Enter the content which will be displayed in sticky bar

Buy Now
Pages: 340
Publisher: Devin-Adair Pub. / Hope Publishing House
Year: 1977; Revised 2005
ISBN: 1932717056
ISBN: 978-1932717051
ISBN: 0815958234
ISBN: 978-0815958239

The Einstein Myth and the Ives Papers: A Counter-Revolution in Physics (Buy Now)
KeyWords: einstein
Authors
  • Mechanical Engineer
    (Relativity)

    Born in Cleveland, Ohio, Samuel Richard \'Dick\' Hazelett received his BA from Oberlin College in 1965 and two MAs from the University of Texas (1969) and Boston University (1973).

    \"My very good friend Dick Hazelett passed away on 23 July 2002 at his home in Colchester, Vermont. GED Associate Editor Howard Hayden first introduced Dick to me some years back. From then on, I knew Dick as a steady participant in the on-paper activities of Galilean Electrodynamics and the in-person conferences of the Natural Philosophy Alliance. He was what I referred to as ?the Good Reviewer\' ? a person who got thoroughly engrossed in whatever I asked him to look at. You will find him having done exactly that, along with his long-time Colorado friend, Dean Turner, in GED vol. 12, no. 2 (2001).

    \"Now Dick will be very much missed by very many people here, and around the world. Not only was he connected to GED, and to NPA, but also to family, extended family, and friends all over the place. I was notified about the sad loss by Dick\'s Berkeley CA housemate, Chaplain, and dear friend, Kaaren Ray. She and Dick\'s Colchester friend Val Kagan had collected many interesting facts about Dick\'s life, some of which are reproduced below:

    \"Along with Dean Turner, Dick had co-authored or co-edited many books. One of the books is very well-known to many GED readers: The Einstein Myth and the Ives Papers. Dick was impassioned by studies centering on the many controversial views related to Eintein\'s relativity theory. The same is true in regard to Darwin\'s evolution theory, and many issues in ethics and religion. Other books resulting from the Hazelett/Turner collaboration include Benevolent Living, which deals with connections between science and religious philosophy. Dick was the researcher for Turner\'s books Commitment to Care and Escape from God. Most recently they produced Coherence Theory of Truth. Dick\'s last book, An Engineer\'s Path to God, was not completely finished. The titles of some of the Chapters show how broad his interests were: ?Religion for Scientific Skeptics\', ?New Help from Astronomy, Biology, Physics\', ?Self-Consistency\', ?Benevolence\', ?Truth and Need\', ?Evil versus the Good\', ?Religion Clears the Way for Natural Science\'.

    \"Dick was an extraordinarily fast reader. He consumed tens of thousands of books from ancient times to the present day. Theology and Philosophy were his lifelong interests, and he pursued them formally through Master\'s Degrees in Philosophy at Boston University and the University of Texas in Austin. For the past three years, Dick had made Berkeley CA his second home in order to pursue doctoral-level Theology work in the Graduate Theological Union. He was formally enrolled this past year for graduate-degree work through the Jesuit School of Theology. He was well known and much beloved in the GTU library, bookstore, the refectory, and the Berkeley community at large. He was that amazing older gentleman riding the recumbent bike! Up until his death, he either walked or rode that bike over twenty-five miles a week.

    \"Dick had worked with his father in the early development of the Hazelett Twin-Belt continuous metal casting machine. He was involved for many years in the mechanical design activities and intellectual property protection of Hazelett Strip-Casting Corporation. He is a named inventor on eleven patents. He also had a big passion for photography, and documented the life of the company through candid photos of its summer picnics and Christmas parties.\"

    Cynthia Whitney - Galilean Electrodynamics

    Richard Hazelett of Colchester, Vermont, an engineer and successful businessman in the machining industry, who was co-editor of the self-published book, The Einstein Myth and the Ives Papers: A Counter-Revolution in Physics (1979, ISBN-0-8159-5823-4), passed away shortly after the 9th Annual Meeting of the Natural Philosophy Alliance (NPA) at San Louis Obispo, California (May 13-17, 2002). He was a dedicated member of the NPA. The seminal Einsteinian relativity criticism of RCA television pioneer Herbert Eugene Ives, which was widely published in major peer-reviewed journals?and then ?forgotten? and ignored by the establishment (see IE #38)?was resurrected by the work of Dick Hazelett. We will sorely miss him. In his later years, Dick spent much of his time in philosophical pursuits at the intersection of science and religion. He was born a Mormon, but later in life converted to Judaism. - Infinite Energy #47

    Benevolent Living: Tracing the Roots of Motivation to God, Hope Publishing House (1990).

