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Two-Thirds

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Although Two-Thirds is in part science-based, drawing on physics and astronomy, it is also deeply philosophical in its exegesis of ideas. This book demonstrates how the secrets of our ancient structures such as the Great Pyramids in Egypt, the city of Teotihuacan in Mexico and Stonehenge in England. hold the key to the development of new energy and propulsion sources for the next millennium. Two-Thirds contains much that is not even recognised by science today, but which can be verified. We learn for example that the speed of light is not constant -- it moves at three different speeds throughout the universe. Age old mysteries are discussed ranging in topic as wide as the Moon's essential role in the creation of life on Earth, the significance of the 'Face' on Mars and the relevance of meditation.

800 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 1993

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David P. Myers

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1,742 reviews44 followers
April 6, 2017
i gave up on this book many years ago and ran out of library books so went back to it and finished it. i'm a bit conflicted. Some of it is really interesting, but for all that it is neither a factual book nor a story, it has bits of both and can be boring. The math-physics-energy bits were good but the characters were one-dimensional and their tale flat. Don't think i'd recommend it to anyone.
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