Robert W. Bass

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Dr Robert W. Bass (Bob Bass) (9 August 1930 – 19 December 2013)[1]Case #1315829, Dec 19, 2013. Tarrant County Medical Examiner Public Access, retrieved 2 Jan 2013 was an American mathematician, principal inventor of the Topolotron, and retired Professor of Physicist and Astronomy from Brigham Young University (1971-1981)[2]Robert W. Bass, Resumé (PDF) on his Web site, www.innoventek.com

On Velikovsky

George Kolodiy in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, writes that:

“Bass and [Irving] Michelson have given theoretical arguments that Velikovsky’s contentions are not at variance with classical Newtonian mechanics and classical electromagnetic theory”.[3]George Kolodiy, “Velikovsky: Paradigms in Collision“, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Feb 1975. 48 pages, ISSN 0096-3402. Published by Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Inc.

Bass summarizes his articles in Pensée:

“In these two articles I have not sought, as yet, to demonstrate that Velikovsky’s central hypothesis is true, so much as to prove that it is not forbidden by Newtonian dynamics. In a resonant, orbitally unstable or “wild” motion, the eccentricities of one or more of the terrestrial planets can increase in a century or two until a near collision occurs. Subsequently the Principle of Least Interaction Action predicts that the planets will rapidly “relax” into a configuration very near to a (presumably orbitally stable) resonant, Bode’s-Law type of configuration. Near such a configuration, small, non-gravitational effects such as tidal friction can in a few centuries accumulate effectively to a discontinuous “jump” from the actual phase-space path to a nearby, truly orbitally stable, path. Subsequently, observations and theory would agree that the solar system is in a quasi-periodic motion stable in the sense of Laplace and orbitally stable. Also, numerical integrations backward in time would show that no near collision had ever occurred. Yet in actual fact this deduction would be false.

“I arrived independently at the preceding scenario before learning that dynamical astronomer, E. W. Brown, president of the American Astronomical Society, had already outlined the same possibility in 1931.”[4]Robert W. Bass, “Did Worlds Collide“, Pensée Vol. 4 No 3: (Summer 1974) “Immanuel Velikovsky Reconsidered VIII”. Online at innoventek.com (via archive.org)

Voluntary resignation

In 2007, Bass revealed that he had been forced to retire from Brigham Young University (BYU) early after attending the 1978 Glasgow Conference on Velikovsky. He writes:

“The reason that I never communicated further with Dr. Velikovsky, after he kindly met me in his home in Princeton and paid half of my expenses to the Glasgow conference, is that when I returned from the conference I was greeted by the news that a secret 3-man committee at BYU had voted to recommend, upon the basis of trumped-up false charges, that I should be “dismissed for cause.” The Academic Vice President recommended that I should Appeal (citing someone the year before who had won), but instead I negotiated a “deal” under which I would take an earned Sabbatical and then a One-Year Leave Without Pay (LWOP), in order to complete a full decade there 1971-81 and become eligible for a Retirement Benefit (which I’m now enjoying at $358.78/month). The Dean of Physical Sciences reported to me that the President of BYU was greatly “relieved” that this “delayed formal voluntary resignation” [and physical departure to return to the aerospace industry] would avoid the mess of litigation.”[5]”Dr. Robert W. Bass to velikov-list”, Sat, 1 Sep 2007. Via the velikov-list Yahoo Groups

Selected bibliography

  • Robert W. Bass, “Did Worlds Collide?Pensée, Vol. 4, No. 3, 1974, pp. 8-20. Online at innoventek.com (via archive.org)
  • Robert W. Bass, “Proofs’ of Stability of the Solar System“, Pensée, Vol. 4, No. 3, 1974, pp. 21-26, 44-45. Online at innoventek.com (via archive.org)
  • Robert W. Bass, “Can Worlds Collide?Kronos, Vol. 1, No. 3, 1975, pp. 59-71. Online at innoventek.com (via archve.org)
  • Robert W. Bass, “The Jupiter Effect: The Planets as Triggers of Devastating Earthquakes by John Gribbin and Stephen Plagemann”, Kronos vol.1 No. 4 (Winter 1976)
  • Dr Robert W. Bass, “The Celestial Dynamics of “Worlds in Collision””, SIS Review Vol VI No 1-3 (1982) “The 1978 Glasgow Conference Proceedings”

External links

References   [ + ]

1. Case #1315829, Dec 19, 2013. Tarrant County Medical Examiner Public Access, retrieved 2 Jan 2013
2. Robert W. Bass, Resumé (PDF) on his Web site, www.innoventek.com
3. George Kolodiy, “Velikovsky: Paradigms in Collision“, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Feb 1975. 48 pages, ISSN 0096-3402. Published by Educational Foundation for Nuclear Science, Inc.
4. Robert W. Bass, “Did Worlds Collide“, Pensée Vol. 4 No 3: (Summer 1974) “Immanuel Velikovsky Reconsidered VIII”. Online at innoventek.com (via archive.org)
5. ”Dr. Robert W. Bass to velikov-list”, Sat, 1 Sep 2007. Via the velikov-list Yahoo Groups