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The Mystery of the Big Bang Theory Solved Using Common Sense

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Abstract of THE MYSTERY OF THE BIG BANG SOLVED USING COMMON SENSE


This short powerfully written Kindle popular science book is about unique reality. You may be shocked to learn that the nation’s schools do not teach unique reality. Education only deals in common abstractions. There is no Right to know anything about realty mentioned in The Constitution. All of the Rights that are mentioned in the Bill of Rights only concern common abstractions of supposed rights. In the final analysis, the only conundrum the Founding Father’s bequeathed to you was, do you have the Right to do, as you like. Alternatively, do you only have the Right to do as you are told? Depending on who you are, I imagine you occasionally practice both sorts of freedom Rights depending on who is watching you.

Unique reality is not the result of an experiment; therefore, all scientific experimentation is unrealistic. As all science is unrealistic, it follows that all scientific theories are also unrealistic. The most unrealistic scientific theory of all is the Big Bang Theory. Essentially, the physicists claim that a singularity exploded approximately between 12 to 14 billion light years ago out of nothing, consequently the Universe behaves the way it does because of its fundamental particularized commencement.

I know that that is codswallop.

Before we get to the science though, I give you a scintillating demonstration of my fiction writing skills. I presently hold the unofficial title of the world’s least successful published author. I have written one fiction book, one comical play. The total sale of book and comic skit play since 2005, amounts to one copy of the book.

I just know that you have to find out just how bad can this author be, and the only way you will know for sure is by reading the book.

Please read the book if you wish to find out why I know I am right about unique reality. And for a good laugh if you are in need of one.

116 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 25, 2013

1 person want to read

About the author

Joe Fisher

43 books10 followers
Joe Fisher, 53, author of The Siren Call of Hungry Ghosts, died on Wednesday, May 9, 2001, by jumping off a limestone cliff at Elora Gorge, near his hometown of Fergus, Ontario, Canada. A variety of personal problems, including a growing list of unpaid bills for the writer, appeared to have pushed him over the edge. In one of his last communications with his editor-in-chief, Patrick Huyghe at Paraview Books, Fisher noted that the spirits were still after him for having written his final book.

Joe Fisher was an investigative writer specializing in metaphysical topics. His books had sold more than one million copies in 22 languages.

Andrew Joseph Fisher was born and educated in England; he held dual citizenship with Canada, his home base since 1971. He regularly gave workshops and seminars based on his explorations into the supernatural.

A veteran broadcaster who gave more than 200 radio and television interviews on his work, Fisher started his career as a junior reporter on The Staffordshire Advertiser where he became, at 22 years of age, the youngest news editor in England. After emigrating to Canada, he worked as an investigative reporter and feature writer for both The Toronto Sun and The Toronto Star. His journalistic stints were interspersed with excursions to Greece, Ireland, Ecuador, Morocco and Peru where he pursued personal writing projects. At Ecuador's Colegio Americano in Quito, he taught English and composed journals which were later edited for the book Cotopaxi Visions: Travels in Ecuador.

In 1981, Joe Fisher left daily journalism to concentrate on writing books and freelance articles. Since then, he has traveled widely (Australia and Antarctica are recent destinations) and contributed to periodicals ranging from Canada's national dailies, The National Post and The Globe & Mail, to magazines including Outpost, Equinox, Ocean Drive and Life & Soul.

Joe Fisher's books included the contemporary metaphysical classics The Siren Call of Hungry Ghosts, Life Between Life, The Case For Reincarnation and Predictions. While His Holiness The Dalai Lama wrote the preface to The Case For Reincarnation, film rights to Hungry Ghosts have been optioned to a Los Angeles film company which is moving towards production.

For five years, Fisher painstakingly investigated the claims of channelers and the mysterious voices that speak through them. The Siren Call of Hungry Ghosts, his last book, is his gripping journey into a realm of darkness and deception. The revised edition includes a new foreword by Colin Wilson, and an epilogue that updates events since the book was first published in the U.K. a decade ago.

In 1987, Fisher was presented with The Leask Award by The Spiritual Science Institute of Canada for "making an outstanding contribution to the field of spiritual awareness."

Many in the publishing community, as well as friends of Fisher's, are expressing shock at his death. A Fergus-area friend, writer Sheila O'Hearn said: "He believed in giving of himself for other people. He felt, for him, that's what life was all about." Her husband, Ray Krzyzanowski remarked: "He's going to be really missed. He was my only real friend here. I'm going to miss him.'

Fisher's family have decided there will be no services.

--Loren Coleman



http://www.anomalist.com/milestones/f...

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