I kinda get what you're saying. But at the same time: the reason these theories exist is because the math says there's something there. It could be flawed math, yes, and that's always a possibility. But if the math makes sense, and can be reliably used to predict real-world phenomenon— you can't really say there's nothing to it. I forget, now, where I found this out. But I looked in to it pretty heavily at the time, only can't remember enough specifics to find the relevant info: but there're these things called "Superconductive Quantum Interference Devices." Apparently, lots of them (around the world) went nuts for about a day before 9/11 happened. I can't find that information anywhere, now: so I was either propagandized, or they scrubbed that knowledge.
Lots of wacky evidence exists that there are things going on, beneath the surface, that we simply cannot detect/fathom, aside from tangential evidence. It makes sense: we only have five senses. We can't see X-Rays, but know they're there. We only figured to look for them (and subsequently: how to use them) due to sheer dumb luck.
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