Gene Ray

Otis Eugene "Gene" Ray (July 2, 1927 - March 18, 2015) was an American inventor and author who was noted for his Time Cube hypothesis and his contentiousness in its promotion, being earlier in his life known for his long promotion of professional marbles.

Gene Ray's Web Tetralogy

 * TimeCube.com (offline, via archive.org)
 * AboveGod.com (offline, via archive.org)
 * TheGreatestThinker.com (offline, via archive.org)
 * TheWisestHuman.com (offline, via archive.org)

Other Media

 * @wisest_human on Twitter (last active 22 Mar 2010)

Patents

 * . "A simplified and inexpensive table game resembling golf is played with marbles propelled by the fingers of players on an imitation grass playing surface. The playing surface has cut-outs to resemble sand and water hazards as well as the holes of a golf course. A plastic or oil cloth underlay is colored to be visible through the cut-outs so that the sand and water hazards will appear realistically to the players of the game. Simplified hole marker flags are constructed from bent pipe cleaners."

Harmonic Cube (1990s)

 * "I received a fascinating little booklet after writing a column about the teaching of evolution in schools. The obviously home-assembled booklet began with a cover page that stated in big black letters, 'Inferior People Are Ignorant of Harmonic Cube.' Each page had a similar declaration. 'A 24 Hr. Rotating Earth Has 4 Days Simutaneously (sic).' 'One 24 Hr. Day is a Measure of Satanism.' 'The Academia-Created 1 Day Greenwich Time is Bastardly Queer and Dooms Future Youth and Nature To A Hell.'"

Reading

 * [interview with Gene Ray on TimeCube]