Recap
Anticipating the Future
Guest host
Ian Punnett talked with futurist
Dr. Paul Guercio and SDI (Star Wars) physicist
Dr. George Hart about the
MERLIN Project, a computer-based forecasting technology that uses specific dates -- the beginning points of major life events -- to produce a graphical image of fluctuations in a person's future (see
About Timetraks® below).
According to Guercio, big events happen at the same time for "time twins" who share a common birth date. As evidence, Guercio pointed to the similarities of the Timetraks
® for Art Bell and General Tommy Franks. Though still in its infancy, the MERLIN Project forecasting technology could one day be used to create a kind of "Farmer's Almanac" handbook of the biggest upcoming moments in a person's life, Hart explained.
Later in the show, Guercio discussed the Iraq War, Timetraks
® for Elian Gonzales and Florida Governor Jeb Bush, as well as revealed Astrology's inability to predict exact circumstances. Friday night's guests have also made available for
Coast listeners a free PDF report titled
How the Future Happens.
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About Timetraks®

Tonight's guests, futurist
Paul Guercio and physicist
Dr. George Hart, coined the term
Timetraks® to describe the output of their
MERLIN Project software.
The code was custom designed by a team of SDI/StarWars physicists to capture moments of what Guercio and Hart like to call "heightened-eventfulness." These uncommon moments of future activity, where important events will likely occur, are generated by mathematically capturing a particularly propitious past moment, like the beginning of a relationship or the start of a new job and applying a precise formula of cyclic intervals to that past 'frozen' moment.
The result is a graphical image of all the future moments, when echoes of the original moment will again be heard. MERLIN Timetraks
® are a lot like pages of sheet music from a very unique and one-of-a-kind symphony that can predict the timetable of future events. The Timetraks
® for Friday night's
Coast program, and instructions for reading them can be viewed/downloaded at the project's
Timetrak® Library.