If the heat from the sun really came from a hot interior, then as the late Dr. Hermann Fricke of Germany has pointed out, sunspots should be incandescent and not dark. Numerous photographs have been taken of sunspots from all angles, and these photographs show beyond any possibility of a doubt that sunspots are nothing else than splashes in the luminous layer. The luminous material is thrown to the sides, leaving a wide open hole at the center through which the dark interior of the sun can be viewed–perhaps not absolutely dark, but much darker that the luminous surface with its temperature of 6000 degrees. According to all authentic science of today, we are supposed to believe that within this dark interior there is raging a temperature of 50,000,000 degrees! It is just too much for the writer to swallow.
Fricke H (1919) Eine neue und einfache Deutung der Schwerkraft und eine anschauliche Erklärung der Physik des Raumes. Wolfenbüttel: Heckner.
Funny.... I was born in Wolfenbuttel, in 1947.
https://aspace.lib.vt.edu/agents/people/984
Fricke, Hermann, 1876-1949 Person Dates Existence: 1876 - 1949 Biographical Note
Hermann Fricke was a German cosmologist and one of a group of physicists that disagreed with Einstein's theory of special relativity. He supported using "ether" to explain electromagnetism.
Found in 1 Collection or Record: Hermann Fricke Manuscript CollectionIdentifier: Ms-2008-062
Abstract
This collection contains German cosmologist Hermann Fricke's manuscript of "Eine Neue Sonnentheorie" from 1932 utilizes Sir William Siemens and William Herschel's ideas on sun spots and the solar corona to suggest new theoretical perspectives on the sun's relationship to the atmosphere.
Dates: 1932 Found in: Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech / Hermann Fricke Manuscript
Marginalization processes in science: The controversy about the theory of relativity in the 1920s
Milena Wazeck
School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
Abstract
In the 1920s, hundreds of pamphlets were published whose authors self-confidently claimed
to have refuted the theory of relativity. The opposition to relativity was extraordinarily fierce
and lasted years, including not only physicists and philosophers but also scientific laymen. What
were the motives of Einstein’s opponents? On what basis was the theory of relativity attacked so
vociferously? This article focuses on the emergence of a heterogeneous international network of
academic and nonacademic opponents to Einstein in the early 1920s and suggests a theoretical
approach for understanding the nature of the controversy about the theory of relativity. I argue that
the controversy about the theory of relativity represents a type of controversy that is unresolvable
because of the ontological commitments underlying the arguments against academic consensus and
the social dynamics of a process of marginalization of proponents of deviant knowledge.
Keywords
Albert Einstein, controversy, dissident science, marginalization, theory of relativity
Introduction
Prague, October 1913. Oskar Kraus (1872–1942), Associate Professor of Philosophy at
the German University, sent alarming letters to Ernst Gehrcke (1878–1960), an experimental physicist at the Imperial Technical Institute in Berlin:
I’m suffering from a severe fatigue and irritability, which, not least, is caused by the absurd
theories of the relativists. I have the burning desire to expose the origin of the error that lies
behind all the absurdities that you, dear sir, have accurately characterized yourself. I also see
Corresponding author:
Milena Wazeck, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich Research Park, Norwich,
NR4 7TJ, UK.
Email:
M.Wazeck@uea.ac.uk
469855SSS43210.1177/0306312712469855Social Studies of ScienceWazeck
2013
A
STR is krapp -- & GTR is mostly krapp.
The present Einsteinian Dark Age of science will soon end – for the times they are a-changin'.
The aether will return – it never left.