User talk:Saschwartz

Reply to Stephan A. Schwartz concerning deleted, flawed material
(cur) (last) 23:30, 10 August 2008 Saschwartz (Talk | contribs) (34,095 bytes) (I have corrected misinformation that garbles several experiments, or cites sources, written by individuals with no direct knowledge that are known to be flawed in reference to this material.) (undo)

I find this curious. But welcome corrections from a neutral point of view? I have been taught critical historians are to be cautious of autobiographies. The author will have a tendency to make them self look good. If I remember correctly [your own writing?] was cited:

Four were given charts of the Pacific ocean and were asked to locate an unknown wreck on the seafloor. They chose as their location a 10 mile square area near Santa Catalina. ref Psychic Powers: Mysteries of the Unknown edited by Henry Anatole Greenwald, Consultants: [Stephan A. Schwartz], Marcello Truzzi, and James G. Matlock, archivist of the ASPR library, Time-Life Books, 1987, p.124 Kazuba (talk) 04:24, 5 September 2008 (UTC)

This one puzzles me. Since Dr. Mostafa El Abbadi is a real person and actually was part of the exploration team. How do you explain the authors' errors concerning the discounting of your discoveries? Lyons and Truzzi did shabby research?

Schwartz also claims he was involved in the discovery and the first modern mapping of the Eastern Harbor of Alexandria and the discovery of numerous shipwrecks as well as Mark Anthony's palace in Alexandria, the Ptolemaic Palace Complex of Cleopatra, and the remains of the Lighthouse of Pharos. Much of this was discounted by two on-site Egyptian scholars whom Schwartz had listed as research associates, Dr. Shehetta Adam, head of Egypt's Department of Antiquities and Dr. Mostafa El Abbadi. refThe Blue Sense: Psychic Detectives and Crime by Arthur Lyons and Marcello Truzzi, Ph.D., The Mysterious Press, 1991, p.77 Kazuba (talk) 19:19, 5 September 2008 (UTC)