I don't know John Walker, but I posted his studies on "editing the past" previously. I didn't know he founded autodesk.
There's a famous example supporting the concept of multiple pasts regarding Nelson Mandela. Some people have evidence and believe that he died in prison ( newspaper articles, etc. as I recall) and others say he's still alive ( other articles ). A collison of probable pasts. I think this happens quite often but is ignored. It does create hostilities and war because each side is convinced and can "prove" that the other side is completely wrong. That's interesting about the lottery. A few years ago I did a year long study for my own satisfaction by buying a ticket every week and choosing the numbers using "map dowsing" i.e. picking the numbers that a pencil naturally tended to seek on the forms. There was a 1:37 chance of winning something, but over the year I won 1:5! (Not much money, but it proved the point to me ). Another effect was that on some occasions, the winning numbers were shifted up/down/left/right one space on the form. Hoyt Stearns Scottsdale, Arizona US -----Original Message----- From: Guenter Wildgruber [mailto:gwildgru...@ymail.com] Sent: Friday, April 20, 2012 11:23 AM To: hoyt.stea...@gmail.com; Vortex Subject: Re: [Vo]:Seasonal variation of halflife: tritium test ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Von: Hoyt A. Stearns Jr. <hoyt.stea...@gmail.com> An: Vortex <vortex-l@eskimo.com> Gesendet: 23:41 Donnerstag, 19.April 2012 Betreff: RE: [Vo]:Seasonal variation of halflife: tritium test Hoyt, You probably know John Walker, the founder of autodesk. He seems to be an interesting person, capable of thinking outside the box. On his website You can find eg his 'Introduction to Probability and Statistics'. See here: http://www.fourmilab.ch/rpkp/experiments/statistics.html ...