     

  • (Space, Time)

    Personal Information

    Family: Born May 24, 1927, in Tyrone, OK; son of Jesse Lee (a barber) and Cora Mae Turner; married Nancy Margaret Roche (a rehabilitation counselor), August 12, 1965. Education: Attended Baylor University, 1945-46; Centro de Estudios Universitarios, Mexico City, B.A., 1955, Adams State College, M.Ed., 1956; University of Texas, Ph.D., 1966. Military/Wartime Service: U.S. Army, 1950-52. Addresses: Home: 1857 13th Ave., Greeley, CO 80631. Office: Department of History and Philosophy of Education, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO 80631.

    CAREER

    Ordained minister in Disciples of Christ Church, 1967; University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, professor of philosophy of education and human relations, beginning 1966. Chair, Starving Children Fund.

    WRITINGS BY THE AUTHOR:

    • Lonely God, Lonely Man: A Study in the Relation of Loneliness to Personal Development, Philosophical Library, 1960.
    • The Autonomous Man: An Essay in Personal Identity and Integrity, Bethany Press, 1970.
    • Commitment to Care: An Integrated Philosophy of Science, Education, and Religion, Devin-Adair, 1977.
    • The Einstein Myth, Devin-Adair, 1977.
    • (Editor) The Ives Papers, Devin-Adair, 1977.
    • Krinkle Nose: A Prayer of Thanks, Devin-Adair, 1977.
    • (With Arnold Burron and John Edismoe) Classrooms in Crisis: Parents? Rights and the Public School, Accent Books (Denver, CO), 1986.
    • (With Richard Hazelett) Benevolent Living: Tracing the Roots of Motivation to God, Hope Publishing (Pasadena, CA), 1989.
    • Escape From God: The Use of Religion and Philosophy to Evade Responsibility, Hope Publishing (Pasadena, CA), 1990.

     

     

     

     

     

  • Research Scientist, Engineer
    (Relativity, Time)

    Herbert Eugene Ives (July 21, 1882, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ? November 13, 1953) was a scientist and engineer who headed the development of facsimile and television systems at AT&T in the first half of the twentieth century. Ives studied at the University of Pennsylvania and the Johns Hopkins University, where he graduated in 1908. He wrote a 1920 book on aerial photography, while an Army reserve officer, in the aviation section. Ives was also an avid coin collector, and was President of the American Numismatic Society.

    Like his father Frederic Eugene Ives, Herbert was an expert on color photography. In 1924, he transmitted and reconstructed the first color facsimile, using color separations. In 1927, he demonstrated 185-line long-distance television, transmitting the image of then-Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover from AT&T\'s experimental station 3XN in Whippany, New Jersey.

    In the 1940s, Ives expressed his vigorous opposition to Einstein\'s theory of relativity. Ives did not have an issue with the theory\'s predictions but with?as he formulated it in 1945?\"The indeterminancies and impotences by which the \"Restricted Theory of Relativity\" has been widely publicized\".

    Following the philosophy of Lorentz, he attempted to demonstrate the physical reality of relativistic effects by means of logical arguments and experiments. He is best known for the Ives?Stilwell experiment, which provided direct confirmation of special relativity\'s time dilation factor.

    His friend, the noted physicist H. P. Robertson, contributed the following summary of Ives\' attitude toward special relativity in a biography of Ives:

    \"Ives\' work in the basic optical field presents a rather curious anomaly, for although he considered that it disproved the special theory of relativity, the fact is that his experimental work offers one of the most valuable supports for this theory, and his numerous theoretical investigations are quite consistent with it? his deductions were in fact valid, but his conclusions were only superficially in contradiction with the relativity theory?their intricacy and formidable appearance were due entirely to Ives\' insistence on maintaining an aether framework and mode of expression. I... was never able to convince him that since what he had was in fact indistinguishable in its predictions from the relativity theory within the domain of physics, it was in fact the same theory... some who have not penetrated to the essence of Ives\' theoretical work have seized upon it as overthrowing the special theory of relativity, and have used it as an argument for a return to outmoded and invalid ways of thought.\"

    U. S. President Harry Truman awarded Ives a \"Medal for Merit\" in 1948 for his war-time work on blackout lighting and optical communication systems. - Wikipedia

    Articles:

    • \"Derivation of the Mass-Energy Relationship,\" Journal of the Optical Society of America, V42, pp. 540-543 (1952).
    • \"Note on \'Mass-Energy Relationship,\" Journal of the Optical Society of America, V43, p. 619 (1953).