PAUL GUERCIO is co-founder of THE MERLIN PROJECT(r). MERLIN is the
first, scientifically-based forecasting technology that combines
equations derived from celestial phenomena with past historical data
and blends that information into a "timetrak(r)" that accurately plots
the chronology of future events. (Source: CNN, NPR, JOURNAL GRAPHICS) 
THE ART OF ANTICIPATION
Surfing the Waves of Change in your Future
by the creators of The MERLIN Project -- Paul Guercio and Dr. George 
Hart
 
     In a world where timing often spells the difference between 
failure and 
success, MERLIN gives you a hedge on the Future. Think of it as a 
high-tech 
crystal ball through which you glimpse forthcoming periods of intense 
activity 
that indicate the best (and worst) times for launching projects, 
initiating and 
sealing business deals, getting married, scheduling non-emergency 
surgery, 
moving, taking on a new job -- in short, when to deal with major life 
issues.  
MERLIN is equally applicable to people, companies and countries.  
     MERLIN combines the exactness of planetary mathematics with 
recognized 
historical cycles to create snapshots of time by using a single moment 
as a 
starting point. These "chronographs" are highly individualized 
patterns, 
tracings in time that begin when we are born or a key event occurs. 
They depict 
chains of activity that are twofold: external factors (career matters, 
where we 
work or live) and internal factors (health, relationships, emotional 
concerns.) 
MERLIN pinpoints three elements about such periods of activity: the 
onset, the 
intensity, and the duration. It's the Next Step beyond The Celestine 
Prophecy. 
     While relating celestial movements to human events has long been a 
controversial subject, MERLIN's track record of timely and accurate 
predictions 
speaks for itself. Notable forecasting successes include: the acquittal 
of O.J. 
Simpson, the collapse of the Clinton presidency and the ascendancy of 
Dole, 
Leno's underdog triumph over Letterman, the emergence of JFK Jr., the 
demise of 
National Health Care and the Republican Revolution, the timetable for 
the 
breakup of the Soviet Union, and many others.  
     Overall, MERLIN's accuracy has approached 80 percent. In one 
controlled 
experiment coordinated by a group of scientists and skeptics, MERLIN 
assigned 
accident dates to their respective victims with an accuracy rate that 
outperformed chance odds by 30,000 to 1.  
     First conceived in 1989, the MERLIN Project came to national 
attention in 
1991 when the NBC Nightly News broke the story of MERLIN's uncanny 
prediction 
of the stock market plunge in November of that year. Subsequently, 
MERLIN has 
been featured in magazines and newspapers around the world and its 
creators 
have been guests on CNN's LARRY KING LIVE three times in the last three 
years. 
 
     In the upcoming book, MERLIN will not only document its own 
successes and 
make new predictions for coming years, but it will also provide readers 
with 
several related tools, enabling them to make their own personal 
forecasts. 
Among the tools immediately accessible will be a Year-at-a-Glance 
calendar 
highlighting days in the coming year best suited for initiating 
projects, etc. 
A more extensive Book-of-Days provides the reader with a ten-year 
chronograph 
of activity that originates on each day of the coming year. An easy to 
follow 
guide is included which alerts readers to specific days likely to be 
favorable 
or troublesome to them. The book employs the easily understood example 
of waves 
and surfing to clearly explain how to use MERLIN.  
     Besides providing readers with highly customized personal timing 
tools, 
MERLIN will also present a clear conceptual framework which for the 
first time 
will provide a firm foundation for "legitimizing" traditional 
predictive 
systems like astrology. At the same time MERLIN will lay the groundwork 
for an 
entirely new 21st century science of pattern, information, intelligence 
and 
consciousness unlike anything which currently exists. A science as 
revolutionary as quantum physics, and as far reaching in impact.  
     There will be options available for readers to contact The MERLIN 
Project 
directly for highly specific, personalized chronographs related to 
career and 
personal activities. These options will include an nation-wide 800 
number, a 
computer disk or CD-ROM which could accompany the book and beginning in 
April 
1996 direct INTERNET access. 
     Direct spin-offs from the book will include an annualized version 
of the 
Book-Of-Days. With its highly useful timing information for personal 
and 
professional planning, it could easily become a yearly purchase akin to 
the 
Information Please or Farmer's Almanac.  
about the authors:
     Dr. George Hart is an SDI (Star Wars) physicist who specializes in 
the 
application of supercomputers to the mathematical modeling of systems 
exhibiting extremely complex behavior. In 1992, he received the 
prestigious 
British RANK Prize for his work in laser technology (for) "..benefiting 
mankind, especially in eye surgery" for inventing the excimer laser.  
     Paul Guercio is a nationally-respected futurist and a long-time 
student of 
traditional and esoteric predictive systems. His 25 years of research 
into the 
Psychical Sciences and subsequent collaboration with Dr. Hart directly 
resulted 
in the creation of the MERLIN Project. His clients include many 
prominent 
business people, politicians and celebrities.  
The MERLIN Project has been featured in the Boston Globe, Boston 
Herald, USA 
TODAY, the Associated Press and foreign press, CNBC, CNN, Larry King 
LIVE and 
TalkBack LIVE, the NBC Nightly News, NPR, ABC TalkRadio and MajorTalk.  
Copyright 1996  by Paul Guercio and Dr. George Hart  All rights 
reserved
Some thoughts about.. TIME and the FUTURE
From the creators of The MERLIN Project(r) Paul Guercio & Dr. George 
Hart
 
