neil
23-11-2007, 03:33 PM
Just a brief and inconclusive contribution for information.
Over the past couple of weeks, I've had a few government sites from around the world (including significant US locations: one hit came from Fort Bragg and another from Oak Ridge National Laboratory) accessing my website after searching for "man made mysteries" and "man made unexplained". Now, my personal website is first of all a blog dealing with various issues relating to history, culture and identity, and more recently consciousness and reality (I doubt whether most readers here would be interested in it, but contact me if you are) and deals with mysteries and the unexplained in the most peripheral way.
If anyone else uses Statcounter or a similar application it might be worth checking this sort of activity out.
I'm wondering whether government bodies or the people working for them are finding out how much we think we know about the man-made nature of certain mysteries and unexplained stuff or enjoying seeing how far we're going off track. Probably a bit of both, with the balance shifting to the former, I think.
Edit:
Just after writing this post I checked again and noticed that someone from Cranfield University had checked me out. Interesting that someone in a place with heavy research ties to the aerospace and defence industries is bothered about man made mysteries!
Over the past couple of weeks, I've had a few government sites from around the world (including significant US locations: one hit came from Fort Bragg and another from Oak Ridge National Laboratory) accessing my website after searching for "man made mysteries" and "man made unexplained". Now, my personal website is first of all a blog dealing with various issues relating to history, culture and identity, and more recently consciousness and reality (I doubt whether most readers here would be interested in it, but contact me if you are) and deals with mysteries and the unexplained in the most peripheral way.
If anyone else uses Statcounter or a similar application it might be worth checking this sort of activity out.
I'm wondering whether government bodies or the people working for them are finding out how much we think we know about the man-made nature of certain mysteries and unexplained stuff or enjoying seeing how far we're going off track. Probably a bit of both, with the balance shifting to the former, I think.
Edit:
Just after writing this post I checked again and noticed that someone from Cranfield University had checked me out. Interesting that someone in a place with heavy research ties to the aerospace and defence industries is bothered about man made mysteries!