Alexander Dewdney

   

Alexander Keewatin Dewdney is a Canadian mathematician, computer scientist, and philosopher who has written a number of books on the future and implications of modern computing. He has also written one work of fiction, The Planiverse. Dewdney lives in London, Ontario where he holds the position of Professor Emeritus of the University of Western Ontario.

Dewdney followed Martin Gardner in authoring Scientific American 's recreational mathematics column "Mathematical Recreations" for many years. He has developed hypotheses which sharply disagree with the official version of the events surrounding the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks (see external links below).

Works

See also

External links

  • Bio at his Physics911 (http://physics911.org/net/modules/cjaycontent/?id=3)
  • Ghost Riders in the Sky (http://feralnews.com/issues/911/dewdney/ghost_riders_1-4_1.html)—an alternative 9/11 theory by Dewdney
  • Operation Pearl (http://www.serendipity.li/wot/operation_pearl.htm) one of Dewdney's analyses of 9/11
  • Project Achilles (http://feralnews.com/issues/911/dewdney/project_achilles_report_2_030225.html) Dewdney's experiment concludes that cell phones are essentially useless on commercial aircraft




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