
O'Leary received a Ph.D. in astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley in 1967. His two decades as a faculty member of the physics departments at such prestigious universities as Princeton, Cal Tech, Cornell, Univ. of Massachusetts, Berkeley, San Francisco State, and Hampshire give him the requisite background in classical physics and the mechanistic world view to provide credibility for his research. At the age of 27, he was the nation's second youngest astronaut, destined to go to Mars, before NASA canceled that program.
His destiny of promoting his hard earned old world view was not to continue uninterrupted, however. Toward the end of the decade of the 1970s, he began to have experiences which shook his assumptions about reality. A remote viewing experience, a near death experience, and a healing of an "incurable" knee led him into new territory which none of his scientific colleagues seemed to want to enter. He cites his own history of confronting this evidence which didn't fit into the neat and tidy theories he'd preached for years.
O'Leary utilizes the contextual framework developed by Elisabeth Kubler-Ross for the grieving process to help understand his own emotional challenge of seeing external idols fall and finding the courage to face the stark responsibilities that arise from abandoning vicarious authority. Kubler-Ross postulates that when we grieve the loss of anyone or anything upon which we've placed great importance, we go through a number of phases: denial, anger, bargaining, depression and finally, acceptance. In order to reach a state of acceptance we must individually integrate what seemed to be disturbing input into a coherent picture of reality. O'Leary states: "Only by addressing the real issues and expressing our grief will we get beyond our denial. I am suggesting we will all need to grieve the old cultural paradigm before we can embrace the new. At this moment, the vast majority of us are trapped in a labyrinth of denial about the reality of the impending death of our old awareness."
Despite his sobering stance on the "three E's" as he puts it (environment, energy and economy), O'Leary's message is filled with hope and promise. His quote from Albert Einstein, "No problem can be solved from the same consciousness that created it," reflects his resolve to share information that empowers people to see beyond limiting beliefs and outdated assumptions espoused by the bulk of our culture. O'Leary has scoured the world during the last decade to find corroborating evidence for both his inner experiences (such as witnessing the materializations of vibuti by Sai Baba in India) and free energy technology that verifies his expanded paradigm for the nature of reality.
His earlier books, _Exploring_Inner_and_Outer_Space_ and _The_Second_Coming_of_Science_, examine such "boat rocking" phenomena as UFOs and abduction, the face on Mars (popularized by Richard Hoagland), crop circles, near death experiences, reincarnation, healing, psychokinesis, mind over matter, Earth energies and the latest theories on physics and consciousness.
In _Miracle_In_The_Void_, Brian O'Leary's third and most recent book, he provides eloquent and compelling evidence for both the emotional and intellectual transformation that is required of each crew member of our planetary spaceship. He makes a very convincing (and highly readable!) case for the need for us to use our inner "energy source" while we explore our externalized free energy sources. The primary focus of this book is the potential of tapping the abundant "zero-point" (free) energy of space itself. He details the efforts of many "free energy" pioneers over the last century and the obstacles those who have "seen too much" have encountered from the entrenched camps of the established order.
O'Leary points to the suppression by J. P. Morgan and others of much of Nikola Tesla's genius as a classic example of how the "sacred cows" of a materialistic society have hampered desperately needed clean energy technology. He discusses the free energy machines developed by Dr. Paramahamsa Tewari of Karwar, India and Bruce DePalma (a former MIT professor) of New Zealand, as well as inventions and proof-of-concept prototypes underway in the United States, Canada, Europe and Japan. He brings up the contributions of Martin Fleischmann and Stanley Pons (who have also left this country) to pursue their cold fusion work in a more friendly economic climate, as well as other inventors such as Adam Trombly, Thomas Bearden, Sparky Sweet, John Hutchison, & Dennis Lee.
O'Leary has cofounded two organizations dedicated to the collection and dissemination of scientific information which support the shifts necessary to midwife our planet through the transformational challenges and ecological crises we all now face: the International Association for New Science (IANS) and the Institute for New Energy (INE). O'Leary states: "The current practices of Western science and technology are approaching an ultimate boundary of diminishing returns. A new and broader paradigm is needed to solve the great challenges of our times. Such a world view is rapidly emerging."
Former Astronaut & Ivy League physics professor Brian O'Leary will present a talk entitled "Miracle In The Void -- Free Energy, UFOs, and other Scientific Revelations" at 7:00 PM on the 6th of the Self-Existing Owl Moon (Monday, October 23rd, 1995) at Crown Point Hall of the Nevada County Board of Realtors Bldg., 336 Crown Point Circle, Grass Valley. Suggested donation is $10. This event is the third sponsored by New Frontiers of the Gold Country, a non-profit group which brings speakers expanding our spiritual awareness to the community. For more information, call 273-3076.
Don't miss the opportunity to hear this compassionate scientist share his latest research on unlimited non-polluting free energy, which will lead to technologies that could usher in a paradigm shift of unprecedented magnitude.
Brian O'Leary was interviewed by Haines Ely on his "Earth Mysteries"
show on KVMR 89.5 FM Nevada City/99.3 FM Sacramento at Noon on 27
Electric Deer Moon (16 October 1995).

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