     "MERLIN" is a computer-based forecasting technology that combines 
equations 
derived from celestial phenomena with past historical data and blends 
that 
information into a "timetrak(r)" that plots the chronology of future 
events.  It 
is the brainchild of Boston-based futurist Paul Guercio and excimer 
laser 
inventor, MIT physicist Dr. George Hart. Since 1991, The MERLIN 
Project(r) has 
been a regular feature of CNN/Larry King LIVE.  
     MERLIN sifts through an immense field of tidal intervals in the 
Universe 
looking for points of convergence and resonance patterns.  In essense, 
it is a 
very sophisticated (pattern) detection system (the particular patterns 
it has 
been taught to identify are at the moment, proprietary, for obvious 
reasons.)  
What we have discovered, however, suggests that "time" has a kind of 
genetic-
like code and behaves much like a musical score.
 
     Think of it this way. Time, in conjunction with your DNA coding 
influences 
the relative likelihood of you developing (for instance) early onset 
coronary 
artery disease or cancer while not being the ultimate cause/effect 
mechanism. 
 
     Our research suggests that "time" may have a similar genetic-like 
aspect, 
when vectored from a particular point in the past and then projected 
forward.  A 
unique "wave-form" composed of it's own, original array of tidal 
movements, a 
little like a symphony.  Events as we know them, may be a convergence 
point for 
a series of unseen clocks that you helped set into motion (or were set 
into 
motion) years before and are now (all) "chiming" simultaneously.  The 
magnitude 
of the resulting "event" may be determined by the number and sheer 
size, i.e.  
interval/duration of the converging curves. The more clocks chiming, 
the bigger 
the event that occurs.   
     MERLIN was designed to "keep track" or these various tidal clocks 
and 
output a picture of the resulting convergence pattern in the form of a 
graph 
with "realtime" correspondences. A kind of "timetable of the future!"
     MERLIN doesn't make predictions anymore than weather computers do. 
 They 
keep track of converging weather systems, giving the meteorologist a 
jumping-
off point to speculate (often badly) about tomorrow's weather.  MERLIN 
does the 
same thing with Time!  We then attempt to draw conclusions about how 
that period
will playout in the real world.  So far, our ability to pinpoint actual 
turns in 
realtime events and individuals lives, has been pretty remarkable. 
 
     But, it's the TIME SCHEDULE of change, its duration (and often 
it's 
magnitude) that MERLIN finds. Not the particulars of circumstance. 
 
     For those of you who are Market-oriented, it would be like having 
the 
NYSE (market) volume charts, in advance.  You'd know the time 
coordinates of the 
change and it's size, just not the direction!  
     And that suggests another intriguing possibility.  We may affect, 
even 
control to some extent, the particular circumstances that occur, just 
not the 
time schedule (or relative impact.)
 
     Along those lines, I should mention that MERLIN is unable to give 
an
equivilent amount of information in every situation.  That's because 
it's
system-driven.  In perhaps 3 out of 10 instances (2 out of 10 at best,) 
it
won't identify much of anything useful.  That may be because we are 
still
working with an experimental version of the program or because it will 
never
deliver more than 8 out of 10.  We're not sure yet.  George and the 
Project 
team are still tooling up for the next generation of the program, but 
it will 
be awhile yet before it's up and running.  Even then I'm not sure we'll 
improve 
the hit percentage much, certainly no more than 5 or 10%.  Then again, 
when you 
can see even 70% ahead with any consistency, that's something to smile 
about especially when the best alternative at present is a coin toss!  
     It should be pointed out that when we saw the graphs for East 
Germany, the 
USSR, Romania, etc. in the late summer of 1989, we didn't know it was 
going to 
be the "end of Communism." Hell, it could just as easily been WW III 
and we were 
worried it might well be.  My point is that the graphs would have 
looked exactly
identical.  There would have been no way to differentiate one from the 
other.  
In fact we looked at each other and agreed (that) we WERE seeing one or 
the 
other -- both of which seemed quite preposterous at the time, in case 
you've 
forgotten. 
     What we now know about the output of the system suggests that the 
future is 
composed of a number of (seemingly) unrelated factors and that the time 
schedule 
appears to operate independently of the circumstances that occur.  The 
later 
seems to be governed by a kind of tidal clock-like mechanism and the 
former by 
the state of consciousness of the person or people(s) involved or by 
other 
factors that MERLIN is not designed to identify.  
     None of the MERLIN program is off-the-shelf.  It was written 
entirely for
this purpose including the orbital mechanics portion of the software, 
by a team 
of underemployed SDI physicists.  The program queries you for a 
"genesis 
moment" (a beginning time,) a local "scan from" date and the frequency 
of the 
output desired (how often: daily, weekly, monthly, etc.)  That's it.  
It then 
generates a portrait of the "time patterns" from that moment forward, 
with 
particular attention to the time frame requested. 
 
