The SCIO, Quantum Xrroid Consciousness Interface, and Bill Nelson: Better late than never--or maybe not

As my fellow Americans (ack! I'm sounding like a politician!) know, this happens to be a holiday weekend in the States, Monday being Labor Day. Given that, I'm taking it easy blogging until Tuesday, given that most people (in the U.S. at least) are probably out taking advantage of the opportunity that what is traditionally considered the last weekend of the summer vacation season affords. Me and my wife, we're taking advantage of this three day weekend to do somthing truly fun: To finally put our basement in order. (There's still a ton of stuff down there from when we moved in.) Woo-hoo!

In any case, all of this makes this weekend the perfect time to catch up on stuff that I've been meaning to post about but somehow never did. For example, I noticed this one about a week ago when fellow ScienceBlogger Mark Hoofnagle posted an incredibly bizarre video by someone who has appeared right here on this blog before. Indeed, he has appeared not just once but twice in my earlier, soon-to-be-resurrected-in-one-form-or-another feature, Your Friday Dose of Woo in 2007 as the inventor of not just the EPFX/QXCI, Quantum Xrroid Consciousness Interface, which combined most amazing woo and arguably one of the most outrageously ugly (if not the most outrageously ugly), least functional computer interfaces I've ever seen, and the Scientific Consciousness Interface Operation (SCIO) system, which "integrates the sciences of mathematics, quantum physics, fractal dynamics, subspace theory, electronics, and computer programming" and includes "naturopathy, homeopathy, acupuncture, chiropractic, energetic medicine, psychology, aromatherapy, reflexology, colour therapy, Neuro-Linguistic Programming, biofeedback and Rife Resonator," not to mention incorporates "knowledge of metaphysical subjects to bring a unique synergistic perspective to natural healing." And, of course, as one of his "admirers" made a point of telling me, Nelson was "nominated" for the Nobel Prize.

Now you know why I featured Nelson twice on Your Friday Dose of Woo last year. I also still wonder why he never won that Nobel Prize. Personally, I'd give him a prize for being able to combine more forms of highly intense woo into a single product than virtually anybody else can. Or perhaps this video can explain:

Amazing. The ego-ism, with Nelson as the lone defender of Truth, Justice, and Naturopathy versus the Evil Allopathy. Hmmm. ("Evil Allopathy" would make a good name for a band, don't you think?) Too bad the FDA has banned the sale of his device in the U.S. and he's on the run from the law. Obviously it's all part of the plot.

But Nelson's amazing talents don't stop with just the film above. Check out some of the films on this website. We see Bill Nelson treating us to his musical talents in drag as a diva, in a courtroom drama ("Naturopathy will have its day"), a transformational drama in which a doctor becomes a "healer," not to mention "proof" of extra-sensory perception, a film shot on location in Africa, and a whole lot more. One thing we learn is that Bill Nelson likes to dress up in drag a lot. Another thing we learn is that he really should take voice lessons. But the most important thing that we learn is the truly bizarre mindset of a man who can come up with such amazingly wild quackery.

Truly, you can't make stuff like this up. At least, I can't. If I could, I'd seriously worry about my mental health.

More like this

I've said it once before, but this week's woo compels me to say it again: I happen to love gadgets. I've been a bit of a technogeek since very early on in my life, with a lot of the things that go along with it, including a major interest in science fiction, awkwardness around the opposite sex,…
Note: Orac is away somewhere warm recharging his Tarial cells for further science and skepticism. In the meantime, he is rerunning some of his favorite posts. Because it's vacation, he thought he'd rerun a fun post. He needs it; vacation is almost over, and it's back to work on Monday. So, here's…
I admit it. I'm a gadget freak. I sometimes think I should have gone into radiology. If you're a radiologist and work with MRI, CT scans, PET scanners, and numerous other cool gadgets. Of course, you also have to sit in dark rooms in the basement of the hospital and stare at films for several years…
Last night was grant crunch time to get a truly serviceable draft to my collaborators today as promised, leaving enough time to revise it by the February 5 deadline. That means the blog has to take a hit today, which is a shame, because Joe Mercola and Age of Autism have laid down some idiocy this…

whoa.

The tune was written by Joseph Brackett in 1848 while he lived in a Shaker community in Alfred, Maine, USA. The melody was also used by Aaron Copland in his ballet Appalachian Spring (1944).

Xrroid rhymes with hemorrhoid, right?

Somebody should tell him that the "lord of the Dance" tune he's mangling is fully copyrighted: www.stainer.co.uk/lotd.html

What Matthew said.

However, browse some of the other videos, and there are plenty of manglings of copyrighted songs. I have to wonder what he has against Paul Simon to have abused Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes so badly.

Don't forget his transvestite porn site. I know I can't.

Major League Woo.
amazing how the rest of the world has not caught on to this fellow's Quantum Consciousness Bipfeedback Super Woo Energy Healing Machine. Surely it's working principles would have been discovered and documented before this?

But only he has The Truth.
Right... I'll take my medical advice from Pharma Shills in preference to this guy, who seems to be either a quack, conman or fool. Maybe all three ?

Oh. My. God.

That possibly surpasses Don't Copy that Floppy as the most unintentionally funny video I've ever seen.

I'd love to get hold of the source code for the interface, just to see what it actually does. Obviously, overall it doesn't really do anything, but I'd like to know whether there are lots of bizarre and convoluted algorithms underneath that they think are doing all this magic, or whether it's all just a bunch of functions that consist of { return rand(); } statements.

Between these videos & the Chick Tracts, my IQ has probably dropped over the weekend.