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Global Acknowledgments
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In a way, this website can be considered a little “son” of Sorce Theory’s Homepage (www.anpheon.org). In fact, Aethernitatis would not even exist without Gerald I. Lebau’s groundbreaking ideas which ultimately ended up in the 1965 monumental work in the form of Sorce Theory, which was the first objective model of physical reality that attempted and greatly succeeded to causally explain all known physical phenomena via the dynamic and pressurized structure of a compressible and frictionless fluid substrate. Many years after the original publication, this theory evolved towards an ever-more encompassing whole thanks to novel insights by Joel Morrison, Sorce Theory’s first serious student. Maybe his most important contribution is in the form of presenting Sorce Theory in a “trans-foundationalist” context. However, the evolution of this physical theory is just a small part of the fully working meta-paradigm that he is putting forth in his revolutionary SpinbitZ Project (www.spinbitz.net). In few words, the goal of SpinbitZ is to reconnect to the project of philosophical and mathematical rationalism (and its unrecognized roots in empiricism) aborted through the mis-interpretations of the key embryonic insights and conceptual tools of Spinoza and Leibniz (among others). Correcting these errors and conceptual biases and significantly fleshing out the details and operational tools of the cancelled project of rational-empiricism enables a fully resonant synergy between rational metaphysics, the emerging physics of Sorce Theory and the new “transrational” interpretation and understanding of mathematics (not to mention the resonance with, and expansion of, the emerging “Integral Methodological Pluralism” of Ken Wilber). The ever-present influence of these two individuals in the articles presented herein should be utterly evident. Actually, it is not a stretch to state that some of the information portrayed in this website is just an attempt to spread the understanding that can be gained from these two sources. Consequently, whenever a Sorce Theory concept is pointed out or when a non-foundationalist perspective is applied without attribution, these notions should perhaps automatically be credited to Gerald I. Lebau and to Joel Morrison, respectively. Otherwise, I will try my best to make my own contributions clear and to attribute resources accordingly.
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