Nominations for Nobel Prizes

Nominations for Nobel Prizes

I was informed on 17th June 2009 by Richard Amoroso, Chair of various Vigier Conferences, that: "I have heard in direct conversation from someone on the Physics Nobel Prize Committee that Myron Evans should win a Nobel Prize for B(3) theory. I assume that this means that Myron Evans has been nominated for a Physics Nobel Prize more than once. In 1993 I was told by Mansel Davies that I should win a Nobel Prize for B(3). He was a chemistry Nobel Prize advisor and nominated Enrico Clementi, I. B. M. Fellow, for a Nobel Prize. I have been informed many times by others that I should win a Nobel Prize in physics or chemistry. With the complete acceptance of B(3) and ECE among the avant garde of physics, I assume that these nominations will continue if anyone is given a fair oportunity of nomination. The person with whom Amoroso had a conversation was almost certainly Bo Lehnert, a member of the Royal Swedish Academy and able to nominate me himself as a Member of the Royal Swedish Academy. Bo Lehnert was a referee for my Civil List Pension along with Alwyn van der Merwe and the late John B. Hart. With the sad death of Stephen Hawking in March 2018, the dogmatic grip on physics has loosened. For example the reason why gravitational or Hawking radiation was never observed from black holes is that neither Hawking radiation nor black holes can exist because they are based on incorrect geometry. They have been refuted by ECE and ECE2, the successor theories to EGR. This has been described recently in the international and avant garde "Nexus" magazine. Einstein was nominated sixty one times before he was awarded a Nobel prize for the explanation of the photoelectric effect in terms of photons. The Committee and Academy never awarded him a Nobel prize for relativity.

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