• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

What the BLEEEEP do you know?!

yhelothar

Lifer
My bio prof just had me watch it for extra credit. Very awesome move. Very thought provoking on what is possible and how our minds work.
Highly recommended 🙂
 
blah blah.. i don't know crap.. but i want to look smart..so i'm gonna say you are a stupid sheep without providing any facts..

 
I agree that some of the claims made don't seem too credible, like the native americans.
But then again... the part that talks about our biochemistry was very interesting.
How we are just addicted to the peptide chemicals that our hypothalamus produces when something we experience triggers it to come out.
But overall, I think it was pretty good.
 
i agree the movie was semi interesting but you cant trust everything in it.
if ya like this you should check out waking life...
 
I tried to watch it and fell asleep due to its suckiness halfway through. I'm an astrophysics major too. A physics friend of mine said that it was alright, but that if you knew anything about physics then some of the stuff they said didn't really work.
 
Movie didnt really explain much...just proposed some theories without much backing up with facts and some of the CG-modeling of the neural physiology is all wrong. A nice introductory piece for laymen anyways.
 
Good grief, how many times do we have to cover this ground!

This 'movie' IS AN INFOMERCIAL for the cult 'Ramtha School of Enlightenment'!

Linkage from other thread

Q. While the film "What the #$*! Do We Know!?" parades itself as a tell-all about quantum physics, it turns out that it's actually a 111-minute infomercial for ... that's right, the Ramtha School of Enlightenment. In fact, the three filmmakers, [William] Arntz, [Betsy] Chasse and [Mark] Vicente, are all devotees of Ramtha.

There's little to no accurate science in the film, and, as a physicist pointed out recently in your Answer Man column, the individuals who are quoted are pretty far from qualified experts on the field of quantum mechanics. Case in point: One of the persons expounding on causality and quantum physics (Dispenza) is a chiropractor. The film's sole purpose appears to be to promote the ideology of the Ramtha School of Enlightenment. A quick browse through their Web site will clearly demonstrate that the film's pseudoscientific nonsense comes straight from the teachings of the RSE.


Rubin Safaya, Edina, Minn.

A.
Several other readers also unmasked the documentary as a hoax. I knew there had to be something fishy when the expert who made the most sense was channeling a 35,000-year-old seer from Atlantis.
 
horrid movie. if you want a movie that will make you think and is actually important go watch "the corporation"
 
Back
Top