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Quantum Electronic Processing : Information OVERLOAD Error

Jul 11th, 2018
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  1. https://steemit.com/ai/@j1337/quantum-electronic-processing-information-overload-error-711
  2.  
  3. What is a Quantum Computer?
  4. The quantum computer is a computer that uses quantum mechanics to perform calculations and solve problems. A classic computer, PC or supercomputer consists essentially of two components: a memory and a logical device. The memory consists of cells that can assume 0 or 1, and the logical device can write and read zeros and ones to and from memory on orders of an application. This program is stored in memory and may change during the calculation. The quantum computer consists in principle of a single memory register, and the logical operations are performed directly on the memory. The memory register consists of a coherent quantum mechanical wave function as described by Schröding's wave equation . The memory register can be compared to the water surface of a lake, and the program of wind blasts that tear up waves and create complex interference patterns . These patterns contain all the information about how the waves were created and developed. It is the information in this pattern of quantum waves used for calculations with quantum computers.
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  6. The quantum power of the quantum computer is that it is built of coherent quantum mechanical systems - atoms , molecules , ions , semiconductor quantum points, diamond defects, or superconducting circuits - and therefore naturally calculate and simulate quantum mechanical phenomena. For example, quantifiers can basically effectively calculate the structure of a molecule, or magnetism in a material - which becomes impossible for ordinary classical computers when the problems grow in size. The quantum computer's superiority in calculating the material's properties at microscopic level is currently one of the most important driving forces for building useful quantum computers. For general mathematical calculations, quantum computers are not faster than today's computers. However, the quantum computer superior in some special cases where the calculation can utilize quantum properties as superposition and entanglement the most known cases, the factorization of large numbers of products of prime numbers and searching databases with quantum information.
  7.  
  8. What is the Schrödinger equation?
  9. In quantum mechanics, the Schrödinger equation is a mathematical equation that describes the changes over time of a physical system in which quantum effects, such as wave particle duality, are significant. These systems are referred as quantum mechanical systems. The equation is considered a central result in the study of quantum systems, and its derivation was a significant landmark in the development of the theory of quantum mechanics. It was named after Erwin Schrödinger, who derived the equation in 1925, and published it in 1926, forming the basis for his work that resulted in his being awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1933.
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  12. What is ANN?
  13. An artificial neural network that's made entirely from DNA and mimics the way the brain works has been created by scientists in the lab. The test tube artificial intelligence can solve a classic machine learning problem by correctly identifying handwritten numbers. The work is a significant step in demonstrating the ability to program AI into man-made organic circuits, scientists claim. This could one day lead to human-like robots made from entirely organic materials, rather than the shiny metal cybermen seen in popular culture. Researchers hope the device will soon start forming its own 'memories', from examples added to the test tube. Their ultimate goal is to program intelligent behaviours – such as the ability to compute, make choices, and more – with artificial neural networks made from DNA. These networks must be 'taught' how to recognize numbers, account for variations in handwriting, then compare an unknown number to their so-called memories and decide the number's identity. The team demonstrated that a neural network made out of carefully designed DNA sequences could carry out chemical reactions to indicate it had correctly identified 'molecular handwriting.' When given an unknown number, this so-called 'smart soup' would undergo a series of reactions and output two fluorescent signals, for example, green and yellow to represent a five, or green and red to represent a nine.
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  16. Is Bio-mechanical AI real?
  17. Key to creating biomolecular circuits out of DNA are the strict binding rules between molecules of DNA. A single-stranded DNA molecule is composed of smaller molecules called nucleotides abbreviated A, T, C, and G arranged in a string, or sequence. The nucleotides in a single-stranded DNA molecule can bond with those of another single strand to form double-stranded DNA, but the nucleotides bind only in very specific ways. An A nucleotide always bind with a T and a C nucleotide with a G.Taking advantage of these predictable binding rules, researchers were able to design short strands of DNA to undergo predictable chemical reactions in a test tube and thereby compute tasks, such as molecular pattern recognition. In 2011, they created the first artificial neural network made of DNA molecules that could recognize four simple patterns. In July 2018, they unveiled test tube artificial intelligence which can solve a classic machine learning problem by correctly identifying handwritten numbers. Each molecular number is made up of 20 unique DNA strands chosen from 100 molecules, each assigned to represent an individual pixel in any 10 by 10 pattern. These DNA strands are mixed together in a test tube. Given a particular example of molecular handwriting, the DNA neural network can classify it into up to nine categories, each representing one of the nine possible handwritten digits from 1 to 9. First, the team built a DNA neural network to distinguish between handwritten sixes and sevens.They then tested 36 handwritten numbers and the test tube neural network correctly identified all of them. The system theoretically has the capability of classifying over 12,000 handwritten sixes and sevens 90 per cent of those numbers taken from a database of handwritten numbers used widely for machine learning into the two possibilities.
