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Author
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Robert Anton Wilson

Title
Index
S

Schrodinger's Cat: the universe next door
Year 1979
Publisher Sphere Books Limited
ISBN 0722192266
 

 

Synopsis

















A Cosmic Vision of the Universe

'New York was a city-state or island in the midwestern part of Unistat.  It seems to have been a centre of religious worship, and many came there to walk about, probably in deep meditation, with an enormous female statue, the goddess of these primates.  Various authorities identify this divinity as Columbia, Marilyn Monroe or Liberty - all of these being names widely recorded in Unistat glyphs.  Perhaps her true name will never be known.'
Terran Archives 2803

It was Benny 'Eggs' Benedict who started the cosmic ball rolling.  Around the end of 1983 he unleashed his weird and timely article, One Month To Go To 1984, on an unsuspecting, bombed-out primate population.  And sent cosmic ripples from coast to coast as the world stood poised for its final, far-out curtain call ...

 

 

Review

 

 

Robert Anton Wilson is best known for the Illuminatus trilogy which he co-wrote with Robert Shea in the 1970s. The Schrodingers Cat trilogy is in shorter, funnier, less dense, more readable and ultimately much more satisfying than Illuminatus
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Saturn

 

 

Credit: NASA

String of Pearls
Saturn's fascinating meteorology manifests itself as a "string of pearls" formation, spanning more than 60,000 kilometers (37,000 miles).

Seen in new images acquired by Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer and lit from below by Saturn's internal thermal glow, the bright "pearls" are actually clearings in Saturn's deep cloud system. More than two dozen occur at 40 degrees north latitude. Each clearing follows another at a regular spacing of some 3.5 degrees in longitude.

This is the first time such a regular and extensive train of cloud-clearings has been observed. The regularity indicates that they may be a manifestation of a large planetary wave. Scientists plan to take more observations of this phenomenon over the next few years to try to understand Saturn's deep circulation systems and meteorology. This image was taken on April 27, 2006.

NASA Image of the day archive

 

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