[net.books] Quasi-scientific weirdness

wmartin@brl-tgr.ARPA (Will Martin ) (10/30/85)

Found a strange little book at the library the other day, and just
finished reading it. It is by G. Harry Stine; ON THE FRONTIERS OF
SCIENCE - Strange Machines You Can Build (Atheneum, New York, 1985,
$8.95 pb, 111pp).

This book describes (in a very unemotional and objective format) a
number of easily-home-constructed devices that seem to have odd effects.
Included are dowsing rods, pyramids, pendula, the "energy wheel" (simply
a piece of paper or light material balanced on a needle point, which
seems to rotate in response to mental wishes, even when enclosed and
isolated from ambient air currents), the famous Hieronymous Machine,
the "wishing machine", and my favorite, the SYMBOLIC Hieronymous Machine
(which works even though the circuitry is a drawn schematic, the wires
are threads, and the mechanical components are representations of the
actual items). Sounds like a cure for the energy shortage!

Most of these items originated with the old John W. Campbell "Astounding
Science Fiction" editorials and articles, and Stine's name is familiar
to anyone who has read in this and related areas, but this would be a
handy introduction to this field for a newcomer. All the devices, even
the electronic ones, are easily built at home out of scrap or surplus
material, so you can play around with this stuff without fearing you
have to invest large sums or risk being ripped off by a con artist.

Maybe it is all nonsense, and maybe it is the revelation of mysterious
Great Truths, but it appears to be harmless fun, unless you get obsessed
with it (I guess obsession makes a true "crank"). In any case, if you
have seen references to these devices and didn't know just what they
were, this book will serve to explain their use and construction
(though not, of course, their principles of operation [if they have any]).

Will