Lee Ann Wolmack: We've covered your personal details, but let's get into the meat of our discussion. In your book, you used the term "moment of god-hood". As we begin, could you explain what the phrase 'moment of godhood' actually means?
Dr. Stephen Anson: Of course, I'd be happy to. The "moment of godhood" is a colloquial term for paroxysm. It is a term I have used to describe the pivotal moment when a Quasar gains their extraordinary powers. It's essentially the transformational event that elevates an ordinary individual to Quasar status. While the concept is most commonly associated with a physical event, it can also be explored through the lens of metaphysics and psychology.
Wolmack: That sounds intriguing. How do physicists approach the idea of the "moment of god-hood"?
Dr. Anson: Well, first, let's acknowledge that the "moment of godhood" is primarily a creative and speculative concept that was previously only found in comics, movies, and literature. In the realm of physics, we typically focus on understanding the laws of the universe as they are, rather than inventing hypothetical scenarios. However, we can certainly explore the idea from a scientific perspective.
In mythical terms, the moment of god-hood has been a moment of transformation and realization, when the supranatural and extraordinary become normalized physical events. In the real world, we can think about how extreme conditions or unusual interactions with fundamental forces might lead to extraordinary abilities. For example, exposure to high-energy cosmic rays or experimental accidents involving quantum technology could theoretically trigger radical changes in an individual's biology or physics.
Wolmack: So, are you saying that such an event could actually happen spontaneously.
Dr. Anson: Well, first, yes, it has happened. Statistically, we know with a one hundred percent certainty that it has happened. It happened with the creation of Pilot and the rest of Team Eagle. So absolutely. But the spontaneity belies the physical conditions that must exist for the phenomenon to manifest. But secondly, we are not trying to ascertain the possibility of Quasar powers, but rather the definition of the conditions that have led to an actual measurable, physical event. So, my answer would be that your question is not 'could such an event happen spontaneously?', but more importantly, 'how can we control the transformational nature of events that turn a homo sapiens sapiens into a homo sapiens divinitas?
Dr. Anson: And that, Lee Ann, is a question at the crux of quantum physics that is still very much in its infancy. We are little more than primitives who have discovered fire, not in a divine manner such as Prometheus gifting it to mankind, but more as apes that have seen it -- and know that it can occur. We do not understand how it works, but merely that we have seen it and are enamored by its possibilities. We have recreated the events using a key combination of technology and conditions, in essence, banging sticks and rocks together until it happens again.
Wolmack: That's a very intriguing perspective. Can you explain how these powers might manifest, given in your own terms, a set of quote key combination of technology and conditions.
Dr. Anson: Certainly. In the realm of Quasar technology, we know that the basic elements include a Q-implant, a discharge of particles of a unique signature, and a conscious observer and interactor in these events to manifest changes in a human to make them a Quasar.
Wolmack: Let me interrupt doctor. You brought an interesting term into our conversation so please explain what you mean by the conscious observer and interactor.
Dr. Anson: The first element is the Observer Effect, where the act of measurement or observation can influence the properties of a quantum system. In other words, the outcome of a quantum measurement is not just a passive observation but an active interaction between the measuring apparatus and the quantum system being observed. Combine that with the wave-particle duality, where particles such as electrons and photons, can exhibit both wave-like and particle-like behavior. The choice of how to observe them can influence whether they behave as waves or particles. The very element of physical condition being influenced by conscious observation. Consider the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle and Shrodinger's Cat...
Wolmack: Shrodinger's Cat, like the cat in the box that both lives and dies based on when a box is opened?
Dr. Anson: ...not when it is opened. The cat is alive and dead until it is opened. While that is a very simplified observation of the thought experiment, and I must insist it is a thought experiment aand by no means a real experiment. However, Lee Ann, your intuition is canny. The scenario of both Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, where a particle is not in a measured point but rather exists as a state of probability of existing in a given point and velocity, or of the condition of a quantum event until such time as it is measured through observation, so then does a Quasar's powers exist from what I refer to as a 'moment of god-hood'. That moment when all possibilities exist for the Quasar. However, the most likely outcomes are driven not by explicit observation but instead by implicitly believed perception.
