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Relativity, Quantum Mechanics, and UAP
Below, interested students and members of the Society can learn about our latest online course offering, taught by longtime physics professor and foundational thinker Dr. Mark Stuckey, whose work on quantum mechanics and relativity has helped shape modern interpretations of space, time, and causality. Dr. Stuckey is Professor of Physics at Elizabethtown College and co-author of Einstein’s Entanglement and Beyond the Dynamical Universe.
8 October - 26 November 2025
Wednesdays
6:00 - 9:00 pm Eastern U.S. Time
special offer: free for the first 20 student who sign up to Physics of Exotic Propulsion!

Course Description
Special relativity tells us it is possible to travel thousands of light-years in mere seconds without going faster than the speed of light. General relativity tells us it is possible for an observer to be at rest with respect to space in their immediate vicinity yet be moving faster than light relative to another such observer at rest with respect to space in their immediate vicinity.
According to what Einstein called "spooky actions at a distance," quantum mechanics tells us two particles can be "entangled" such that measuring one particle instantly changes the state of the other particle, regardless of the distance separating the two particles. In this course, we will explore these and many other counterintuitive phenomena of relativity of quantum mechanics and see if they can be used to explain characteristics of "unidentified anomalous phenomena" (UAP).
No matter what your time zone, or your schedule, we encourage you to enroll! For the benefit of any student who can't attend live, the Society will record the sessions and make them available to students (once video processing is complete - generally, two to three days).

Weekly Topics
Week 1: The Game of Physics
Week 2: The Mysteries of Length Contraction and Time Dilation
Week 3: The Mysteries of Curved Spacetime
Week 4: Warp Drives and Wormholes
Week 5: Time Travel
Week 6: Schrödinger’s Cat
Week 7: “The Greatest Mystery in Physics”
Week 8: Reviewing Elizondo’s Claims and Psionics

Course Syllabus

Mark Stuckey is Professor of Physics at Elizabethtown College, where he has taught physics and philosophy for over three decades. A specialist in cosmology, relativity, and quantum foundations, he is also co-developer of the Relational Blockworld interpretation of quantum mechanics. Mark holds a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Cincinnati and is the co-author of Beyond the Dynamical Universe and Einstein’s Entanglement. When not decoding the mysteries of space and time, he’s guiding students through the philosophical implications of modern physics.