Harrison Crecraft
1 min readNov 14, 2024

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I am a geoscientist from outside of the academia bubble. I have seen firsthand the arrogance and hubris, as I have tried cross over from geology to take on physics dogma. Geology is about time, creation, and novelty, none of which is recognized as “real” in physics. This, I believe, is the source of mistrust in science.

But there is also arrogance and hubris in those who state “we must agree that science simply does not nor cannot have all the answers.” Science, by its nature, is self-correcting. Yes, dogma creates roadblocks to change, but that does not mean it can’t change.

I recognized a serious problem in physics, and after multiple failures, I have gotten two articles through peer review and a third in peer review. I described my story in Part I of a 7-part series, and in my most recent story on a purpose-driven universe, I summarize my papers.

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Harrison Crecraft
Harrison Crecraft

Written by Harrison Crecraft

PhD Geoscientist. Exploring physics’ foundations to reveal the realities of time and evolving complexity.

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