Wolmack: This phrase, moment of god-hood can you elaborate on this.
Dr. Anson: As I stated before, this is a simplification of the moment just before paroxysm, where possibilities exist but none have been chosen. This crux of quantum states, where particles are excited and attuned to a living being's personal quantum states create a moment of uncertainty -- a Shrodinger's box if you will of possibilities that exist and are driven purely by both direct observation and subconscious expectation of observation. In this moment, the definition of a Quasar's powers is solidified through expression. This is the moment of paroxysm, or initial empowerment.
Wolmack: So the moment of godhood -- this is the moment a person has both the understanding that they can have powers and the moment they can express their powers.
Dr. Anson: Simplified, Lee Ann, but quite aptly defined. The observation of powers at the moment of paroxysm is the first manifestation of a quantum field-change that allows the Quasar to manifest in response to their unique personality, desires, or even their subconscious. From a scientific standpoint, if we imagine a moment of godhood as the point at which a human redefines their implicit relationship to the physical world, which triggers inducted changes at the cellular and even the atomic or subatomic level. For example, Pilot wanted to protect his crew -- he was driven beyond all reason and instinct to find a way to protect his crew from the incident on the shuttle Endeavor. The solar discharge created the physical conditions for his development into a Quasar, while his training as a NASA astronaut, indeed his drive, drove the developing manifestation of his powers.
Wolmack: Fascinating! So, in summary, the "moment of godhood" is the moment when a person has the power to become anything they choose.
Dr. Anson: Exactly. And first, let me define moment of godhood with a little g, not a big G. One does not become an omniscient, all-powerful god, but rather expresses divine, unexplainable control over their relationship with the physical state of the universe. So, the 'moment of godhood' is a literal rebirth that is imposed by excitation of the quantum interaction between a human consciousness and the physical world. In psychological terms, it is the moment in which a human realizes they can be whatever they want to be. Paroxysm is the initial experience of that transformation.
Dr. Anson: But I'm going to go back to something you said a moment ago. The power to become anything they choose is somewhat accurate, but at its heart, it is not fully definitive. It would be more appropriate to say, someone can become whatever they can imagine, comprehend, and psychologically accept. The self-identification of a Quasar form is one of the most fascinating aspects of psycho-quantum interaction we have. The fact that a Quasar can be in one form as a human and in their empowered Quasar form, look, sound, and behave completely differently while retaining their psychological continuity throughout is one of the more fascinating elements of Quasars.
Wolmack: In your book, Quasars: The Myth of Reality, you describe the terms paroxysm and hyperexpression. Can you provide a simple definition between these terms.
Dr. Anson: Lee Ann, the terms are inextricably tied. But there is a point of distinction. Paroxysm is the definition of a Quasar's powers in their initial moment of godhood. Hyperexpression is the manifestation of their abilities. A Quasar typically goes through one single paroxysm, while they may go through multiple instances of hyperexpression. By measurement, a hyperexpression is the massive discharge of a Quasar's powers while the paroxysm is the initial defining moment of the Quasar themselves.
Dr. Anson: Think of it in terms of baking a cake. Preparing the batter is analogous to the steps of putting conditions into place, preparing the Q-implant, the quantum power generator, and the surrounding physical elements. Preparing the potential Quasar for their moment of paroxysm. Putting the cake in the oven and applying energy -- heat in this case -- at some point, the cake stops becoming batter and transforms into cake. Hyperexpression is closer to the analogy if heating the cake up in the microwave for a few minutes to return it to its original, warm, fresh-baked state.
Wolmack: So, are you saying that creating a quasar is as simple as baking a cake?