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  20. How does artificial Intelligence learn?
  21. AI systems rely on artificial neural networks (ANNs), which try to simulate the way the brain works in order to learn.
  22. ANNs can be trained to recognize patterns in information - including speech, text data, or visual images - and are the basis for a large number of the developments in AI over recent years. Conventional AI uses input to 'teach' an algorithm about a particular subject by feeding it massive amounts of information. A new breed of ANNs called Adversarial Neural Networks pits the wits of two AI bots against each other, which allows them to learn from each other. This approach is designed to speed up the process of learning, as well as refining the output created by AI systems. Though scientists have only just begun to explore creating artificial intelligence in molecular machines, its potential is already undeniable.
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  25. How is CERN Satanic?
  26. The Truly Evil Side Of Quantum Computer Blockchain Artificial Intelligence that operate in millions of multiple dimensions. The 4-dimentional Tesseract is the building brick that is the lattice-work of the blockchain architecture for feeding endless iterations of data into artificial intelligence quantum computers that operate in millions of parallel dimensions. D-Wave Adiabatic quantum computer Model 8192, has 8192 Qubits the most powerful computer in the world, with virtually unlimited processing power. It will be used by the CERN particle collider in Geneva to "open a portal to another dimension" in the CERN scientists' own words. That means they will open a permanent gateway to the bottomless pit, as prophesied in the Holy Bible. CERN is built over an ancient Roman temple dedicated to the worship of Appolion (Satan), and believed to be a portal to the Bottomless Pit. The CERN particle colliders counter-rotating particle
  27. accelerator rings are a giant quantum computer in themselves, operating on the same quantum principle as the Josephson junction effect. It's huge and opens other Quantum dimensions and its the pit. When the CERN scientists permanently "open a portal to another dimension", Geneva will cease to exist, IT WILL BE DESTROYED, as prophesied by Nostradamus & the Holy Bible. The D-Wave adiabatic quantum computers use a mathematical version of the Enochian alphabet, the language of Fallen Angels (demons) to communicate with billions of entities (demons) in millions of dimensions to derive its super-fast quantum computations. The Vatican and the Jesuit Order funded CERN for a reason. They could try to open a portal to the Bottomless Pit at any time they say.
  28.  
  29. What is the Abelian Hidden Subgroup Problem?
  30. Abelian hidden subgroup problem is the problem of finding generators for a subgroup K of an Abelian group G, where this subgroup is defined implicitly by a function.
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  32.  
  33. What is Shor’s algorithm?
  34. Shor’s algorithm solves the following problem: given an integer N, find its prime factors.
  35. On a quantum computer, to factor an integer N, Shor's algorithm runs in polynomial time (the time taken is polynomial in log N, which is the size of the input). Specifically it takes quantum gates of order O((log N)2(log log N)(log log log N)) using fast multiplication, demonstrating that the integer factorization problem can be efficiently solved on a quantum computer and is thus in the complexity class BQP. This is substantially faster than the most efficient known classical factoring algorithm, the general number field sieve, which works in sub-exponential time – about O(e1.9 (log N)1/3 (log log N)2/3).The efficiency of Shor's algorithm is due to the efficiency of the quantum Fourier transform, and modular exponentiation by repeated squarings.
  36.  
