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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
2 yrs

Harvard social 'scientists' lay out the case for the existence of 'cryptoterrestrials' such as lizard people
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www.theblaze.com

Harvard social 'scientists' lay out the case for the existence of 'cryptoterrestrials' such as lizard people

The Department of Defense's All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office defines "Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena" (UAP) as: (A) airborne objects that are not immediately identifiable; (B) transmedium objects or devices; (C) and submerged objects or devices that are not immediately identifiable and that display behavior or performance characteristics suggesting that the objects or devices may be related to the objects or devices described in subparagraph (A) or (B). The Pentagon regards UAP as "sources of anomalous detections in one or more domain ... that are not yet attributable to known actors and that demonstrate behaviors that are not readily understood by sensors or observers." The dominant hypotheses for these phenomena are either that they are the work of extraterrestrials from distant worlds and civilizations, or that they were simply fashioned by human beings. A paper set to be published in the academic journal Philosophy and Cosmology recommends that scientists keep an open mind about a possible third option: that UAP could be the product of nonhuman intelligent beings (NHI) "concealed in stealth here on Earth (e.g., underground), and/or its near environs (e.g., the moon), and/or even 'walking among us' (e.g., passing as humans)." In other words, academics are entertaining the possibility that flying saucers might not be the work of little green men from Mars but rather by "cryptoterrestrials": lizard people, stranded aliens, fairies, advanced cave dwellers, or residents of the dark side of the moon. According to Tim Lomas and Brendan Case of Harvard University's Human Flourishing Program, and biological anthropologist Michael Masters of Montana Technological University, scientists should not dismiss the "cryptoterrestrial" hypothesis (CTH) outright. "We recognize these CTHs may rightly be regarded skeptically by most scientists, but argue they nevertheless should not be ruled out, and deserve consideration in a spirit of epistemic humility and openness," they wrote. The trio indicated they were inclined to pursue the topic after philosopher Bernado Kastrup's recent dismissal of the hypothesis over its "outlandish, unlikely, and 'far out' nature." Their paper — a hodgepodge of references to local myths, alleged archeological discoveries, believers' anecdotes, questions raised by lawmakers, science fiction, and statements by military officials — raised five considerations: limits to historical and geological knowledge; traces of lost civilizations; supposed traces of underground civilizations; traditions around "magical" cryptoterrestrials; and UAP activity underground, underwater, and near the moon. 'We personally would have rated the possibility of a CTH having some basis in truth as low as 1%.' The researchers stressed at the outset that this particular theory is distinct from the notion that UAP are the work of inter-dimensional beings. Instead, so-called cryptoterrestrials are understood to be physically present within current standard spacetime dimensions, even if "hidden" from view. Possible candidates for cryptoterrestrials apparently include "dinosauroids." "Across cultures are legends for instance of anthropomorphic reptilian races, such as the Nagas, a semi-divine species of half-human, half-serpent beings thought to reside in Patala (a netherworld), venerated in Hinduism and Buddhism. Moreover, palaeontologists have even speculated whether such creatures could possibly have evolved from known zoological origins," wrote the Harvard academics. The researchers cited the suggestion that an anthropomorphic dinosaur called a troodon survived the mass extinction event 65 million years ago and now lurks underground. The troodon or some other "terrestrial animal which evolved to live in stealth," they intimated, could be that which former CIA agent John Ramirez apparently believes is "crawling all over the earth" with the knowledge of the U.S. government, the National Reconnaissance Office in particular. Noting the perception of an absence of visible means of propulsion or sources of exhaust in various alleged sightings, the researchers raised the possibility, again noncommittally, that cryptoterrestrials could instead be magical beings, such as angels or "fairies, elves, gnomes, brownies, trolls, and the like." If not lizard people or fairy folk, then there are two other possibilities, according to the paper: remnants of lost human civilizations or "extraterrestrial aliens or our intertemporal descendants who 'arrived' on Earth from elsewhere in the cosmos or from the human future, respectively, and concealed themselves in stealth." The paper — released online one year after Gallup revealed that Americans' confidence in high education had fallen to 36% — notes that the primary locales where NHI have been alleged to hide out are Antarctica; Dulce, New Mexico; deep in the oceans; and on the dark side of the moon. Volcanoes, such as the Popocatepetl volcano in central Mexico, are also apparently possible headquarters if not portals. The researchers admitted in their conclusion that all four hypotheses "are far-fetched on their face; we entertain them here because some aspects of UAP are strange enough that they call for unconventional explanations." The trio noted that whereas in past years, "We personally would have rated the possibility of a CTH having some basis in truth as low as 1%," they would now put it at around 10%. "Indeed, this is a fitting summary of the CTH: it may be exceedingly improbable, but hopefully this paper has shown it should nevertheless be kept on the table as we seek to understand the ongoing empirical mystery of UAP," continued the researchers. "This point was made in a recent article in Scientific American, for example, titled 'It’s time to hear from social scientists about UFOs.'" Although accepted for publication, the paper has not yet been peer-reviewed. Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Get two free games when you buy these AMD Radeon graphics cards
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www.pcgamesn.com