     We're often asked how much of the output requires human 
interpretation to 
derive a projection or forecast. That varies from about 40 - 60% which 
is 
roughly what the weather bureau also has to contend with.  MERLIN only 
generates 
raw data, albeit in a highly compiled form.  It only indicates points 
of 
converging "timepatterns" and determines the number and size of the 
curves 
involved.  That is eminently useful in developing a working scenario or 
conversely, eliminating possible scenarios, but the system is never 
definitive 
in that sense.  It just makes the practice of "going out on a limb" a 
little 
less of a crapshoot than it might have been otherwise.  Scary but 
tolerable.  
     Also, just a brief word to those of you who think we're just 
recycling
obvious predictions. It's not so much a matter of the particular call 
we made 
but how long ago we made it and the precision of the TIMING in the 
resulting 
event.  When we said on CNN/LARRY KING in December (1991) that there 
would be 
a major change in the Pope's situation/wellbeing commencing in late 
summer 1992, 
we didn't know what form it would take, just WHEN it would put in an 
appearance.  
He could have died (almost did) or retired or had someone else take a 
shot at 
him.  The Vatican could have become embroiled in some massive scandal 
or been 
implicated in the death of his predecessor (not an unlikely possibility 
someday.)  The same thing holds true about the prediction for Saddam 
(that he 
would be BACK, which has now come to pass) or for Larry himself.  Who 
knew, that 
Ross Perot would turn the KING Show into a staging area for a third 
party bid. 
 
     The point is MERLIN isolated the correct time frame and level of 
drama and 
found it a year or two or three before it happened.  
     I think part of what intrigued George about my work was that it 
was simple, 
elegant and system-driven.  The variables are always the same and the 
change 
points are always obvious. You don't have to do handstands to find 
them. 
 
     George and I can see a day where MERLIN is an element in a more 
comprehensive forecasting technology, perhaps utilizing AI and things 
like 
"fuzzy logic" and not coincidentally, the insurance industry's acturial 
database to really do some fancy prognosticating.  For now, MERLIN is 
not much 
more than a good (albeit high-tech) bloodhound, sniffing out 
interesting 
"scents." It accounts for no more than perhaps 50% of any forecast we 
might 
release.  The balance is at present represented by a healthy grasp of 
current 
events and some serious historical knowledge and perspective. In short, 
grunt 
work. 
 
     Why is only (say) 50% of the forecasting (at best) done by the 
system?  
Because time, in and of itself can't predict circumstance, even if your 
timepiece is very sophisticated and pinpoints the location of (call 
them) 
anomolies or abberations.  All you know is that a sizible "rip" will 
occur 
within a particular time window, plus or minus about 90 days.  Weather 
forecasting, which operates by the same principles (if not the same 
variables) 
is often less accurate -- lots often.  That doesn't seem to stop us 
from 
straining to hear tomorrow's "weather report," though.  Even though 
we've said 
the program is not based on classical astrology, the system does, on 
the most 
fundamental level, share the same paradigm.  However, MERLIN uses 
different 
principles for putting that paradigm into practice.  
     The basic paradigm both astrology and MERLIN use for trying to 
predict the 
future involves finding a core set of correlations between a pattern 
formed by 
the relationship between a number of scientifically predictable natural 
events 
and future events that the subject of the prediction will experience.  
     Astrology is based on the assumption that these correlations are 
already 
known or can be learned from existing literature in the field. A given 
set of 
zodiacal positions for the sun, moon and planets is assumed to 
influence a 
particular human activity in a certain way.  There is no scientific 
proof that 
these traditional correlations are accurate, but the system is so 
complex that 
most of its practical applications are really metaphysical rather than 
scientific, so the whole question of "proof" is completely irrelevant.  
     MERLIN doesn't rely on a pre-existing set of correlations between 
natural 
events and human activities.  It is based on decades of first-hand 
research 
involving specific "time patterns" and then devising a sophisticated 
program 
using those time patterns to make predictions.  
     Here's how one might design such a system.  First, you would 
create a 
database describing the fluctuations of the set of predictible natural 
events 
you'd chosen.  Next, you would lay out a time-line for the human 
activity you 
were analyzing, recording all the dates in the past on which major, 
dramatic 
events took place.  Then you'd compile a chart that showed what each of 
the 
natural events was doing on a specific date.  Next, you'd attempt to 
find a 
pattern that held consistent (within preset limits) for each date.  If 
you found 
one, then you'd compile a chart of all the dates on which that pattern 
had 
occurred and compare that back with the timeline of the human activity 
to see 
how many times it had occurred on dates with no significant happenings 
involving 
the subject activity.  If the number of "misses" was below a pre-set 
number, you 
could conclude that you had a significant correlation, and proceed to 
make a 
prediction of future "important" events on that time-line by simply 
marking in 
the dates when the pattern re-occurred. 
 