  37. If a quantum computer with a sufficient number of qubits could operate without succumbing to noise and other quantum decoherence phenomena, Shor's algorithm could be used to break public-key cryptography schemes such as the widely used RSA scheme. RSA is based on the assumption that factoring large numbers is computationally intractable. So far as is known, this assumption is valid for classical (non-quantum) computers; no classical algorithm is known that can factor in polynomial time. However, Shor's algorithm shows that factoring is efficient on an ideal quantum computer, so it may be feasible to defeat RSA by constructing a large quantum computer. It was also a powerful motivator for the design and construction of quantum computers and for the study of new quantum computer algorithms. It has also facilitated research on new cryptosystems that are secure from quantum computers, collectively called post-quantum cryptography. In 2001, Shor's algorithm was demonstrated by a group at IBM, who factored 15 into 3 × 5, using an NMR implementation of a quantum computer with 7 qubits. After IBM's implementation, two independent groups implemented Shor's algorithm using photonic qubits, emphasizing that multi-qubit entanglement was observed when running the Shor's algorithm circuits. In 2012, the factorization of 15 was performed with solid-state qubits. Also in 2012, the factorization of 21 was achieved, setting the record for the largest number factored with Shor's algorithm. In April 2012, the factorization of 143 (=11×13) was achieved, although this used adiabatic quantum computation rather than Shor's algorithm. In November 2014, it was discovered that this 2012 adiabatic quantum computation had also factored larger numbers, the largest being 56153, (this number is equal to 233×241). On the television show Stargate Universe, the lead scientist, Dr. Nicholas Rush, hoped to use Shor's algorithm to crack Destiny's master code. He taught a quantum cryptography class at the University of California, Berkeley, in which Shor's algorithm was studied. In the animated film Summer Wars, the character Kenji Koiso reads an article titled "Shor's Factorization Algorithm" while riding on a train, foreshadowing his ability to understand and calculate complex equations. In the TV series The Big Bang Theory it was mentioned in a Physics bowl competition in season 1 episode 13.
  38.  
  39. What is Simon’s problem?
  40. In the computational complexity theory and quantum computing, Simon's problem is a computational problem that can be solved exponentially faster on a quantum computer than on a classical or traditional computer. Although the problem itself is of little practical value, it can be proved that a quantum algorithm can solve this problem exponentially faster than any classical algorithm. The problem is set in the model of decision tree complexity or query complexity and was conceived by Daniel Simon in 1994. Simon exhibited a quantum algorithm, usually called Simon's algorithm, that solves the problem exponentially faster than any deterministic or probabilistic classical algorithm, requiring exponentially less computation time than the best classical probabilistic algorithm.This problem yields an oracle separation[clarification needed] between the complexity classes BPP and BQP, unlike the separation provided by the Deutsch–Jozsa algorithm, which separates P and EQP. Simon's algorithm was also the inspiration for Shor's algorithm. Both problems are special cases of the Abelian hidden subgroup problem, which is now known to have efficient quantum algorithms.
  41.  
  42. What is a network telescope?
  43. A network telescope (also known as a darknet, Internet motion sensor or black hole[1]) is an Internet system that allows one to observe different large-scale events taking place on the Internet. The basic idea is to observe traffic targeting the dark (unused) address-space of the network. Since all traffic to these addresses is suspicious, one can gain information about possible network attacks (random scanning worms, and DDoS backscatter) as well as other misconfigurations by observing it. The resolution of the Internet telescope is dependent on the number of IP addresses it monitors. For example, a large Internet telescope that monitors traffic to 16,777,216 addresses (a /8 Internet telescope in IPv4), has a higher probability of observing a relatively small event than a smaller telescope that monitors 65,536 addresses (a /16 Internet telescope). A variant of a network telescope is a sparse darknet, or greynet, consisting of a region of IP address space that is sparsely populated with "darknet" addresses interspersed with active (or "lit") IP addresses.
  44.  
  45. What is Quantum Electronic Processing?
  46. Quantum Electronic Processing – or QEP in short – is an area still fraught with all manner of cognitive and execution hurdles. Cognitive in the sense that the central idea in it is pretty counter-intuitive. And execution in the sense that once the idea is grasped, the implementation still raises some major problems. But there is a promising solution, and hence both the cognitive and the executive hurdles will be addressed here. Quantum processing differs from traditional processing in one major way: it doesn’t just deal with the binary states of 0 and 1, but also deals with a superposition of all states between those two ranges. Effectively, qubits – the particulates of quantum computing – can attain any value between 0 and 1… and they can do so, for all those values, simultaneously. Due to this, quantum processing introduces an inherent parallelism into computing. And this, in turn, makes quantum computing to potentially be several million times faster and more efficient than traditional, transistor based, bit processing.
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  48.  
