NYC Class Series, Moon-Mars Economics, pt 7
November 25th, 2009 • 11:00 PM

Peter Martinson and Shawna Halevy continue the now famous New York City LaRouche Economics Series, with a seventh class on the development of a true space culture. What kind of person will be suited to travel on a continuously accelerating ship to Mars? Martinson presents the distinction between what LaRouche calls the Type A and the Type B personalities, in terms of using the paradoxes of sense perception, to make ever higher breakthroughs in human knowledge. He then compares Euclidean geometry with non-Euclidean geometry, and the fight to establish a geometry without axioms, from Gauss's investigation of anti-Euclidean geometry, to Riemann's indication that the universe is continuously developing to higher and higher states of order. Halevy then presents the concept of a continuous human culture throughout history, with quotes and discussion from Lyndon LaRouche and Albert Einstein, emphasizing the willful act of creativity and how Einstein explicitly used the passion of music to ignite his imagination when making a scientific discovery. The challenge of joining this immortal culture is then posed to the audience.

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