Get two free games when you buy these AMD Radeon graphics cards

AMD has just updated its offer on which games you can get free if you purchase some of its graphics cards, with the new AMD free game offer now letting you claim two out of the four available games when you buy either an RX 7800 XT or RX 7700 XT. The new AMD offer adds some extra value to its mid-range best graphics card offerings, letting you download Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, Starfield, Lies of P, or Company of Heroes 3 for a combined roughly $60 saving on buying the games separately. Continue reading Get two free games when you buy these AMD Radeon graphics cards MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Ryzen 7 7800X3D review, Best gaming CPU, Radeon RX 7800 XT review
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

You’re going to want an Nvidia GPU to play Star Wars Outlaws
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www.pcgamesn.com

You’re going to want an Nvidia GPU to play Star Wars Outlaws

We're chomping at the bantha bit to explore the galaxy of Star Wars Outlaws, and that anticipation has only grown with the knowledge the upcoming game will launch with support for Nvidia's latest DLSS 3.5 tech, and will include ray tracing and Reflex support too. The combination of these features should mean that Star Wars Outlaws runs well and looks lovely on the latest Nvidia RTX 4000-series hardware. That's not to say it won't also perform and present perfectly on AMD GPUs, but the likes of the RTX 4070 Super, which tops our best graphics card guide, should be extra well placed to play the game. Continue reading You’re going to want an Nvidia GPU to play Star Wars Outlaws MORE FROM PCGAMESN: GeForce RTX 4070 Super review, DLSS explained, Best graphics cards
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Nvidia’s main chip maker is threatening to increase GPU prices
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www.pcgamesn.com

Nvidia’s main chip maker is threatening to increase GPU prices

Nvidia has famously been skyrocketing in value recently, off the back of its specialist AI chips being snapped up in the tens of thousands with huge profit margins. That appears to have struck a nerve - or at least been noticed - with Nvidia's main chip manufacturing partner, TSMC, hinting that it could increase its GPU production prices for Nvidia, so it can reap a little more of what Nvidia is sowing. How this might affect future pricing of the best graphics cards is hard to say, as the implication here is that TSMC would be charging more for higher-profit items, rather than just charging more across the board. However, it does give us a little cause for concern, as if TSMC does raise its prices to produce gaming GPUs, we would reasonably expect Nvidia to pass on the price hike to consumers. Continue reading Nvidia’s main chip maker is threatening to increase GPU prices MORE FROM PCGAMESN: GeForce RTX 4070 Super review, DLSS explained, Best graphics cards
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Gamers Realm
Gamers Realm
2 yrs

Soulslike Flintlock blends Bloodborne combat with God of War spectacle
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www.pcgamesn.com

Soulslike Flintlock blends Bloodborne combat with God of War spectacle

Gods and guns. What more could you want? While the flintlock fantasy subgenre has long since carved out a space in genre fiction thanks to Naomi Novik’s Temeraire and Brian McClellan’s Powder Mage series, it remains shockingly elusive in videogames. GreedFall and Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire certainly come close, but their scales are tipped further towards high fantasy than they are gunpowder and military dress. Thankfully, A44 Games puts both front and center in Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn, an upcoming soulslike with an axe to grind. Continue reading Soulslike Flintlock blends Bloodborne combat with God of War spectacle MORE FROM PCGAMESN: Best RPG games, Best soulslike games, Upcoming PC games
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History Traveler
History Traveler
2 yrs

