The purpose of this work was an attempt to establish contact with electrons, assuming that if they are called by the right names, they might possibly respond, and these names coincide with the names of the Achaeans from Homer’s “Iliad”: Odysseus, Achilles, Menelaus, etc. A phonogram of the enumeration of Achaean leaders in the order in which they are mentioned throughout the text of the “Iliad” was directed at a piece of iron, whose electrons were supposed to be contacted. Apparently, the only way for the electrons to respond is to form an electric current. To record such an event, if it ever occurs, our piece of iron was directly connected to an electric lamp.
But besides that, one should not forget about the gods. After all, they essentially determine all the events of the “Iliad.” Who are the deities for the electrons? Obviously, the sources of electromagnetic fields. Therefore, transformers were involved in the experiment and connected in a certain way, according to the Olympic genealogies: the connection went through the neutral “Zeus” and then branched into two circuits, on one side were the deities supporting the Achaeans, on the other – the Trojans, the twins Apollo and Artemis looked the same in our scheme, and so on, and so forth. [1]
[1] Leiderman Yu. Names of electrons 1 [Electronic resource] // Moscow Conceptualism – Access mode to the resource: http://www.conceptualism-moscow.org/page?id=969Comment type: Published comment
Author: Yuriy Leiderman
Bibliography:
Leiderman Yu. Names of electrons 1 [Electronic resource] // Moscow Conceptualism – Access mode to the resource: http://www.conceptualism-moscow.org/page?id=969