     This is actually a fairly simple paradigm, consistent with the 
characteristics that MERLIN exhibits.  We're not going to elaborate 
further 
about what specific predictible natural events MERLIN employs, because 
if the 
system works, the identity of these events is our most valuable 
discovery.  It 
can be protected only by secrecy, since it can't be patented or 
copyrighted.  
 
     This idea is a fairly easy one to understand, if one frames the 
proper
analogies.  Imagine, for example, time as a road running up and down a 
series
of hills.  Obviously, it's easier to travel faster when you're going 
downhill.  
So "important" events might tend to happen whenever time is "going 
downhill."  
Now, if one could just identify where the hills were by finding 
predictible 
natural events that were traveling on the same "road".. you get the 
idea. 
 
     In a sense,  MERLIN follows the lines of what we might call 
"potential des- 
tinies" or "probable futures."  Consider this.  Suppose you have a 
racehorse 
capable of winning the triple crown.  It is his "potential destiny" but 
only if 
he is trained and entered in the proper races.  He will win if he gets 
in, but 
the potential remains unexpressed if he is put out to pasture or stud 
without 
being raced.  As MERLIN sees it, the future or destiny is not fixed, 
but has 
sets of potentials with subsets of variables or factors which can 
increase or 
decrease a specific potential.  
     Here's an interesting reality-based variation on that flight of 
fancy that 
has actually been employed by a client of ours for the past couple of 
years. 
 
     She owns, breeds and races horses and has used MERLIN to determine 
what
"genesis dates" for a foal might produce a champion (in their two and 
three
year old years -- the racing years) based on the emerging trendline at 
that 
point in their development.  
     In the two years she has tried this as a model, the horse so 
designated has 
in fact turned out to be a major stakes winner in those years although 
she was 
unable to afford them as "weelings."  Now she's wondering if you could 
breed a 
mare on a time-schedule that might allow a foal to arrive at the right 
point to 
catch that kind of curve. Smart lady! 
     It's interesting that historically it's been the 'non-scientists' 
or fringe 
researchers that have pioneered the major breakthroughs. Oh, maybe not 
so much 
in the last few years when official credentials have determined who 
gets heard,  
but over the centuries.  Science, as we now perceive it was not yet 
even a 
toddler in the scheme of things and who knows, it may revert to that 
status 
again!  Imagine metaphysics being required reading right along with 
quantum 
theory.  Try not to laugh too hard because that day may be coming if 
we're ever 
going to progress past this dead zone we're in.  Even the most hard 
boiled 
physicists I know keep whispering that "..there's magic down there!"  
Here's a quote I'm fond of..
        "It is not the critic who counts, not the man who points out 
how the
strong man stumbled or where the doer of deeds could have done them 
better. 
The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena; who's face 
is
marred by dirt and sweat and blood.  Who strives valliantly, who errs 
and
comes up short again and again, but who knows the great enthusiasms.  
The great
devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause.  Who at best, knows in 
the
end the triumph of high achievement and who at worst, fails while 
daring 
greatly.  So that his place will never be with those cold and timid 
souls who 
know neither victory or defeat." 
                                           - Teddy Roosevelt
     With MERLIN, we have merely expanded our universe of reference 
points to
include many more of these known clocks in an attempt to discover if 
the larger 
episodes of time could give us a way to "tag" each moment, so as to 
distinguish 
it from any other.  Before one can attempt to view time as a variable 
in the 
precipitation of circumstance, you need to have a way to capture it and 
compare 
it. 
 
    "Time-lapse" photography seems to be a good model. Individual 
snapshots 
taken over a long enough interval and then chronogically compared can 
tell a 
remarkably intricate story of what "time" did (actually what the 
elements did) 
to the "thing" you captured on film.  
     But consider this. If you (say) took away every other picture in 
the 
sequence, you could still make a good guess at what happened in between 
the 
frames.  If you took away the final frames and had enough previous 
ones, you 
could still make a very good guess at the outcome.  Problem is, you're 
limited 
to the pictures actually taken.  You could speculate on what happened 
before the 
first one or after the last one but you'd be limited to the sequence of 
time 
covered by your actual universe of pictures. 
 
