Re: Are there any correspondence courses I can take to get a BS in Electronical Engineering?

John Berry ( antigrav@ihug.co.nz )
Sun, 22 Mar 1998 13:44:10 +1200

Old books and other such sources are great ways to learn, The most important
thing is not what you know or how clever you are it's how open your mind is to
ideas, There are many bright people that use only there left brain and only use
there creative right brain when they are dreaming, That is why Stephen Hawking
and others only come up with creative ideas when dreaming. (they are computers
the rest of the time)

If you learn from a school (though correspondence school may be a bit better)
they are telling you what happens and what you can't do (teaching you how to
think, To ignore creative ideas and to not do something because it is
impossible) books are better and better yet is to spend time to think about
electricity so you understand electricity in your mind, that is not the same as
being tough what happens you need to know electricity.

If you want to go where every other electrical engineer goes then fine but if
you want to do something different to make free energy devices then take a
different road.

If you want to be a rocket scientist and develop a much better way to get to
orbit don't read conventional books on rocket engineering, wait until you have
your ideas set out first, otherwise you will go the way of all other bright
rocket scientists with great dreams. (nowhere)

Why do you think that there were so many great scientists (in the electrical
field) one hundred years ago but none now? (and there IS much we still don't
know about electricity)
Because they did not learn like you will today, leaning today is done in such a
way to resolve mysteries or question and ideas, to kill creativity.

Think alot then read old books.

John Berry

ufotruth@ix.netcom.com wrote:

> Dear List,
>
> As some of you might know I am an 18 year old who just graduated from high
> school a few months ago via a correspondence course. For the last few years
> I have became very interested in free energy, electrogravitics, and other
> alternative technologies. There is only one problem. I am not very educated
> in electronics, physics, science, etc.
>
> So I have a question: Does anyone here know of any correspondence courses
> that someone can take to get a Bachelors Degree in Electrical Engineering?
> You see I cannot afford to go to a regular college and I want to get some
> kind of education so I can start actually "doing" something in the free/alt
> energy field instead of just listening to all of theories. So I have decided
> that "somehow" I would like to get a BS in Electrical Engineering.
>
> Can anyone direct me to a school/company/institution that offers
> correspondence courses in electrical engineering?
>
> I apologise for this off topic post but if I am ever to really contribute to
> this field I need to get an education.
>
> Best Regards,
> William
>
> PS: Sorry for "lurking" on this list but truthfully I do not understand the
> technical informaiton about what is being discussed but I greatly enjoy
> reading some of the posts that are made.