Dr. Anson: Heavens no. Well, perhaps. If baking a cake were subject to random insecurities, fears, emotions, thoughts, distractions, physical stimuli, and the intervention of other cakes quantum fields, then yes, you could say that it is like baking a cake. Except in this case the cake may explode, implode, disintegrate, devolve, evolve, evaporate, or suffer catastrophic physiological shock and stress at the time it becomes a cake.
And imagine the complexity of telling someone to think the exact right thought at the exact instance they enter paroxysm and doing so as they are going through profound physiological stresses and doing so within a window of a key split second that will occur within the time spanning minutes or even hours.
The greater the complexity involved, greater power sources, more complex Q-implants, and more unique subjects creates exponentially more danger and chance for failure. Hence why you can create a squad of drones with relative ease, but creating a team of Gamma or even Delta or Omega level Quasars is fraught with chances for failure and mishap -- often on a scale that makes the creation site a risk of a catastrophic environmental and physical disaster.
Wolmack: So the key is in thinking the right thoughts at their paroxysm.
Dr. Anson: It is more than just thinking or not thinking specific thoughts. It is a combination of the instincts, physical sensations, perceptions that occur at the moment that their personal quantum field reaches a point of excitation and attunement. All we do know that for certain about the envelopment of this moment is that it is akin to catching lightning in a bottle. At the very moment that a Q-implant reaches a resonated state of empowerment, the thoughts and concepts in a mind for the expectation of observation define what expresses in that paroxysm. Distractions, overriding subconscious thoughts, along with emotions and feelings such as fear, anger, love, or hatred all create a constant stream of consciousness. Further, a person has to be able to mentally accept the changes at their paroxysm.
Wolmack: Dr. Anson, let me go into another subject you brought up in your book. What are the distinctions between an Ace, a Jack, and a Suit?
Dr. Anson: The Quasar's relationship to their quantum field is a resonating function. In the case of most powers, the Quasar powers only exist in relation to the quantum field around them. Suits must have a set definition of Quasar fields in which they resonate, which requires one or more of those Quasar fields, or Nodes as they are called, to exist within proximity for their powers to manifest. They require specific Quasar nodes to operate -- their fields resonating in very specific ways.
Aces, on the other hand, are self-resonating, in which their fields are constantly in self-defined resonation and excitation. Jacks, alternatively, can resonate with any Quasar power field, including artificially induced fields. Their fields do not fully-self resonate, but rather adapt to the resonation of any nearby field. This is one reason why Aces and Jacks are more powerful -- their fields are more flexible in resonation and and scale.
Wolmack: What defines whether a Quasar will be a Suit, an Ace, or a Jack?
Dr. Anson: That, Lee Ann, is the key question that all individuals working in the field of Q-tech and Quasars is asking and will likely continue asking. If you solve that mystery, you can probably find yourself a very wealthy billionaire in the field of Q-tech.
Wolmack: But Suits sometimes become Jacks and Aces. Why does it not happen in the other direction?
Dr. Anson: Again, you are reaching the limits of my, or anyone else's understanding in the field of Quasars and Q-tech. What we do observe in fields is that they can alter from a defined frequency of resonation to a variable frequency, even to the point of self-resonation, such you would find in Aces and Kings. However, implicit control of quantum fields is not a conscious choice, but rather seems to be an environmental affectation of the relationship between various quantum fields.
Wolmack: You mention Kings. That is relatively new parlance in the field of Quasars. How do they differ from Aces?
Dr. Anson: While Aces are self-resonating and static in their Quasar functionality, Kings seemingly have the ability to alter the Q-fields, but are independent of, those to which they have attuned. They are a rare and unique phenomenon and one which only serves to confound and complicate our understanding of Quasars and their manifestation in the physical world.
Wolmack: This has all been extremely fascinating Dr. Anson. Thank you for taking your time to give us some insights into Quasars. Good luck in the upcoming Munich Conference.
Dr. Anson: And thank you, Ms. Wolmack.