     Time clocks aren't limited unless our corner of the Milky Way goes 
belly-
up.  That's how come we can "predict" the arrival of Fall or the return 
of 
Halley's Comet.  It's how come (when) Voyager2 arrived in the vicinity 
of 
Neptune, Neptune happened to be there.  What we've never done is to 
intergrate 
all of those time functions that celestial mechanics creates into a 
comprehensive clock and then see what kind of time it tells.  The more 
functions 
we include, the more precisely we can slice-up moments.   
     That's part of what "MERLIN" does, but only part.  I like to think 
of it as
"applied astronomy," number-crunching for more than the sake of 
crunching
numbers.
     Then the fun starts.  If moments can be distilled down to a unique 
sort of
"signature," what happens when you bounce one moment against another.  
Think of
it this way.  Suppose time is like music and each moment (subdivision) 
like a
unique chord.  Those of you know who ever studied piano know that if 
you strike 
a chord and hold down the pedal (which holds the note for those who 
don't know,) 
you can then play successive chords, some of which are pleasing in 
conjunction 
with the first one (the one you're holding) and others which are not.  
We can 
argue whether that issue of pleasing/displeasing is a subjective one 
but the 
fact remains that each combination would be, at least, different.  
Sheet music 
is essentially that; a notation of sounds bouncing against sounds.  
     MERLIN displays a "musical score" of moments bouncing against 
moments, a
sort of motion picture of (the flow of) time from a given moment
forward. 
Each moment would interact with all successive moments in a unique 
fashion
producing a "symphony" from that moment on into the future. If that 
were true
and you could track it (or forecast the "score" in advance) you could 
predict
when that moment would climax in some crescendo or where the quiet 
passages
would be or where the tempo would change.
     That still would leave the issue of circumstance.  Ok, so maybe 
you could
forecast time as a kind of wave form.  That wouldn't explain the form 
events
would take; whether they would be -- good or bad.  Exactly, and if 
we're right
about time having at least an acausal effect, it suggests that the 
point of
appearance of "uncharacteristic activity" or what I call "heightened
eventfulness" is fixed in time by the genesis of the activity.  In 
other words
the beginning moment starts a clock that has an orderly pulse to it and 
the
successive events are related to the initial event in more than 
coincidental
ways.
     A system built around this premise would allow you to locate the 
approximate "time coordinates" for successive events, perhaps even 
their 
intensity (relative to what preceded their arrival or followed their 
appearance) but not the qualitative circumstance that might occur.  
     To do that one would need to know the various emotional and 
psychological
factors impinging on the situation or person being tracked.  That is 
strictly a
judgement call, non-scientific and entirely interpretive.  If you knew 
exactly
what those subjective factors were, you would probably still make the 
wrong
call occasionally.  That would, in all likelihood, never be an exact 
science. 
As Edward Lorenz, the father of Chaos Theory discovered with weather 
data, you 
can never have data precise enough to make exact predictions.  No 
measuring 
device is sufficiently sensitive nor would you ever have enough 
reporting 
stations. 
 
     For those of you who know who Lorenz is and are therefore jumping 
to the
conclusion that MERLIN has ties to chaos theory let me correct you now.
There is no connection other than the fact that modern computers 
allowed the
"invisible" to become, visible.  I have been working on this theory for 
more 
than twenty five years and computers simply made the validation process 
possible by making the patterns visible.  It's our suspicion that 
earlier 
civilizations in their magic and ritual forms, recorded similar 
expressions of 
this cosmology. They just didn't know what they had found. 
     TIME.. will tell, if we're right!
     In terms of planetary equations both real and imaginary, it 
probably 
doesn't much matter which ones you use.  They're all largely 
representational in 
the sense that they are a substitution for the actual phenomenon.  The 
key is 
the consistency of the system you choose and the consistency of the 
rules of 
order you apply to it.  If there is an error factor built-in; it's 
always built-
in.  Real systems and symbolic ones will generate equivilent 
information if they 
set to work observing the same (or a common) phenomenon, provided you 
don't 
confuse the rules that govern one with the rules that govern the other. 
 
     How come these patterns haven't been codified by now?  Probably 
because 
most of the data has been accumulated by practitioners of soft (or what 
some 
like to call pseudo) sciences.  No one looked or for the most part, 
even knew 
how or where to look.  Nor did they get much help from practitioners in 
these 
areas, partly because of the contempt each camp has for the other and 
partly 
because there is no common channel for communication.  They don't speak 
a 
language the other can or is willing to try to understand.  That's 
certainly 
been true for at least the last hundred or so years.  Hell, look at the 
ethnic 
strife erupting all over Eastern Europe.  How could this still be going 
on after 
all these years? Same reason. 
     A real system vs a symbolic one?  For puposes of discussion, money 
is a 
real system.  Checks or credit cards are symbolic ones. If you hand 
someone a 
check or a credit card to pay your phone bill it represents money 
without being 
money. (Of course, money/currency is in itself symbolic -- 
representative of a 
level of confidence in a nation's economy by its citizens.)  
 