  49. How does GGGQEP Work?
  50. Quantum entanglement can be utilized in quantum computing by using one of the entangled pairs for measurements, while leaving the other particle inside the quantum processor. As long as the quantum processor does not interfere with the quantum superposition state of this second particle, measurements from the other entangled particle can consistently, and reliably, give information about the quantum states of the two. The only challenge is to avoid triggering a reverse decoherence of the two particles –which can be achieved by ensuring that all measurements of the entangled particle remains within the dephasing margins they themselves set, or by deploying optical pulsing mechanisms into the system. In this way, the total amount of information being processed per unit time is capped off only by the bounds set in by Holevo’s limitative theorem. The rationality behind creating the GGGQEP (Gadolinium Gallium Garnet Quantum Electronic Processor) system is simple. The two factors that limit computing capacity most are storage volume and processing speeds. Other factors, such as data transfer rates, are easily dealt with by using such things as optical, instead of electrical, communications pathways.
  51.  
  52. Bigger file sizes are likely to be created as the storage capacities increase, but even now, such file systems as BRTF, XFS, and even the common NTFS can theoretically handle sizes up to one exabyte. The increased computation needed for the user-space can, in turn, be easily handled using quantum algorithms, such as “Simon’s problem”, “Shor’s algorithm”, and several other algorithms found in the “Abelian Hidden Subgroup Problem”. Through extreme laser engineering at the molecular level for GGG, and a bit of lateral thinking about quantum dynamics, the future of computing seems boundless. Most of the discretionary technologies described here are already operational – some in futuristic prototypes, and others in such facilities as DARPA, NASA and CERN. Whether or not GGG is already in use as a storage media remains “classified”, but from a theoretical perspective, there isn’t anything stopping its use. What remains to be done, therefore, is to combine all the various technologies, and create the next generation of computers. This, judging by current trends, might happen within this lifetime… and computing will change fundamentally, and forever. Its a processor with a specific formula. It is used to access the deepest parts of the Mariana’s Web no one could say for sure if it exists and would be really groundbreaking for someone to invent that. They say that Mariana isnt just a part of the deep web, but a super advanced AI capable of hacking every network in the entire world, it protects the secrets of the deepest darkest parts of the web which could possibly hold the Vatican’s Secrets, Atlantis information that had been long forgotten and possibly things that the human brain couldn't comprehend. Lets just say you should stay away from that stuff.
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  54.  
  55. What is Molecular beam epitaxy?
  56. Molecular beam epitaxy (MBE) is an epitaxy method for thin-film deposition of single crystals. It was invented in the late 1960s at Bell Telephone Laboratories by J. R. Arthur and Alfred Y. Cho. MBE is widely used in the manufacture of semiconductor devices, including transistors, and it is considered one of the fundamental tools for the development of the nanotechnologies.
  57.  
  58. What is 4200 Mhz?
  59. 4200 Mhz corresponded to the hydrogen radiation, the most common element in the cosmos, and therefore from a logical point of view the universal message that which any mind can conceive of as the alpha and the omega.
  60. While Frequency Modulated-Continuous Wave (FM CW) is more complicated, the accuracy of it far surpasses any other type of altimeter. Like simple pulse systems, signals are emitted from a radar aerial (the bomb), bounced off the ground and received back at the bomb's altimeter. This pulse system applies to the more advanced altimeter system, only the signal is continuous and centered around a high frequency such as 4200 MHz. This signal is arranged to steadily increase at 200 MHz per interval before dropping back to its original frequency. As the descent of the bomb begins, the altimeter transmitter will send out a pulse starting at 4200 MHz. By the time that pulse has returned, the
  61. altimeter transmitter will be emitting a higher frequency. The difference depends on how long the pulse has taken to do the return journey. When these two frequencies are mixed electronically, a new frequency (the difference
  62. between the two) emerges. The value of this new frequency is measured by the built-in microchips. This value is directly proportional to the distance travelled by the original pulse, so it can be used to give the actual height.
  63.  
  64. What is Quantum cascade lasers?
  65. Quantum cascade lasers (QCLs) are semiconductor lasers that emit in the mid- to far-infrared portion of the electromagnetic spectrum and were first demonstrated by Jerome Faist, Federico Capasso, Deborah Sivco, Carlo Sirtori, Albert Hutchinson, and Alfred Cho at Bell Laboratories in 1994. Unlike typical interband semiconductor lasers that emit electromagnetic radiation through the recombination of electron–hole pairs across the material band gap, QCLs are unipolar and laser emission is achieved through the use of intersubband transitions in a repeated stack of semiconductor multiple quantum well heterostructures, an idea first proposed in the paper "Possibility of amplification of electromagnetic waves in a semiconductor with a superlattice" by R.F. Kazarinov and R.A. Suris in 1971.
