Interview with James Hardt, Ph.D., Author of The Art of Smart Thinking
Published March 10, 2008
I use this training process myself to maintain and to boost my own creativity and all of the technology I have designed to do this work has been designed in the Alpha Feedback Chambers of Biocybernaut Institute. I go into a high alpha state and I am literally shown what to add to the system, what to change and how to do it. Then after the session I sit down to build it. I used to do all my own computer programming, but now I have computer programmers who understand my method of creation in the High Alpha State. They receive my instructions, that I received in the High Alpha State, and they implement the new software routines and write the new code needed to implement the new features I have been shown while in the High Alpha State. I work in a similar way with my electronic hardware designers. Creativity is simply a matter of having the right brain waves. Alpha increases bring creativity increases very quickly.
How was your experience in looking for a publisher? What words of advice would you offer those novice authors who are in search of one?
I am not in a position to give advice about finding a publisher, because I am currently looking for a publisher. Up to this point I have self-published with the help of my office staff. The process of self-publishing has been very expensive,- about $100,000 to get to this point. However, some of the advantages of this route are that no editor told me to take important themes out of my book. I remember on time I had submitted a paper to ISNR, International Society for Neuronal Regulation. The paper was on Halos and was about how I had discovered the underlying brain wave basis for halos. I was contacted by the Head of the Program Committee and asked to take the word “Halo” out of the title of my paper. I objected that this was the topic of the paper, but he persisted saying, “There might be reporters in the audience.” When I refused to take the word “halo” out of the title of my scientific paper on the topic of brain wave patterns underlying halos, he rejected my previously accepted paper from the ISNR’s conference that year. There was a happy ending a year later, because when I was speaking at the Winter Brain Conference about this scientific censorship, the Program Chairman for the NEXT YEAR’S ISNR conference was in the audience. He was both open-minded and horrified at what his predecessor had done the year before, so he accepted my paper on the brain waves of halos and personally introduced it at the next year’s conference
- Interview with James Hardt, Ph.D., Author of The Art of Smart Thinking
- Published: March 10, 2008
- Type: Interview
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: Self-Help, Books: Science, Books: Psychology and Self-Help, Books: Nonfiction, Books: Health
- Writer: Mayra Calvani
- Mayra Calvani's BC Writer page
- Mayra Calvani's personal site
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