mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
104 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
104 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
THE HOLLOW EARTH: A MADDENING THEORY THAT CAN'T BE DISPROVED
|
||
From OMNI Magazine (October 1983), Games section (p. 128)
|
||
|
||
If there were a hall of fame for pseudoscientists, surely Cyrus Teed
|
||
would deserve a place of honor. It was shortly after the Civil War that
|
||
Teed had his vision: The earth is a hollow sphere, and WE LIVE INSIDE
|
||
IT. Everything else in the universe is in here with us -- planets,
|
||
comets, stars -- everything. What's outside the sphere? Nothing.
|
||
Teed's cosmology had a particular appeal to religious
|
||
fundamentalists. It made the earth important again, rather than an
|
||
insignifigant speck in the cosmos. And it eliminted the difficult
|
||
concepts of infinite space and aimlessly scattered worlds. We're all
|
||
right here together in this safe, spherical womb.
|
||
In 1870 Teed changed his name to Koresh (ancient Hebrew for Cyrus)
|
||
and started a cult. At its peak in the Nineties the Koreshan
|
||
(pronounced ker-ESH-an) Unity movement had some 4,000 followers. Teed
|
||
established a religious/scientific community a few miles south of Fort
|
||
Myers, Florida, and there founded the town of Estero. He was determined
|
||
to prove his theory scientifically and launched his own geodetic survey
|
||
in 1897 to do just that. Using his "rectilineator," a set of double-T
|
||
squares made of large logs, he projected a horizontal line until his
|
||
calculations indicated that it would plunge into the Gulf of Mexico,
|
||
four miles from its starting point. This was Teed's proof that the
|
||
earth's surface is concave and that his rectilineator line had
|
||
intersected the earth's upward curve.
|
||
The scientists had gotten everything backward: It is centrifugal
|
||
force, not gravity, that keeps our feet planted on the ground. The
|
||
sphere *is* about 25,000 miles around, just as the scientists say.
|
||
China is about 8,000 miles away, through the earth's center -- straight
|
||
up.
|
||
The Nazis entertained many occult theories in their quest for world
|
||
domination, and Teed's was one of them. At one point a Nazi expedition
|
||
went to the Isle of Man. Its mission: to get secret photographs of the
|
||
United States by pointing its powerful telescopes *up*.
|
||
...
|
||
What's most infuriating is that a little mathematical fiddling turns
|
||
this crazy theory into a proposition that is virtually impossible to
|
||
refute. The trick is done by *inversion*, a purely geometric
|
||
transformation that lets a methemetician turn shapes inside-out. When a
|
||
sphere is inverted, ever point outside is mapped to a corresponding
|
||
point inside, and vice versa.
|
||
The goemetry is quite simple. If a sphere's center is "C" and its
|
||
radius is "r," then every outside point "P" maps to an inside point "P'"
|
||
such that "CP x CP' = r2" {that's "r squared" - Foxx}.
|
||
{My apologies for not being able to include the accompanying
|
||
illustration. - Foxx}
|
||
Here's a good way to visualize it: For any outside point "P" (on
|
||
the sun, or Pluto, or Cygnus X, for example), draw a circle that has
|
||
"CP" as its diameter. From one of the two points where this circle
|
||
intersects the earth, draw a line perpendicular to "CP." The
|
||
intersection point {of this perpendicular and "CP"} is the location of
|
||
"P'".
|
||
By far the largest body in our inverted Earth is the moon; a bit
|
||
over half a mile in diameter and some 3,933 miles over our heads. The
|
||
sun's sphere is only eight feet across. The stars ar microscopic spots
|
||
clustered around the center, which is, of course, infinity.
|
||
Is there any way to prove we *aren't* inside a hollow earth? We
|
||
asked H.S.M. Coxeter, mathematics professor at the University of
|
||
Toronto and an expert on inversion geometry. "I can't think of any," he
|
||
said. "A rocket flight, an eclipse, a Foucault pendulum, a Coriolis
|
||
effect -- any observation we can makeon the outside of the earth has an
|
||
exact duplicate version inside. There would be no way to tell which was
|
||
the truth."
|
||
Just as the geometry of space inverts, so do all the laws of
|
||
physics. Toward the center of a hollow Earth, light slows down and
|
||
everything shrinks -- atoms, astronauts, spaceships, and measuring rods.
|
||
Light travels in circular paths, producing some weird (but lawful)
|
||
optical effects. Astronauts on the moon looked back on what they
|
||
thought was a blue sphere in the distance. Actually it was the inside
|
||
of the earth's shell, throught sight lines that flared like the bell of
|
||
a trumpet, producing the *illusion* of a sphere. The optical distortion
|
||
is something like the wide angle view through a fisheye lens.
|
||
As we look to the sky and the horizons, our visual field is filled
|
||
with a sphere some 4,000 miles in diameter. Celestial bodies that
|
||
revolve around the earth's center appear to "rise" and "set" as they
|
||
enter or leave that sphere.
|
||
|
||
Cyrus Teed said that the moon is an illusion, that gravity is really
|
||
centrifugal force, and that a horizontal line on the earth's surface
|
||
eventually intersects the earth's upward curvature. We like to think
|
||
that if he were alive today he would junk some of his earlier
|
||
predictions to conform to inverse geometry, thereby keeping his theory
|
||
irrefutable.
|
||
The centrifugal-force idea is demonstrably false. If it were so,
|
||
there would be two points on the earth's surface where the force
|
||
disappeared -- along the axis of spin. It is gravity of a peculiar kind
|
||
that pulls us all to the outside. Teed's rectilineator experiment must
|
||
have been in error. A line that appears horizontal actually curves in
|
||
toward the center and so gets farther and farther "above" the surface.
|
||
Teed would have embraced Einstein's view of a finite, bounded
|
||
universe in which light travels in circles and eventually returns to its
|
||
starting point. An infinitely powered telescope aimed straight up,
|
||
Einstein said, will eventually produce a view of the other side of the
|
||
earth. That idea might seem paradoxical to most of us, but it would
|
||
have been intuitively obvious to Cyrus Teed.
|
||
... the Australian Journal _Speculations in Science and Technology_
|
||
has published an article by Mostafa A Abdelkader, of Alexandria, Egypt,
|
||
that considers in all seriousness the proposal that we really *are* in a
|
||
hollow Earth. Abdelkader says that the only way to test the theory's
|
||
validity is to drill a tunnel straight through the earth. Until such an
|
||
experiment is performed, he writes, "it seems ... that the odds are
|
||
strongly in favor of [a hollow Earth] being our actual universe."
|
||
|