  66.  
  67.  
  68. How many Breeds of Humans?
  69. There is 120 breeds of humans. A breed is a sub category of a species (ie. all breads of a species are all the same species) that can still interbreed to produce potentially fertile (and usually vary healthy, the genetic diversity and all) young with members of another breed, but each independent breed is still distinct for sharing characteristics not seen in other breeds. A species is a species, and populations of that species cannot breed with other species and produce fertile young (and most often can't produce any young at all) because their genes are too different. There are mixed breeds, which contain the characteristics and genes of multiple other breeds, but the different breeds in the larger picture are still distinguishable from each-other. What makes a species a species more-often-than not if pretty well defined (know that there are complications that show you just how poorly the terms we invent fit the purposes we give them, but apparently they're too complicated for here), a breed however is simply a group of like animals that are related enough that we recognize the group as distinct from others of their species. What does and doesn't constitute a breed is up to interpretation. If you only buy white rats (which can result from normal brown/brown breeding, no matter what hogwash would lead most high schools to believe otherwise) and eventually you're breeding them and selling them to your friends, do white rats suddenly become a "breed" separate from otherwise identical brown rats? Consider that, given enough time and luck, the same thing could naturally happen to people. That's what breed is. In the knitty gritty of genetics, there are 120 generally distinct categories of people (genes like the ones that might give you white hair, but on a scale that you don't notice just by meeting a person.
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  71.  
  72. The Human Experiment?
  73. The Human Experiment was among the first sites of the Deep Web to attract attention on TOR and in general on Darknet . Already from the name you can guess what you are dealing with, ie experiments done on people. In some respects the idea of ​​the site was reminiscent of the film "Human Centipede". The film tells the story of a German doctor who kidnaps three tourists and unites them surgically, forming a human centipede. With the success of the operation, the doctor begins the formation of the centipede, while trying to hide from the world. As far as we know, the site was active until 2011. The site's slogan says it all "Not all humans are equal, some of them are born to be superior to others"). As well as the sentence "the laboratories are equipped with all equipment". It seems that it was a group of doctors (three nurses, six students, two medical trainees, three doctors). Experiments, in particular, were kept secret. The site is divided into 4 "Warehouses" (warehouses) of which only the first and third are listed experiments. In the first Warehouse there were experiments related to insemination and abortion. In Warehouse 3, instead, an experiment of resistance to immersion in cold water was reported (the death of the subjects occurs by hypothermia in times such as 104 minutes or less). Body and water temperatures are also reported. Laboratory tests (complete blood count, urinalysis, etc.) were done in hospitals where samples were taken and sent under other real patient names. The results were carefully dispersed, to avoid suspicion. The warehouses were buried and the test subjects were confined to their cells. The nutritional status, they say, was usually irrelevant because none of the test subjects survived long enough. There are several experiments listed: effects of organ infection - transfusion - test of drugs - sterilization - resistance to hunger and thirst - pain / tolerance to pain - tolerance to X rays, heat and pressure. The protagonists are deprived of their name and surname and replaced with serial numbers, then slaughtered bodies. The people chosen for this range of experiments were usually homeless people, so unregistered citizens.
  74.  
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  76.  
  77.  
  78. What Happened to Tesla's Research?
  79. A few days after Tesla died on January 8th, 1943, his possessions were seized by officials from the amazingly-named government Office of Alien Property. About 3 weeks after that, all of Tesla’s things and documents were given a thorough examination by a group of FBI agents that included none other than John G. Trump, the uncle of President Trump. Tesla’s “thoughts and efforts during at least the past 15 years were primarily of a speculative, philosophical, and somewhat promotional character,” but “did not include new, sound, workable principles or methods for realizing such results.” Donald Trump once referred to his Uncle, invoking John Trump’s intelligence as a sort of voucher for his own genetic and historical pedigree. Trump said in one interview, according to the New Yorker magazine that “My uncle used to tell me about nuclear before nuclear was nuclear.” This would likely be referring to hydrogen bombs rather than the first nuclear bombs as Trump was born in 1946, after the Atomic Age was already upon us. Trump also recalled to the Times how his uncle “would tell him many years ago about the power of weapons someday, that the destructive force of these weapons would be so massive, that it’s going to be a scary world.” Trump often sites his uncle’s genius as a way to solidify a pedigree of intelligence handed down generation after generation.
