Jew Corrupter: Physicist Wolfgang Pauli

Started by CrackSmokeRepublican, December 18, 2010, 04:05:42 PM

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CrackSmokeRepublican

Pretty typical J-Tribe Corrupter below... He was kicked out of Austria by the Nazis and fled to the American University system. -- CSR

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Jew: Pauli, Wolfgang (1900-1958)    

QuoteGerman physicist who, in 1925, proposed the Pauli exclusion principle, Eric Weisstein's World of Physics which states that no two fermions Eric Weisstein's World of Physics may possess the same energy (occupy the same quantum state) in a given atom. Eric Weisstein's World of Physics He made fundamental contributions to quantum mechanics. Eric Weisstein's World of Physics His ability to make experiments self destruct simply by being in the same room was legendary, and has been dubbed the "Pauli effect" (Frisch 1991, p. 48; Gamow 1985).

Pauli is infamous for a number of scathing remarks directed at his colleagues. Of one colleague's paper, he is purported to have said "This isn't right. This isn't even wrong." (Australian Institute of Physics).

http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Pauli.html

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Deciphering the Cosmic Number: The Strange Friendship of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung



Hardback
137: Jung, Pauli, and the Pursuit of a Scientific Obsession

In Deciphering the Cosmic Number I explore how Carl Jung analysed the dream imagery of one of his most famous patients, the ground-breaking physicist Wolfgang Pauli. Pauli's unconventional and wild life brought him to the brink of a mental breakdown. He obsessed over how he had made his greatest discovery, feeling that he had tapped into something beyond physics.

It's the story of two mavericks – Pauli, a scientist who – unlike his peers – was fascinated by the inner reaches of his own psyche and not afraid to dabble in the occult; and Jung, the famous psychologist who nevertheless was sure that science held answers to some of the questions that tormented him. Both made enormous and lasting contributions to their fields. But in their many conversations over dinner and wine at Jung's Gothic mansion on the shores of Lake Zurich, they went much further, striking sparks off each other as they explored the middle ground between their two subjects.

They deliberated at great length over whether there was a number that everything in the universe hinged on, that explained everything – a primal number that provided insight into the equations of the soul. Might it be three as in the Trinity? Or four as argued in alchemical texts? Could it be the weird number 137, which on the one hand described the DNA of light and on the other is the sum of the Hebrew letters of the word "Kabbalah"?   <:^0

Deciphering the Cosmic Number is a tale of an extraordinary friendship between two equally brilliant yet very different men. Jung's and Pauli's was a truly unique meeting of the minds. It was, as Jung wrote, to lead both of them into "the no-man's land between Physics and the Psychology of the Unconscious...the most fascinating yet the darkest hunting ground of our times."

http://www.arthurimiller.com/books/deci ... ic-number/


Squaring the Circle


The Divine and Mundane Triangles



Pauli's World Clock, his mandala

Quotehttp://www.arthurimiller.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/pauli-clock-copy-150x150.jpg

Uroboros the serpent
After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan

CrackSmokeRepublican

QuoteThe odd couple: Carl Jung, Wolfgang Pauli and mystic numbers
A strange marriage of science and psychology
Georgina Ferry

Soon after he arrived to take up a new post in Zurich in the early 1930s, exhausted and emerging from divorce and a breakdown, the physicist Wolfgang Pauli took the obvious course: he checked himself into the clinic of the local analytical psychologist Carl Jung for a course of therapy. So began one of the most extraordinary partnerships of the twentieth century. Over the following twenty-five years, the two men worked together, not just on Pauli's emotional problems but on a quest to unify the worlds of science and human psychology. Arthur I. Miller is not the first to mine their extensive correspondence for insights into both men, but his accessible account should bring this odd couple to a wider readership.

Pauli was a leading member of the group of theoretical physicists, including Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg and Erwin Schrödinger, who transformed our understanding of the way matter behaves at the subatomic level. Apart from his own discovery of the "exclusion principle", which underlies our understanding of electricity and magnetism and for which he won a Nobel Prize in 1945, Pauli received the grudging admiration of his colleagues for acting as their most trenchant critic. Yet even at the height of his success he was not a happy man. Working as a junior professor in Hamburg, he spent his days in monk-like devotion to physics, and his nights drinking and roving the "Sankt Pauli" red light district looking for sex "without feeling, without love, indeed without humanity". This pattern had been established for almost a decade by the time he turned up on Jung's couch.

