Quantum Jumping Ebook Torrent Rating: 9,0/10 5792 votes

Quantum Jump was a 1970s British band, consisting of singer and keyboard player Rupert Hine, guitarist Mark Warner, bass player John G. Perry (then of Caravan), and drummer Trevor Morais (who had previously played in The Peddlers).The band is best remembered. What are the most-visited and working torrent sites at the start of 2020? As we do our best to continue a long-standing top 10 tradition, we see that The Pirate Bay is the favorite among.

Share this story.A few days ago, a reader submitted a tip to the Ars newsdesk: he’d seen an ad appear for a course in “,” a service that purports to solve all your ailments of motivation, status, and finance. Intrepid traveler of the Internet that I am, I dove in, eager to see how someone had managed to bend modern principles of physics to help middle-class citizens double their salaries and realize their potential.“I really was thrilled with the ability to cross all of the universes,”.

“I love that I can instantly reach Alpha now,” said another. Yet a third wrote, “I'm making a lot of new friends and they are all me. Me, in different realities.” What is happening in this strange, apparently otherworldly corner of the Internet?“Quantum jump,” while a scientific concept, entered the common lexicon a few decides ago to describe a “big leap,” per the. Actual quantum jumping describes what subatomic particles do when they change quantum states.If an electron moves from one energy level to another, that is a quantum jump (physicists also refer to it as an atomic transition). A quantum jump can also occur when an electron’s angular momentum or spin changes. Scientists can’t ascertain these changes unless they conduct an observation of the particle, and the change of state happens so quickly the particle appears to be “jumping” between them.To be perfectly clear, quantum jumping has nothing to do with travel outside of an atom, quantum or otherwise.

It is not quantum teleportation, let alone physical teleportation. There is no information or matter exchange, and no extra-atom movement, during a quantum jump.Knowing all of this about quantum operations, I was skeptical that Quantum Jumping had anything to do with them. But I signed up for the free e-mail newsletter anyway. (An e-mail to Quantum Jumping's contact form did not elicit requests for more materials or comment.)The Quantum Jumping website and materials say precious little about how Quantum Jumping is supposed to work, mechanically. There is a lot to be said about what it is supposed to do for you: make you richer, taller, more successful; help you “get ahead in your career,” “learn new skills,” “improve your wellbeing.” Quality of life magic, for the low, low price of!The first e-mail newsletter “intro course” contains a PDF that is essentially a five-page description of Think and Grow Rich, a book about visualization by Napoleon Hill released in 1937: imagine yourself receiving advice from famous luminaries like Abraham Lincoln, Ghandhi, or Thomas Edison, and your destiny of greatness will manifest. Toward the end of the document, more modern influences are cited: “Remember how in the movie The Matrix, people were able to instantly download skills and abilities into their minds?

What if that was real? Well guess what? The Matrix was right.” In the last few sentences, the document states the process is based on “quantum physics and the theory of multiple universes.”.

Burt Goldman, a man over 80 years old who, having quantum jumped his whole life, decided to impart his knowledge in his twilight years.A video is linked from the PDF, described as “the first part of the introductory course on Quantum Jumping.” This constitutes a that is an audio interview with Burt Goldman, the purported inventor of Quantum Jumping, set against vaguely inspiring imagery. Goldman is the interviewee and describes how he “discovered” a way to “jump into those other realities” provided by the conception of a multiverse.During the video, Goldman invokes the properties of visualization.

He also invokes the name of Steven Weinberg, a Nobel laureate.“There’s an infinite number of parallel realities existing with us in the same room,” Goldman says. “Those aren’t my words, those are the words of a Nobel laureate in physics.” While Weinberg did write at least on the conception of string theory and the multiverse, we had difficulty turning up a record of him saying there are multiple universes existing in the same room.“The first time I quantum jumped I was two or three years old,” Goldman said, apparently describing some innate ability he learned to control, the way learned to control her ability to turn into a silvery puddle. But rather than changing states, Goldman asserts he’s conducting some kind of mental teleportation into one of many parallel universes dictated to exist by string theory.“I do a quantum jump, and now I’m talking to the great photographer Burt Goldman,” Goldman said. “The best way that I can describe it at the time is a controlled daydream.

It’s much more than that, but it’s the only way I can get you to understand it.” Goldman goes on to describe some cryptic advice his multiverse self gave him (“plant yourself”) that led to his participation in an exhibit at the International Photography Hall of Fame.Goldman attempted to tie Quantum Jumping back into principles of physics. “When you turn on a radio, you can only listen to one frequency at a time,” Goldman said.

“Likewise, in our universe, we’re tuned into the frequency that corresponds to a physical reality, what we know.”If only the rest of us had thought to imagine reality as a radio station. Subatomic particles changing states and your self changing universes are, when we think about it, really the same thing, for large approximations for “same.” Come to think of it, we should be jumping to different universes to talk to different versions of ourselves just as often as these other versions are cropping up in our living room, asking for philosophical guidance. It’s time to balance the scales!I’m not here to judge anyone for using visualization as a motivation technique; whatever helps you sleep at night/better the third world/become the CEO of a company. But science is not for you to co-opt, smear on a couple layers of mysticism, and market as the key to success. Mysticize if you want; just.

