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The Monday Morning Memo

Now let's take a look at the same treatment given to one of the first music videos ever made. This one was shot in the early 60's, right at the beginning of the Idealist cycle that zenithed in 1983. Then Idealism slowly declined to the tipping point, 2003, when I began lecturing on what to expect next. Have you noticed that all of it happened right on schedule?

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Random Quote:

“The detection of life elsewhere in the universe would be the greatest discovery of all time. Physics professor Enrico Fermi wondered why, given the age and vastness of the universe, and the presence of billions of stars and planets that have existed for billions of years, we have not yet been contacted by any other alien civilizations. This was his paradox.

Chatting with his colleagues over lunch in 1950, Fermi supposedly asked, ‘Where are they?’ our own galaxy contains billions of stars and there are billions of galaxies in the universe, so that is trillions of stars. If just a fraction of those anchored planets, that’s a lot of planets. If a fraction of those planets sheltered life, then there should be millions of civilizations out there. So why haven’t we seen them? Why haven’t they got in touch with us?

In 1961, Frank Drake wrote down an equation for the probability of a contactable alien civilization living on another planet in the Milky Way. This is known as the Drake equation. It tells us that there is a chance that we may coexist with another civilization but the probability is still quite uncertain. Carl Sagan once suggested that as many as a million alien civilizations could populate the Milky Way, but he later revised this down, and others since have estimated that the value is just one, namely humans.”

- Joanne Baker, Universe: 50 Ideas You Really Need to Know

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