----- Original Message ----- From: "Stephen A. Lawrence" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: A historical walk on the wild side




Horace Heffner wrote:
A walk on the wild side:

<http://www.facebase.com/rhodes.html>

Robert Bass addresses Rhodes Scholars at Caltech 5 yrs ago. Note link at bottom of page.

Regarding the link:  Wow.  Impressive letter.

I don't know nearly enough to comment intelligently on Mills, but my gut reaction has never been positive. I find Bass's insinuations very easy to believe.
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I've been aware of Robert Bass for some years, and he is a brilliant individual of considerable scope. For example, he taught astronomy at BYU. A number of decades ago, I was following the Velikovsky affair rather closely. One broad criticism of Velikovsky's 'Worlds in Collision' scenario is the assumption that the planetray orbits have been observed to be stable for centuries, and therefore could not possibly have undergone the perturbations required by Velikovsky *and* settled into stable orbits within historical time. Bass advanced an anlysis of celestial dynamics based on sophisticated math which purported to prove that the orbital damping is much higher than supposed by conventional analysis, and therefore that argument could not be used against Velikovsky.

Bass was present a Cold Fusion colloquium in 2005, organized by Dr. Mitchell Swartz. Bass did not speak, and I didn't have a chance to speak to him. apparently he was there in his capacity as a technical patent attorney.

Steve Lawrence properly characterized Bass's letters as insinuating. I can't speak to the mathematical analysis, which seems to parallel that made by Connett and others. As for as the references to gyrotrons, Bass was very superficial. Procurement of a standard gyrotron microwave amplifier from a commercial source is in no way similar to the custom design that would be required by Mills' speculations of the time, and Bass should have known better if he had actually looked at the situation.

As far as the gyrotron thread, critics on HSG have thought me gullible, but at the time I criticized the gyrotron idea as fundamentally unfeasible because its operation requires a hard vacuum with long mean free paths for electrons. Such is fundamentally incompatable with a BLP plasma as the source of fast electrons.

Steve is quite ready to accept negative indicators about the Mills affair. He should put the Bass comments into the context of their time and look more carefully at the recent experiments for himself, not at other's opinions about the experiments.

Mike Carrell

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