I’m sitting here on a long 12 hour shift with my engineering partner discussing major accomplishments of the modern era. It seems to always go back to magnetism. Magnets are incredible tools, and magnetism is even more incredible, yet we have no universities or trade schools openly diving into educating the populous about their incredible abilities.
Give me your thoughts, why is the entire magnetic field being covered up and overlooked by the modern educational system. Are they afraid we’re going re-discover free energy?
Look at the history of physics, for starters. Pay attention to QM and what QM replaced. It is there you'll find your answer. Ask yourself: If you use a permanent magnet to pick up a bunch of nails, for instance, say it's mounted on a bit of wood you can swivel over the pile of nails. Pick up the nails, move the wood, take the nails off and do it again. Do it over and over and over, for a very long time. [In testing longevity of samarium cobalt motor magnets, my results indicated that under adverse conditions - subjected to demag fields - the magnets lost less than 1% in 200 years.] That simple experiment contraindicates the common perception that free energy is impossible. The necessary impulse to magnetize a samarium cobalt mag is considerable, but the resultant magnetic energy available is far greater than the magnetizing impulse. Want to fiddle around? Do some research into scalar magnetics. Build a caduceus coil - just be careful. Figure out where that energy is going. How about the Bloch wall? Or thousands of other characteristics that QM has either misstated or won't address. Yeah, I spent a lot of years doing control systems, motors and that sort of crap, much in the mil R&D area. Be careful though: you might get yourself killed due to other factors.