system.

» of old Scots is from German and Dutch «

Dutch probably not so much because Dutch is derived from Old Frankish (some dialects in Western-most parts of Germany, Cologne, Eifel, Luxemburg), whereas the anglosaxon core of English is derived from Old Saxon, just like the all but extinct "Platt" dialects in Northern Germany (which I have trouble understanding). Lots of German linguistic features are recognizable in Old English, but Middle English has moved away from German, understandable on account of the succeeding waves of Northern invaders of the British isles and the big impact made by the French speaking Normans.

The sound of the Scottish poem makes me think of the Nordics rather than German. But I don't speak any of the Nordic languages.

don findlay said...

Michael ,

First, thanks for the translation from Wegener (about "ploughing") on yours of Aug.158th.
https://tinyurl.com/yydkvnny
(I was under the impression that the word was attributed to him by others - "hanging dead dogs" on him, so to speak.)

The crust-mantle contact there (/"subduction zone" ; tho' he didn't know about any subduction zone or the ocean floors being young) is very steep, almost vertical. So with such a deep 'root' the concept of 'ploughing' (as of the keel on a boat) is appropriate compared to the idea of continents being like a flat-bottomed 'barge' 'ploughing' through a sea of mantle.

** Detachment Faulting** on (https://tinyurl.com/y5rnb3bw) (Aug 18 2020)
A quick image search on google returns this one
https://tinyurl.com/y4kphjvs
..chosen for its factual geophysics (tho' conceptual sketches are based on similar).

All of Earth's geology can be telescoped into those two words ("detachment, faulting", .. effectively replacing "Plate Tectonics") (so there's a lot to say about it). It's a consequence of "lithospheric boudinage"
(https://tinyurl.com/y2stpuuw)
(/ 'Boudinage of the lithosphere"), which, scaled up from "Boudinage - an organising control on the location and formation of ore deposits", was my leg-in to the whole global picture of geological evolution back in the 1970's. Largescale boudinage wasn't recognised back then (I guess you could say today's entries are a direct result of my several observations & publications on ore deposits, and their extrapolation to crustal scales).

Scaled up, it all comes down to an EArth getting bigger and breaking up the crust according to the forces of gravity and rotation, much as Wegener (and Carey) (but not Holmes) have it. Size increase is taken up in the mantle (and probably the core as well). Mechanism is unknown but Energy-Mass equivalence is clearly implicated. Exact ly how, is the big question. Failure to conceive of an answer leads to assuming Earth as a constant size and subduction as the corollary antidote to the creation of all ocean floors being new. Curvature correction related to increasing size results in 1. extensional detachment (image) and 2. complementary collapse (folding) - much modified by Earth's rotation (as crust/mantle detachment) Continental crustal structure is esentially 'fossilised', with size increase being largely taken up in the growth of the mantle (brittle shell as growth faults superimposed on new mantle 'underplating').

And that's all there is to it. Nothing in it, really. .. :))) The future of geology (apart from the phyics of creation of material substance of the mantle) is as an exercise in logic - GEO-logic as a template for other sorts of logic, .. like the humanities (health, housing and education) as the foundation for a society's economy (rather than the other way round). First place (humanity) => second place (the economy). It's that simple. All based on the Golden Rule.(humanity), not on "He who has the gold, makes the rules". = "The American Dream". Being acted out as we speak, with a lot of people keeping their fingers crossed that redness doesn't progress to bloodshed in a fest of, " Ït all began when he hit me back".

Just my view (untrammelled by flags, celebrity, beach-tans and grabbed pussies."

I mean, it might be ok for the kitchen sink, but not for the Presidential Podium, ("Dating his sexy daughter", indeed..) (Another American dream, maybe.) Ooh! Better keep *that* one under wraps (till the next election anyway). I'm looking forward to the musical. 'Trump in America' (to follow "Nixon in China"). I very much think he's looking for an excuse to null the election
https://twitter.com/earthexpansion/status/1229230363462889473

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