Introducing ”Quantum Paranormal, A 21st Century Analysis of the Paranormal Phenomena” A book that cuts away the dogma, and cuts away the myths… Explaining a whole new analysis on the worldwide paranormal activity that includes hard data – explaining behaviour patterns and physical effects… Said to be the biggest leap in paranormal research in the last 300 years, Written by I.T Reverse Engineering Specialist Patrick Jackson, The only paranormal book in the world that engineers & technical specialists agree with.
Patrick Jackson is the Founder of Learning Like Crazy, an Internet-based foreign-language learning company. Some of Learning Like Crazy’s most popular foreign-language learning products are Learning Spanish Like Crazy, Verbarrator, Learning Italian Like Crazy, and Fast Lane Advanced Spanish. Patrick lives the life of his dreams in Medellín, Colombia. “La Ciudad de la Eterna Primavera” or the City of Eternal Spring. Patrick developed the Learning Spanish Like Crazy method to teach conversational Latin American Spanish. He developed the realizing that all of the Spanish courses on the market did not teach the Spanish that Latin American actually speak in Latin America and even urban areas in the US. Unlike many other Spanish courses (i.e “commercial Spanish courses”), Learning Spanish Like Crazy teaches you how to speak spoken Latin American Spanish as opposed to textbook or formal Spanish. The course is all audio.
The existence of the spheres hinges on poor photography, grainy video stills, footage that has been thoroughly debunked, and wild speculation. It cannot and does not function as any kind of evidence as to the reality of these objects.
The connection between the spheres and alleged poltergeist activity is pure conjecture. It is literally nothing more than (not an actual quote): “Bob Lazar the nuclear physicist [sic] says that disc flying saucers have gravity amplifiers. Therefore, spheres can cause poltergeist activity with gravity amplifiers.”
The allegation that the spheres contain matter that has an atomic number between 140 and 150 is a testable assertion. The author claims folks have these things in their possession. Okay, then PROVE the allegation and make the evidence publicly available. Don’t just quote what some UFOlogist who worked in government says. Folks have this notion that if a true UFO believer worked in some high government office that the UFO narrative must be true, but these people in government aren’t special. No, they’re just people, and their beliefs aren’t true by virtue of holding government office. This mahfcka who was a govt scientist or a Lockheed scientist or whoever the hell he was (Boyd Bushman) needs to support his allegations with evidence and fact, not just proclamation.
The book is filled with grammar and spelling and fact errors. The author claims to have poured over this book for years, but evidently fact checking and proof reading were not a part of that work, nor did he bother to learn how to site sources in a bibliography.
The links between ghost accounts and sphere activity is tenuous, wild-ass speculation lacking any basis in anything whatsoever that has the slightest contact with reality. It is the sort of conjecture that hits like religion, and this entire book and the podcast interviews I’ve heard with the author sound to me like a guy who has taken what is actually a really damned cool idea for a science fiction novel — hard sci-fi focuses on what “could be” but “is not” — and used it as the basis for the beginnings of a modern day UFO cult.
Folks, do not be fooled: so-called orb photography is nothing more than lens flares, that is, out-of-focus particles of dust close to the camera lens that are illuminated by the camera flash. Not ghosts, not sphere UFOs under AI or divine control or whatever other pure total horseshit the author imagines.
So, the spheres are protecting us from alien invasion and visitation, are they? What’s next? Should we worship them? Are they angels? God’s tech army? Instruments of the programmers of the simulated universe? Insert any number of unprovable theory here that can fulfill the need for cult. Watch out for the moment when this guy claims humanity is trapped on some kind of prison planet, with these spheroid AI prison wardens. Will he have a path to salvation from that unfortunate state? Let me guess. Some special meditative practice, or perhaps downloading his sphere attracting app for some price, or whatever.
Afterthought: Chapter 20, “A Glimpse Into Pandora’s Box,” is where he really lays the foundation for a cult, and he lays it on thick. I was joking above when stating, “what’s next? Are they angels, god’s tech army,” etc, and I had not yet read to chapter 20. Well as I write this review I’m finishing reading the book and he actually does go there, so wait for it. He even cites the book of revelation and lays a sci-fi interpretation atop it. So folks do be aware this guy may be trying to start a cult.
Enjoying this book to it's fullest, requires open mindedness. Jackson presents a comprehensive theory that ties together sightings of orbs, UFOs and all paranormal activity into one unified hypothesis.
Jackson drops skepticism that phenomena are false or products of the mind. But he retains lógic and scientific rigor to analyze these phenomena. With an IT background, he attempts not to prove or disprove anything but instead to interrogate the question of function.
His approach is surprisingly unique in the world of UFO and paranormal inquiry and his unified, detailed theory is exciting and terrifying to consider. He describes an alien-designed, autonomous planetary defense system, composed of a network of extremely advanced spheres. Poltergeist activity are a "scarecrow" protocol to discourage humans from getting too close to type 3 spheres that seek buildings to shield their radiation.
As far-fetched as his conclusions seem, some of the lógic is hard to dispute if you also approach these subjects with a pause on skepticism around the question of existence. In an age where we are witnessing early days of AI, it may be an appropriate time to begin to recognize it's structures and rules that could be universal.