Dr. Eric Haseltine
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
That's true.
Well, in science, that's what really happens, where you dig deep and you get answers that you weren't looking for.
that lead you to questions you weren't going to ask.
And so at the end, there's this kind of rapid fire series of reveals of deeper and deeper truths where what you thought just a week ago is now today's illusion.
And you turn one illusion into one fact until you finally get to
something that's close to the truth.
And that's what science is like.
So we have a lot of twists and turns on purpose, and all of those are science-driven.
So pretty much most of the science that was in the new science of UFOs is in here, but it's used to tell a story about people who are trying to overcome obstacles and rise above themselves.
Yeah.
And there's a lot of biology in there, a lot of exobiology.
There's a lot of neuroscience.
Neuroscience is very important.
I am a neuroscientist.
And I'm really interested in species that are radically different from us.
And I would commend to people to read this book called An Immense World by Ed Young, in which he describes what he calls the umwelt, or worldview, of these exotic creatures like...
fish that have electric fields and sense electric fields, snakes.
I got my PhD on snakes, rattlesnakes and pythons that see infrared.
They see in the dark.
The mantis shrimp that see 12 different colors that we don't see.