     Planetary motion is a real system; clocks are symbolic.  But 
planetary 
motion may be itself representative of a (kind of) "heartbeat" of the 
Universe.  
The tidal effects we can see (and there are hundreds, perhaps 
thousands) are 
likely to be outnumbered by those we cannot.  James Gleick ("CHAOS") 
wrote the 
following in a recent book (with nature photographer Eliot Porter.)  He 
said, 
"..There are flows in Nature well beyond our perception that are 
(either) too 
slow or too grand to encompass." 
     We may have prematurely "decided" that time is nothing but a 
construct; a
devised form of abstract measurement when in fact it may be "a 
breathing in,
breathing out process in the Universe.."  That when collated can define
episodic periods.  How would we know?  Look what we're using for 
timekeepers
and how little recorded history we have to work with.  If the history 
of the
Solar System were a 24 hour day, we appeared in (what) the last 3 
minutes, 
maybe? 
 
     The celestial events we include in MERLIN are used only to 
calibrate.  We 
are not in any way proposing a cause/effect relationship between 
celestial 
events and human events.  If you're going to compare moments of time 
from the 
standpoint of moments being unique, you need some common denominator so 
that you 
can differentiate one from another.  Our forms of timekeeping are too 
limited 
and repetitive to provide the scope needed.  Therefore we have expanded 
the 
universe of "clocks" we're including.  Each addition allows for a more 
precise 
"fix" on a moment to be developed.  
     Then, working with the idea that all "clocks" provide an "on-off" 
function 
or replicate a seasonal rhythm, we turned a team of physicists loose on 
the 
problem of detecting points of convergence of the theoretical cycles 
these 
various "clocks" might time. 
 
     Then, we turned the resulting program loose on a particular moment 
(that
happened to mark the beginning of some momentous human event) to see 
what kind
of a graphic it would generate.  Also, to see if the resulting pattern 
in any
way paralleled the actual sequence of circumstances of the event we 
chose to
begin with. And to everyone's surprise and delight, it did!
     The "height" of the measurement is generated by the program in 
response to 
the number of cycles cultminating at that particular instant and not 
some graph 
of history.  The program has no idea that the beginning moment chosen 
has any 
historical inportance or the sequence of the historical event that it 
"mirrors."  
If there are parallels, they are unconnected by any mechanism we are 
aware of.  
And there are parallels! 
 
     An ordinary clock is very limited and unsophisticated for 
referencing.
If, instead, you use all of the planets in our system, you have 9 
clocks and 
therefore 9 reference frames. The more you include, the more precise 
your clock 
becomes, provided you choose your "timekeepers" carefully.  
     Before Newton and others defined gravity, people had explanations 
and 
basically guesses about gravity but they didn't accurately describe it. 
 
Astrology is a guess.  MERLIN is set up with rules, equations and 
'clocks.'  
Before Newton, there was no 'science' of gravitation; before MERLIN, 
there was 
no 'science' of historical event timing. 
 
     The reason we don't use a Fourier analysis on a historical event 
sequence 
is simply that we have no objective way of knowing which events are 
related to 
which "in time," since that is the variable we're using.  All L.A. 
earthquakes, 
for instance, may not be related, even though they're all in the same 
earthquake 
zone or on the same fault line.  That's the problem of using events as 
though 
they were related.  It's how come market analysis using past 
performance data as 
your forecasting gauge invaribly breaks down.  There is an assumption 
that 
they're connected, when in many cases, they're probably the result of 
multiple 
factors that aren't consistent. 
 
     MERLIN is working in a much purer "environment;" watching various 
"time
functions" and not the entrance or exit (or repeat refrain) of the Ross
Perots.
     In other words, if you knew how to design your "sort" (which 
clocks to
include, which were redundant, so on) the essential pattern would 
emerge. The
problem is knowing how to apply it.
     Lots of factors could effect the onset of a California earthquake 
that are 
not related in-time.  MERLIN only finds those that are related in-time. 
 Maybe 
certain stresses within plates follow long time curves, the intervals 
of which 
are of too long a duration to match any commonly accepted time frames.  
I'm not 
sure; we haven't spent a lot of time looking at earth movement.  (A 
matter of 
funding; sound familiar?)
 
     Instead of complex equations, MERLIN is using even more complex 
'clocks.' 
In one domain, we may find the equations for the data complex and 
inaccurate, 
while in another domain, the equations become simple and precise.  That 
is one 
reason we switch domains.  What cannot be modelled in the time domain, 
may be 
modeled in the frequency domain or in MERLIN's case, the celestial 
star-time 
domain. 
     The sky pattern, perhaps inadvertently is (or seems to be) 
generating 
elements of what Dr. Hart likes to call "..a dance of pattern," that 
hints of a 
new science.  Our attempts at describing it are admittedly crude but 
display a 
pronounced order and organization.  
     It's probably the realm of mandalas and music and information 
transfer and 
the impact of consciousness on concrete reality; subtle but 
unmistakeable. And 
very "strange."
 
