Invisible Resonance by Prospero2013 published on 2013-10-03T07:23:29Z M.’s papers made their first appearance in print in October 1978. This was during the last days of the experiment. The experimental hypothesis involved the discovery of a method to broadcast human thoughts. M's theory involved the subatomic pattern associated with any phenomenon. This fractal pattern would function and radiate at various levels of organic organization. One afternoon, M. got out of his seat and pushed all his papers away. He had decided he would set a form for the manifestation of the event. This would enhance the probability of that event occurring. Every previous experiment that allowed people to communicate silently had been called a hoax. M.'s work would be no exception. The fascination followed swiftly, as did the backlash. It was suspected that there must be a hidden box through which people could communicate with others secretly. D. blasted the ethics of the experiment, calling it an act of communication unlikely to be more effective than reproduction. She singled out M.’s posture of indifference toward his subjects. It was true that he thought of social networks as invisible cities. He hoped to establish a new invisible resonance through pre-linguistic expressions. This kind of thinking prevented the experiment from ever being replicated. It is possible that M.'s work allowed people to project their thoughts but it is only a probability, not a certainty. Regardless, he raised profound questions about human behavior. "Only between those phenomena having considerable similarity can a link operate." M.'s basic postulate would have been nice and simple but it included the 24 percent who said they had some doubts. Their manifestations were more subject to indeterminate chaotic occurrences. Other papers have been recently unearthed by scholars in the archives. They have been quietly shared for intimate, secret studies. The results remain unknown. Genre ambient