It is very pleasing to see the Omnia Opera essentially complete and being studied continuously all over the world. So many thanks again to all concerned, a great volunteer effort on behalf of truly new science. There are only a few items missing and only one erratum as follows.
1) OO51, G. J. Evans, M. W. Evans and C. J. Reid, Adv. Mol. Rel. Int. Proc., 12(4), 301 -312 (1978).
2) OO96, M. W. Evans, P. Grigolini and M. Ferrario, Physica A, 108, 136 (1981), which was a typographical error in an old list, so this is an erratum.
3) OO428, M. W. Evans, “Longitudinal Magnetic and Electric Fields in the Einstein / de Broglie Theory”, in “Waves and Particles in Light and Matter” ed. A. van der Merwe and A. Garuccio (Plenum, New York, 1994).
4) OO488, M. W. Evans, “B(3) Echoes”, ref. (472), page 285.
5) OO649, M. W. Evans, “Electrodynamics as a Non-Abelian Gauge Theory” in Frontier Perspectives”, 2, 7 – 12 (1998).
6) OO651, M. W. Evans, “The Equations of Grand Unified Field Theory in terms of the Maurer Cartan Structure Equations”, Found. Phys. Lett., 17, 25 (2004).
7) OO660, M. W. Evans, “The Electromagnetic Sector of the Evans Field Theory”, Found. Phys. Lett., 18, 259 (2005).
There are about eight hundred and fifty papers and books in all to date, and I will search around here for the unpublished manuscripts at the end of the list. The complete UFT series of 205 papers to date is in the course of publication in J. Foundations Phys. Chem., and we will be pleased to post the contents pdf’s when they arrive. There are about thirty reviews in the course of preparation for the journal. In comparison, the Omnia Opera of my Ph. D. supervisor, Mansel Davies, still a well known scientist, was about sixty papers and books. I published only one paper with him, (a paper which I wrote), because he recognized the quality of my work from the beginning and let me publish on my own. He was very capable, a Fellow of Peterhouse Cambridge, and had the very rare attribute of being a fair judge of young people. He wrote the biography of Peter Debye for the Royal Society of Chemistry, Faraday Division. On a personal level he was complicated, sometimes incomprehensible, but when it came to science he was objective, having been brought up as a Baptist, i.e. a Leveller who measured things only on merit and rejected false authority, intellectual or otherwise. A few people took offence at that and he was never elected F.R.S. or given any state honours. He was wholly unconcerned about that and was a Nobel Prize advisor for chemistry.