     In George's model, the "A world" is one of cause and effect; 
measurement,
steady-state repeatibility.  The "B world" is one of pattern 
interactions, a
representational reality, where the symbol is the object.  Where 
consciousness
manipulates rules (or creates them.)  Where like attracts like; where 
resonance
is king and information lives a life of it's own.
     I'm told that when you approach the "outer limits" of quantum 
theory, the
rules start to behave strangely.  Particles appear and disappear with 
equal
aplomb and without explanation.  We've assumed that we merely don't 
have all
the rules.  It may be that we've arrived at the transfer point between 
"A"
world and "B."  The place where expectation affect outcome, directly.
     We think that we've stumbled onto a form of "bridgework" between 
these 
realities.  That's why it's so difficult to find a paradigm for it; 
there
really isn't one.  And, that's why we can't easily put a standard 
measurement
to it.  How do you explain a "dance of pattern."  
     Some folks say that if you're superstitious, you notice 
coincidences more
easily.  What if noticing coincidences (or better yet, cataloging them)
increases the rate at which they manifest themselves.  Or if it is 
merely 
that they become more noticible, exactly how come they are so 
prevalent.  Sheer
number suggests some other explanation.  And the more you notice them, 
the
freakier they become almost to the point of absurdity.  Except, you 
were
validating them as they occurred and none of it is a figment of your
imagination. 
 
     By "A" world rules; you're a nut case.  But, what if them ain't 
the only
rules?  And George and I have found a straight-forward 
"scientifically-based"
formula for analyzing them.
 
     Perhaps an "outsider" can get us to the crux of this matter.....
     Let's phrase it in the form of a question:
            Do those of you who are skeptical of MERLIN 
            conceive each moment of time as being qualitatively 
            identical to every other moment of time?
     It seems as though you do, else you would not be so hostile to 
this idea. 
But what Paul is saying -- and what MERLIN apparently charts -- are the 
QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCES among various moments in time.  
     This notion is not nearly as "radical" as y'all try to make it 
appear. 
Space is not homogenious.  A point in space at the top of a mountain is 
qualitatively different from a point in space at the bottom of the 
ocean.  
Both are qualitatively different from most of the points in space 
that lie in 
between them. 
 
     If the three spatial dimensions are not qualitatively
homogenious (some 
are hard, some are soft, etc.), then why should the time dimension be 
so? There 
is no reason in the world that it should and, in fact, our experience 
with 
both space and time hints very strongly that moments in time are not 
identical 
with one another in a qualitative sense. 
 
     In colloquial terms, we might describe this as a "good day" or a 
"bad day." 
Or a "time of war" versus a "time of peace."  A "lucky time" vs. an 
"unlucky 
time."  Etc.  Yes, in some ways those descriptions are subjective and 
psychological -- because they are qualitative.  Yet that doesn't mean 
that 
they're not very REAL differences -- in the same way, for example, that 
differences between two people's personalities are qualitative, but 
nonetheless 
very real. 
     Besides, is not time itself largely a psychological phenomenon to 
begin  
with?  Or perhaps more accurately:  Is not our PERCEPTION of time (the 
"good 
day" vs.  the "bad day") primarily psychological in nature?  
     Time, as I understand Paul to be speaking of it, is not simply the 
"t"  
factor that you plug into your equations.  That "equation" view of time 
implies 
that every moment in time is identical to every other moment in every 
way.  For 
some purposes, those points in time may well be identical to one 
another.  But 
in other ways, they are obviously not identical.  
     What Paul is saying, as I understand him, is that these 
QUALITATIVE 
differences among various moments in time are 1) significant and 2) 
measurable.  
I believe the way he expressed it is as the "terrain of time."
 
     Think of time as having a "terrain."  As you move through time, 
you are not 
moving through an uninterrupted, unbroken, straight-line "sameness"; 
but instead 
you're experiencing a "texture," just as you do as you move through 
space.  You 
go up over hills, down through valleys, sometimes through solid 
material (on 
land), sometimes through liquid material (in a lake or the ocean), 
sometimes 
through gaseous material (in the air).  That, I believe, is the core 
concept 
behind MERLIN. 
 