Everyone Should Know About Rickwood Field, the Alabama Park Where Baseball Legends Made History
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www.smithsonianmag.com

Everyone Should Know About Rickwood Field, the Alabama Park Where Baseball Legends Made History

The sport's greatest figures played ball in the Deep South amid the racism and bigotry that would later make Birmingham the center of the civil rights movement
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Twitchy Feed
Twitchy Feed
2 yrs

'You Liars'! Miranda Devine Shreds NY Times for Clinging to Hunter Biden Laptop Denial
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twitchy.com

'You Liars'! Miranda Devine Shreds NY Times for Clinging to Hunter Biden Laptop Denial

'You Liars'! Miranda Devine Shreds NY Times for Clinging to Hunter Biden Laptop Denial
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

Life360 confirms a hacker stole Tile tracker IDs and customer info
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www.theverge.com

Life360 confirms a hacker stole Tile tracker IDs and customer info

Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge A hacker breached the systems behind Tile device trackers and stole customer data, including names, addresses, emails, and phone numbers. According to reporting from 404 Media, which was contacted by the hacker, the collected information came from a database that indicated it was intended for law enforcement to identify owners of specific Tile trackers. The stolen information did not include precise Tile location data. Life360, which owns Tile, published a statement by CEO Chris Hulls acknowledging the hack. Hulls confirmed the data includes Tile tracker IDs and said that the hacker had attempted to extort Life360 and that the company reported it to law enforcement. In an email to The Verge, Hulls wrote, “From what I gather, very little... Continue reading…
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

Epic Games database leak hints at a trove of unannounced games
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www.theverge.com

Epic Games database leak hints at a trove of unannounced games

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge An unofficial site tracking titles in the Epic Games library may have just leaked a ton of upcoming games, as reported earlier by Wccftech. The site, called EpicDB, was taken offline shortly after it posted information scraped from the Epic Games Store catalog on Monday, but that didn’t stop people from scanning the list and posting their findings. You can see the list of games from publishers like Bethesda, Sega, Sony, Square Enix, and others in a series of screenshots posted by a user on a ResetEra forum. While some, like Turok, are easy to spot, others are listed under previously rumored codenames, such as “Parkside” or BioShock 4. There are still other titles under codenames we haven’t heard about. Some users speculate that “Momo”... Continue reading…
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Trending Tech
Trending Tech
2 yrs

Google AI Overviews are still a disaster unless you like glue on your pizza
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bgr.com

Google AI Overviews are still a disaster unless you like glue on your pizza

How much glue should one put on pizza? The answer is (and always was) that you should not put any glue on pizza, ever. But if you're Google Search's AI Overviews, the answer is a bit less clear. Yes, putting glue on pizza is one of the Google Search AI Overviews results that gave Google its biggest AI headache so far. The answer went viral online a few weeks ago, along with other misleading AI Overviews and a few fake ones. Google had to come out and explain how AI Overviews hallucinations aren't the same thing as regular Gemini hallucinations. It blamed users for faking some Google Search AI answers, though the company acknowledged AI Overviews' inability to handle online jokes, like the pizza glue mess. Even after all the hubbub, the AI Overviews feature is still live, and Google has no plans to pause it. Reports have said that the company might have reduced the frequency of AI-powered snippets, though. Now, the recommendations to put glue on your pizza are back in AI Overviews, a signal that our collective Google Search nightmare isn't over. Continue reading... The post Google AI Overviews are still a disaster unless you like glue on your pizza appeared first on BGR. Today's Top Deals Today’s deals: $249 iPad, Sonos speakers from $199, $495 Apple Watch Ultra, $14 charging station, more Today’s deals: $19 Roku streamer, $79 Beats Studio Buds, $199 Bose TV Soundbar, $399 Lenovo laptop, more Today’s deals: $299 Apple Watch S9, $30 Fire TV Stick 4K, $259 stationary bike, $20 Blink Mini cam, more Best Apple Watch deals for June 2024
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