Quantum Jump was a 1970s British band, consisting of singer and keyboard player Rupert Hine, guitarist Mark Warner, bass player John G. Perry (then of Caravan), and drummer Trevor Morais (who had previously played in The Peddlers). The band is best remembered for its 1979 UK hit single 'The Lone Ranger'.

Career[edit]

Quantum Jump were formed in 1973 at Farmyard rehearsal studios by Trevor Morais and Jeffrey Levinson. The idea for the name came from a conversation Rupert Hine had with Anthony Stern, an ex-Cambridge University friend and filmmaker. 'He had told me about the relatively recent discovery at Cambridge of the manner in which an electron's energy increases and decreases, not linearly as had been long assumed, but in a discrete step, known as a 'quantum'. The term 'quantum jump' (later to be commonly referred to as 'quantum leap') was coined by the Cambridge team. I preferred 'jump', as it had more of a 'soul / funk' music connotation'.

Quantum Jump's sound was a hybrid of fusion, funk, and jazz rock. The first album was written and arranged in 1973–1974, and recorded (with equipment hired from AIR London) at Farmyard. Hine produced the sessions, with Steve Nye as sound engineer. The sessions were independently financed by Jeffrey Levinson (of Mountain Fjord) but, explained Hine, after some 18 months of managerial and contractual problems, the rights to the album were sold to The Electric Record Company in 1975. The label's MD, Jeremy Thomas, believed that the song 'The Lone Ranger' was a potential hit single if only it had something more 'interesting' for the intro.

Hine picked up on his remark and sang the longest word in the world (listed in The Guinness Book of Records) a capella, replacing the original intro to the song altogether.[1] The word in question, taken from the language of the Maori, New Zealand's indigenous people, was the name of the hill Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateapokaiwhenuakitanatahu in Hawke's Bay, New Zealand. On the record, the word (made to sound as if it were Native American, in keeping with the Lone Ranger and Tonto theme) is chanted as follows:

Taumata-whaka-tangi-hanga-kuayuwo
tamate-aturi-pukaku-piki-maunga
horonuku-pokaiawhen-uaka-tana-tahu
mataku-atanganu-akawa-miki-tora

'The Lone Ranger' was first released in 1976. After it was chosen as Tony Blackburn's BBC Radio 1 'Record of the Week' (the nationwide morning radio show with the highest ratings in the UK at the time), it was banned when some fragments of lyrics were deemed to contain references to drugs and homosexuality. The BBC stopped playing the record, and it failed to chart. Disillusionment with the length of time it had taken to get the original record deal, and the lack of any really cohesive management, led to guitarist Mark Warner's decision to leave and join Cat Stevens' live band.

Quantum Jump soldiered on for a second album, recorded in late 1976 as a trio with the help of various musician friends, most notably Caravan multi-instrumentalist Geoffrey Richardson. Barracuda was released in April 1977, coinciding with the band going out on the road for a couple of UK tours with Roye Albrighton (of Nektar) on guitar. The album had been expensive to record, and when it did not sell well enough, Quantum Jump disbanded at the end of 1977.

The band would, however, make an unexpected return two years later when a re-release of the 'Lone Ranger' single became an unexpected hit. The song had been widely played by Kenny Everett on both his radio and TV shows. Re-released in 1979, it eventually reached number 5 in the UK Singles Chart.[2] The band (including Mark Warner) reconvened for an appearance on Top of the Pops. A third Quantum Jump album was released to coincide with this unexpected 'smash' single. Titled Mixing, it was essentially a collection of the best tracks from the first two albums, albeit heavily reworked and remixed.

Hine went on to become the producer of more than 100 albums for artists as varied as Tina Turner, Bob Geldof, Chris de Burgh, the Thompson Twins, Stevie Nicks, Rush, the Waterboys, Suzanne Vega, Duncan Sheik, the Fixx and Howard Jones. He would also appear to form another band in the mid-1980s, called Thinkman, but this was simply another name for his solo recordings. In addition, there is the Soundtrack album Better Off Dead on A&M Records, featuring Rupert Hine, Cy Curnin (the Fixx), Martin Ansell, Terri Nunn, Thinkman, and E. G. Daily. The production is centered on Rupert Hine, and this is the first appearance of Thinkman.

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Discography[edit]

  • Quantum Jump (1976)
  • Barracuda (1977)
  • Mixing (remix collection, 1979)

References[edit]

  1. ^Tony Augarde (1984), The Oxford guide to word games
  2. ^Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 444. ISBN1-904994-10-5.
Quantum Jumping Ebook Torrent

External links[edit]

  • Quantum Jump discography at Discogs
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