  80.  
  81.  
  82. What is Plus Ultra?
  83. It’s a Small World attraction at the Pepsi-Cola Pavilion at the 1964 New York World’s Fair contained a portal to Tomorrowland and had a fictional secret society called Plus Ultra. PLUS ULTRA was founded by Nikola Tesla, Thomas Edison, Gustave Eiffel, and H.G. Wells in a legendary meeting at the top of the Eiffel Tower during the 1889 “Exposition Universelle” World’s Fair. All of the men in this so-called fictional secret society were time travelers. They abandoned this world only to return again in different forms. Plus Ultra means Further Beyond and was also inscribed as a warning on the Pillars of Hercules at the Strait of Gibraltar, which marked the edge of the known world. Meaning whatever is beyond is unknown and lost in time. The blueprints for the expansion held key technologies that enabled the journey, including Supra Transport. Key VIPs who were encouraged to join Plus Ultra were given a special VIP audio tour of World’s Fair attractions, such as Ford’s Magic Skyway, and It’s a Small World. For those that couldn’t attend the fair, a double-grooved LP was given with the details. Disney even had a secret place near the Pirates of the Caribbean Ride at his theme park called Club 33. As a private club, 33 is not accessible to the public, and it’s for exclusive use of its members and is the only location at Disneyland serving alcohol. To enter Club 33, a guest must press a buzzer on an intercom concealed by a hidden panel in the doorway. As a youth, Walt Disney had been a member of the Masonic Demolay Society and so many believe that the 33 is related to the 33rd degree of Scottish Rite Masonry.
  84.  
  85. What is Optogenetics?
  86. Optogenetics has emerged as an important tool in neuroscience, especially in central nervous system research. It allows for the study of the brain’s highly complex network with high temporal and spatial resolution. Optogenetics trigger a chemical response in the brain and activates the microbiome, the enteric nervous system, the brain in the gut, which makes it beneficial in curing many brain and nervous system disorders. It can also be used for controlling impulse, brain activity, and functions of balance and equilibrium. It controls the activity of neural circuits that sends the messages through the viral vector or transgenic animal line. Optogenetics is a novel technology that combines optical and genetic methods to activate or silence excitable cells and with time could also enhance some of our abilities to that of superhero status. This at this moment in time is science fiction, but it is ending up closer to being fiction as we explore just what lurks in the body and what alien creatures can be activated in the microbial universe that lives in your body.
  87.  
  88. What is Synarchism?
  89. Synarchism is a term which generally means “joint rule” or “harmonious rule.”
  90. Beyond this general definition, both synarchism and synarchy have been used to denote different political processes in various contexts. Increasingly, the terms have been used to denote rule by a secret elite. The Synarchy that may be in power now is part of an alien human alliance run by an elite priesthood who some have claimed to be the Illuminati. Unfortunately the word Illuminati paints everything with a wide brush and so it is impossible to pinpoint just who may be responsible and who is pulling the strings.
  91.  
  92. What is Tulpamancers?
  93. Tulpamancers are people who, through extended bouts of concentration and visualization, produce a special kind of imaginary friend they call a Tulpa. Tulpas are understood to be distinct sentient beings with their own personalities, inclinations and relative autonomy. Tulpamancing is actually something everyone does, well everyone who believes there is an invisible agent that intervenes from time to time in our lives. Anytime we pray to an external god asking for an intervention, we are literally mediating and willing into reality something or someone to have a hand in cognitively considering that things begin to happen in your favor.
  94.  
  95. What is a Homunculus?
  96. Homunculus is an artificial humanoid created through alchemy. While not quite a human, this creature is a “rational animal” that will be the guinea pig for further experimentation that will be used to fulfill humanity’s dream of mastering life and death.
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  98.  
  99. What is Neuropolitics?
  100. Neuropolitics, neuromarketing and neurolinguistic programming are distant cousins to the surveillance infrastructure. It taps into the brain and searches for what triggers excitement in a person. It also analyses what motivates and confuses people. It is Big brother inside your head and it manipulates you into believing that 2+2=5.
