What might it mean when it’s discovered that a bizarre, grotesque, and extinct sea ammonite was able to send evolutionary information across 20 million years of space-time to influence the design of a modern-day seashell creature? One clue to answer the question might well be that it appears to have been designed to float upright, suggesting an evolutionary process better understood in ancient Greek days than by modern science. Nipponites Mirabilis, stone from Japan, had a writhing, primitive, snake-like shell, from which emerged a small squid-like creature that floated slowly in an ancient sea to catch its meal. The evidence that the ancient Greek science of life might have been correct overwhelmingly argues that Darwin’s evolutionary theories appear to be outdated.
During the 1980s, Italy’s leading science journal, Il Nuovo Cimento, published papers written by Australian Science and Art Center mathematician Chris Illert, in which he was able to generate simulations of seashells indistinguishable from color photographs of the living sea shell By reducing the harmonic structure of the relevant formula he had constructed, a simulation of the creature’s fossil ancestor was generated. By reducing the formula by a harmonic minor, a strange fossil simulation in the shape of a compacted tube was obtained.
The grotesque design of the seashell was identified by the Smithsonian Institution as an accurate simulation of Nipponites Mirabilis. Illert became the first person to show that the extinct ammonite had been able to transmit design information across 20 million years of space-time to influence the design of a living creature. His discovery of optics was reprinted in 1990 by the world’s largest technological research institute as a major discovery in 20th century literature.
Illert’s mathematics became associated with Renaissance geometries and at the time generated a great deal of controversy. Some scholars, such as the late Dr. George Cockburn, Royal Fellow of Medicine, London, proposed that the evolutionary logic belonged to the universal space-time logic of fractal geometry. This was not a popular idea because mainstream science was, and still is, governed by Einstein’s main law of all science. Although the infinite logic of fractal geometry is quite acceptable to modern science, all life in the universe must be destroyed, a death sentence demanded by Einstein’s worldview. Dr. Cockburn of the Science-Art Centre, quite familiar with Chris Illert’s research, spent the rest of his life linking artistic creative thinking to the workings of universal fractal logic. Cockburn’s optical theories led to a modification of Leonardo’s Theory of All Knowledge, which successfully demonstrated that Darwinian theories of the life sciences were based on false assumptions.
Leonardo da Vinci considered the eye to be the key to all knowledge, a concept that Plato considered to belong to barbarian engineering, because such principles ignored his principles of spiritual optical engineering. The engineer, Buckminster Fuller, based his synergistic discoveries of vital energy on Plato’s ethical optics research. Fuller’s work was built on a fractal mathematical logic compatible with published medical research by Cockburn. Fullerene logic is now making the case for a new life science chemistry of fractal logic backed by the three 1996 Nobel laureates in Chemistry.
Leonardo’s theories were modified because, when the spermatozoon makes contact with the liquid crystal membrane of the ovum, the eye does not exist and life is instigated through the operation of liquid crystal fractal logical optics. This discovery linked the human evolutionary process to ancient prehistoric life forms whose fatty acids sometimes combined with minerals to form liquid crystal soaps which, when influenced by cosmic X-radiation, turned into crystalline formations exhibiting certain associated fractal functioning. with human evolution.
The discovery of a fractal evolutionary information transfer from a small extinct marine creature across 20 million years of space-time indicated an aspect of fractal intelligence in the life sciences far beyond Darwinian evolutionary theory. It is also far beyond the primitive technology of modern science, yet it is consistent with Platonic spiritual engineering principles now associated with a new life science chemistry. The human sphenoid bone vibrates with the same seashell life energy forces used by Nipponities Mirabilis to help advance the evolution of fractal logic. Human vibrations are in contact with the seashell design of the human cochlea, designed not to hold a creature upright in water, but to hold humans upright on land.
Dr. Richard Merrick of the University of Texas has properly researched and developed the electromagnetic fractal logic of life that works within the human creative brain mechanisms. This functioning can be considered established by the liquid crystal programming of the sphenoid. Dr. Merrick’s work is associated with the fractal life science worldview of Pythagoras’ Music of the Spheres, which can be considered associated with the life force song sung by the Nipponites Mirabilis. To develop human survival technology, we can now ask the sphenoid where it wants to go. From the humanoid fossil record, every time the sphenoid changes shape, a new species emerges. By applying knowledge about harmonic music sung by a grotesque little sea monster floating in an ancient sea off the Japanese coast, we can imagine a futuristic super-technology that links us to a reality 20 million years in the future.
©Professor Robert Pope