Jung, who had by that time broken from his mentor Sigmund Freud and established his own school of analysis, attributed Pauli's fragile state to his over-reliance on rational thought at the expense of feeling. He prescribed Pauli a course of dream analysis, and subsequently used many of Pauli's dreams as examples in his publications. Miller devotes a central section of the book to describing these dreams and their interpretation, which drew heavily on Jung's ideas about archetypes and the collective unconscious and his reading of medieval occultists and alchemists.

Pauli certainly gained in self-awareness as a result – a modern therapist might argue that simply giving himself permission to conduct such a thorough self-examination would have been beneficial. But Pauli went further. He wholeheartedly accepted the more controversial aspects of Jung's theoretical framework, which struck a chord with his own long-standing interest in the mystical significance of particular numbers. Why did his exclusion principle demand that each electron be described by four quantum numbers, and not three as he had previously believed? What was the significance of the number 137, which appears in nature as the fine structure constant that determines the degree of splitting of spectral lines?

Miller traces Pauli's willingness to entertain non-rational explanations back to his interest in a dispute between the seventeenth-century astronomer Johannes Kepler, who correctly calculated that the orbits of the planets were elliptical and not circular, and the English philosopher Robert Fludd. Both believed in hidden harmonies of nature, but among their differences was whether the number three or the number four held the greatest significance. This was the kind of question that Jung was only too happy to discuss, and after Pauli's therapy sessions ended, the two men corresponded for decades. While Pauli never accepted the totality of Jung's beliefs about "synchronicity" – coincidence of thought or action brought about through the collective unconscious – in 1952 they published a book together, The Interpretation of Nature and the Psyche. Pauli's contribution was an essay on the role of archetypes in Kepler's theories, and he put forward arguments for the necessity of an irrational element in scientific creativity.

Miller enthusiastically joins in the debate. He is eager to remind twenty-first-century readers that "Jung, Pauli and their contemporaries considered Jung's research to be quite as important as Pauli's work in physics", and certainly seems to be more than open-minded on that point himself. Pauli was intrigued to find, on consulting a scholar of Jewish mysticism, that the word Kabbalah, written as numbers in Hebrew, adds up to 137. Miller agrees that this is "an extraordinary link between mysticism and physics". Neither does he question Jung's accounts of Pauli's dreams: a more rational explanation of the images that successively appear in them might be that Pauli's increasing preoccupation with Jung's theories while waking caused him to rehearse versions of them in his sleep. Miller also seems surprisingly little interested in the relationship between Pauli and his parents. Pauli's mother poisoned herself when his father left her for another woman, but Pauli's psychological problems clearly date from before this traumatic event, which did not occur until he was twenty-seven.

Miller himself originally trained as a physicist before developing an interest in the history and philosophy of science. His ability to approach his subject from the perspective of both the sciences and the humanities is a great strength. My sympathies, however, lie with Pauli's loving second wife Franca, who did at least as much as Jung to make him a more or less civilized member of society, and who spent the three decades she survived him trying to delay publication of his correspondence with Jung, in case it damaged his image as a serious scientist.

Arthur I. Miller
DECIPHERING THE COSMIC NUMBER
The strange friendship of Wolfgang Pauli and Carl Jung
336pp. Norton. £18.99 (US $27.95).
978 0 393 06532 9

Georgina Ferry is a science writer and biographer. Her book Max Perutz and the Secret of Life was published last year.

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/ ... 818433.ece


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After the Revolution of 1905, the Czar had prudently prepared for further outbreaks by transferring some $400 million in cash to the New York banks, Chase, National City, Guaranty Trust, J.P.Morgan Co., and Hanover Trust. In 1914, these same banks bought the controlling number of shares in the newly organized Federal Reserve Bank of New York, paying for the stock with the Czar\'s sequestered funds. In November 1917,  Red Guards drove a truck to the Imperial Bank and removed the Romanoff gold and jewels. The gold was later shipped directly to Kuhn, Loeb Co. in New York.-- Curse of Canaan