Audio by artist dewey_b_larson
1978 Conference Keynote Address by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:32Audio rip from the NSA conference video, pulled from the original Betamax tape and enhanced for clarity.
65:48 minutes (15.06 MB)
1978 Conference Q&A by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:32The audience questions Dewey Larson after his keynote address. Audio has been enhanced to make the questions audible. This resulted in some distortion, as some of the questions were barely audible.
46:41 minutes (10.68 MB)
1984 9th Conference Keynote Address by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:51Dewey Larson's keynote address to the 1984 9th conference in Salt Lake City, Utah, on the basis of motion and how it led to the Fundamental Postulates. Audio tape provided courtesy of Robin Sims.
44:02 minutes (10.08 MB)
1980 5th Conference Keynote Address by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:51Larson speaks on the creation of theories at the 1980 5th NSA, Huntsville, Alabama, USA. (Audio quality is poor; lot of background noise).
Audio tape provided courtesy of Robin Sims.
93:25 minutes (21.38 MB)
1982 7th Conference Keynote Address by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:51Dewey Larson's keynote address to the 7th NSA conference in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, The Mythical Universe of Modern Astronomy. Audio tape provided courtesy of Robin Sims.
93:02 minutes (21.29 MB)
1981 6th Conference Keynote Address by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Fri, 02/01/2008 - 19:51Dewey Larson's keynote address, The Renaissance of the Physical Sciences. Audio tape provided courtesy of Robin Sims.
73:38 minutes (16.85 MB)
Lecture and Discussion on Scalar Motion by Dewey B. Larson
Submitted by DB Larson on Mon, 03/03/2008 - 10:44Larson discusses scalar motion using the balloon analogy, and how flies on the surface of the balloon represent two types of motion: dead files are like photons, carried by the expansion of the balloon, and living flies are coordinate motion, walking across the surface. An interesting lecture; includes Q&A by Paul deLespinasse, Frank H. Meyer and Ronald Satz.
38:45 minutes (8.87 MB)