     Like I said, to me, this concept seems extremely common-sensical.  
Although 
I have a rather minimal knowledge of modern physics, the concept also 
seems to 
fit into some very scientific (or "scientifically accepted") theories 
of what 
time is and how it works.  If you can grasp that basic concept -- the 
qualitative differences among various moments in time --  then you'll 
at least 
be able  to understand what Paul's trying to tell you, and thereby be 
able to 
examine MERLIN on its own terms.  
     By contrast, if you can't grasp that concept, then all this hot 
air is for
naught, because you'll be asking the wrong questions and using the 
wrong
criteria for judgment.
     The questions you should be asking are: 1) are these qualitative 
differences among moments of time actually quantifiable in some way?  
And 2) if 
they are indeed quantifiable (or at least "graphable"), then does 
MERLIN 
quantify/graph them in a useful, realistic manner?  
     Seven years of on-the-record research, strongly suggests that it 
does!
Copyright 1996  by Paul Guercio and Dr. George Hart  All rights 
reserved
CONFIDENTIAL MEMO
TO:          A certain Network president, correspondents, producers,
             journalists, editors and political operatives i.e. you.
FROM:        The MERLIN Project(r) Research Group
SUJB:        The Joint Chiefs of Staff "White Paper" released: 7-18-95
Date:        Monday, July 29, 1996
    You received the attached pages (you're mentioned in the report by
name -- Chechnya section) right after the Joint Chiefs did.  A year ago!
A formal report they specifically requested on terrorism and trouble spots
and which was subsequently forwarded to JCS/J-5 at the Pentagon in December
1995.  
    Remember?  And in that same 20 page report we highlighted:
   -  The timetable for conflict/resolution in Bosnia.  We indicated the
          end of 1995. The peace accords were signed in December 1995.
   
-    And the duration of the Chechnyan conflict -- about 18 months. 
          It lasted 17.
   
-   And the timing of a dramatic rise in US-targeted domestic and 
          imported terrorism (by November 1996.)  We missed it by 94 days.
          Dhahran barracks/June 25, TWA-800/July 17, Atlanta/July 27 and
          lots more to come in 1997-8.
    
-   And we only addressed four topic areas.  The fourth being North 
          Korea and the jury is still out on Kim Jong Il, don't you agree?
Take a look!  Or ask us for another copy.  You undoubtedly recall the
afternoon of the OJ verdict. Who doesn't.  We spoke that afternoon.  You 
were amused that we had also (correctly) forecast the outcome of that
trial (on CNN/TBL December 29, 1994.)  We called to see if you had received
your copy of this very same JCS report.  Remember?  Did you save it?
    Don't mind us but what exactly is it going to take, in a world where
pundits are (nearly) always more wrong than right, for some of you to notice,
without being reminded, that this "witchcraft" is regularly beating the pants
off them?   
 
Copyright 1996  by Paul Guercio and Dr. George Hart  All rights reserved
WHO KNOWS ABOUT MERLIN?  (A partial listing)
     John Hockenberry (NBC/NPR) knows.  He knew before almost anyone except 
Jack Anderson and Alan Colmes.  Hal Bruno (ABC) knows.  So does Mark Nelson 
(NIGHTLINE) and Michael Guillen (GMA) and Tami Haddad (SNYDER) and Tom Brokaw 
and the late Fred Briggs (NIGHTLY NEWS) and Shad Northshield (CBS.)
     Larry King and Mary Tillotson know, as does their boss, Tom Johnson (CNN) 
and Susan Rook.  Upclose and personal.  So does Richard Perle (Reagan's point-
man for SDI) and some very high level folks at the CIA and the Pentagon (JCS)
that even we don't know.  Hi fellas!  
     Tina Brown (THE NEW YORKER) knows.  Even before she knew she had a "job 
change" (1992) she knew about MERLIN.  (MERLIN spotted it two months before it 
was announced.)  So does the fellow who has her old job, Graydon Carter
(VANITY 
FAIR) and his boss S. I. Newhouse and Sidney Sheldon and Stephen King and
Keith 
Ferrell (OMNI) and literary agents Scott Meredith and Bill Adler and the late 
great superagent Bob Woolf. 
 
     George Harrison (yes, that George Harrison) knows and (former) White
House 
counsel David Gergen and Doug Bailey (THE HOTLINE) and Jeffrey Rubin (TIME) 
and Debra Rosenberg (NEWSWEEK) and Sue Brown (PEOPLE) and Mike Miller and Paul 
Carroll (WSJ) and Rich Dubroff (WSW) and Peter Lynch (WORTH.)
     Physicist Jack Sarfatti knows; ditto Phillip Morrison.  Senators Dole
and Cohen should know but won't say.  Roger Ailes (FOX) knows.  So does 
John Stossel (20/20) and Stone Phillips (DATELINE) and David Wyss (DRI/McGraw-
Hill) and Tom Squitieri and Michael Zuckerman (USA TODAY.)
     Verdine White (EW+F) knows and his buddy Arsenio Hall.  So does movie 
producer David Blocker and Mark Frost (TWIN PEAKS) and John McWethy (ABC
NEWS.) 
Even Bill Moyers (PBS) knows..
     And now YOU know, too! 
 
     Isn't it nice to know you're in such good company! 
Copyright 1996   by Paul Guercio and Dr. George Hart   All rights reserved
 
THE MERLIN PROJECT
The RetroPsychoKinesis Project does not support or associate itself in any
way with the Merlin Project.  We simply find it amusing.