Submitted by Temlakos on
Joseph Mastropaolo has a B.S., M.S., Ph.D. in kinesiology and a three-year Post-Doctoral Research Fellowship with the National Heart Institute of the National Institutes of Health in human physiology (possibly the equivalent of the European habilitation). As Aerospace Physiologist for Douglas Space Systems, he published two monographs on life in space, one for humans and one for experimental animals. He received two Vice Presidential Awards, one for Aerospace Safety and one for Aerospace Medicine. He also received a patent for a crew conditioning device for extended manned space missions and engineered the life support specifications for the Manned Orbiting Animal Research Facility. He taught biomechanics and physiology at California State University, Long Beach for 26 years and was the engine physiologist for the Gossamer Condor and Gossamer Albatross human-powered flight projects which earned a medal in physiology from the Royal Aeronautical Society for the Kremer Cross Channel Challenge. He built five unique laboratories and was principal investigator for 17 grants to support the pure and applied research that resulted in the publication of 23 science articles in peer reviewed science journals. He discovered the maximum-power stimulus theory for muscle which simplified, unified, and exceeded the various theories of strength and endurance for maximum performance, including the best records for performance enhancement from drugs. His research extended natural theology from planet Earth to the entire universe. He innovated objective ancestry and originality tests which prove that Adam and Eve were genetically perfect, ape-men are frauds, the age of the Earth is 6,800 ± 850 years old, and the science reading of choice is literal, not allegorical, Genesis. He may be reached at: jamastropaolo [at] gmail.com. RETURN TO LIST OF CONTRIBUTING WRITERS.
1 Comment
Submitted by msd092 (not verified) on
I can beat you in your own challenge, on one condition. You have to have an open mind and be willing to accept defeat.