Or You Can Call Me Ray (Cosmic Quest edition)

Ma Bell (The Telephone Company) created a super cool film series on scientific topics.  I just dug The Strange Case of Cosmic Rays (1957) directed by Frank Capra:

https://youtu.be/k_wt5AFjRQo

The film references using isotopes for medicine. John Joly, the physicist who was a pioneer in this area, actually rejected radiometric dating as a reliable geochronometer because of discordant results.  I document this in my prior book:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1088860788

Ice cores are brought forth as a friendly witness to an old earth.  But I deny Old Earth Fallacies #OEF and here’s why … the impact of cosmic rays on certain isotopes should vary during magnetic reversals.  However the findings do not match mainstream expectations.

More here:

https://youngearthscienceblog.blogspot.com/2023/02/or-you-can-call-me-ray-cosmic-quest.html

my site: https://totalyouth.us/

 

#YES #YoungEarthScience #WorldView #TrueTruth #Schaeffer #NormCrosby #RayJ_JohnsonJr #BellTelephoneSystem #MaBell #resonance

By bioessman

Jay Hall is a "ten-yeared" Mathematics Professor at Howard College in Big Spring, Texas. He has a Master of Science degree in Mathematics from the University of Oklahoma. Hall has 53 credit hours of Science courses in various disciplines. He has taught at the High School, Technical School and Community College levels. He also has experience in the actuarial field for a number of insurance and consulting organizations. Hall has previously published Fantastic Polygon Constructions and a paper on MathWorld (“One-Seventh Ellipse,” http://mathworld.wolfram.com/One-SeventhEllipse.html). In addition he is the author of Calculus is Easy (https://www.amazon.com/Calculus-Easy-Jay-Hall-ebook/dp/B00B3YWYNI). There is also a video on YouTube (search: Calc is EZ, look for the hammer). Hall is a proud member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. He was a journalist for a year and had the privilege of interviewing Maya Angelou. You may contact Jay Hall at HallOfMath@yahoo.com or DeepTimeSkeptic@protonmail.com

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