  101.  
  102. What is Neuromarketing?
  103. Neuromarketing techniques allegedly improve marketing effectiveness by understanding sub-conscious behavioral triggers and then crafting images and messages that can stimulate the relevant parts of the brain and incite the right behaviors.
  104.  
  105.  
  106. What are Dyson Spheres?
  107. Dyson Spheres or swarms of spheres may have an ancient component as well. Ancient depictions of wormholes and star gates show gods traveling in flying or winged Spheres similar to what has been described as Nibiru. Anciently, many of these spheres have been called the “Devachan.” The Devachan is the “dwelling of the gods” according to the Theosophy of H.P. Blavatsky. It is regarded as the place where most souls go after death where desires are gratified, corresponding to the Christian belief in Heaven. However, Devachan is a temporary, intermediate state of being before the soul’s eventual rebirth into the physical world. The “Devachan” is also mentioned in the Zohar. The Zohar is the foundational work in the literature of Jewish mystical thought known as Kabbalah. It is a group of books including commentary on the mystical aspects of the Torah, which are the five books of Moses in the Bible and scriptural interpretations as well as material on mysticism, mythical cosmogony, and mystical psychology. The Zohar contains a discussion of the nature of God, the origin and structure of the universe. In the Zohar it states: “The higher or celestial world with its accompanying spheres, (Devachan) though invisible to mortal sight, has its reflection and analogue, namely, the lower world with its circumambient spheres, according to the saying, ‘As above, so below.’ The works of the Holy One in the celestial world are the type of those in the terrestrial world. The celestial world, gave rise or origin to Alhim, the visible divine name that then first became known. Thus Alhim was associated with the creation of the world, as Brashith was connected with the creation of the celestial or invisible world, that being the type, thus the ante-type, or in other words, one was the reflection and analogue of the other, and therefore it is written, or declared the heavens and the earth. The heaven on high produced and gave rise to the earth below.”
  108.  
  109.  
  110. What is XM1063?
  111. The XM1063 is the code name for the US Army’s new secret weapon which will “suppress” people without harming them.According to the British Guardian, the details on how it is used are classified. It is fired from a rocket or a “non-lethal” projectile fired from a 155mm howitzer. The rocket scatters 152 small non-explosive, sub-munitions over a 1-hectare area; as each parachutes down, it sprays a chemical agent.It is speculated that there are three possible payloads an existing riot-control agent or calmative, malodorants or a new chemical agent.
  112.  
  113. What are Nanobots?
  114. Nanorobotics is an emerging technology field creating machines or robots whose components are at or near the scale of a nanometre (10−9 meters). More specifically, nanorobotics (as opposed to microrobotics) refers to the nanotechnology engineering discipline of designing and building nanorobots, with devices ranging in size from 0.1–10 micrometres and constructed of nanoscale or molecular components. The terms nanobot, nanoid, nanite, nanomachine, or nanomite have also been used to describe such devices currently under research and development. Nanomachines are largely in the research and development phase but some primitive molecular machines and nanomotors have been tested. An example is a sensor having a switch approximately 1.5 nanometers across, able to count specific molecules in a chemical sample. The first useful applications of nanomachines may be in nanomedicine. For example, biological machines could be used to identify and destroy cancer cells. Another potential application is the detection of toxic chemicals, and the measurement of their concentrations, in the environment. Rice University has demonstrated a single-molecule car developed by a chemical process and including Buckminsterfullerenes (buckyballs) for wheels. It is actuated by controlling the environmental temperature and by positioning a scanning tunneling microscope tip. Another definition is a robot that allows precise interactions with nanoscale objects, or can manipulate with nanoscale resolution. Such devices are more related to microscopy or scanning probe microscopy, instead of the description of nanorobots as molecular machine. Using the microscopy definition, even a large apparatus such as an atomic force microscope can be considered a nanorobotic instrument when configured to perform nanomanipulation. For this viewpoint, macroscale robots or microrobots that can move with nanoscale precision can also be considered nanorobots.
  115.  
  116. What is Unit 731?
  117. Unit 731 was a covert biological and chemical warfare research and development unit of the Imperial Japanese Army that undertook lethal human experimentation during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945) of World War II. It was responsible for some of the most notorious war crimes carried out by Imperial Japan. Unit 731 was based at the Pingfang district of Harbin, the largest city in the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo.
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