In a message dated 8/12/04 2:10:39 PM Eastern Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
For
example, R. Mills has been working for years on his "shrinking hydrogen"
theories and devices, and he has not shared much practical information with
others. If he were to die, the research would probably die with him.
Side note: Mills and I discussed this at length, as things developed. He joked about how he stopped driving wildly after he had his insight (which, yes, is hotly disputed) because he feared if he died it would be lost. Not forever, mind you. Mills is convinced that if he never had the idea, someone else would have eventually. But who knows when?  Same with Newton or Einstein.
 
But more recently Mills told me he's relaxed a bit. With PhDs working for him, and his lab books stacked high, and the book published, etc., he feels that he's still needed for the passion to drive this work, but the ability to complete it is not in short supply, and the data and methodology is established.
 
So, long life to Mills and all on both sides of the new energy fight, but the work may thrive in successors.
 
Best regards,
 
Erik

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