Levi Weiss (182 BFC - 74 BFC) was a scientist known for his pioneering work in physics, chemistry, and applied engineering. The eldest of three brothers, Levi was born in Israel and grew up in the Levantine Republic where his family had migrated to work as solar pump engineers in a new Jewish barley farming community in the Syrian steppe. Levi was a child prodigy who was studying advanced calculus in his early teens, and at age 18 had published his first paper incorporating parts of information theory into thermodynamics, an area he would return to multiple times over his life in an attempt to integrate entropy, computation, and quantum processes.

    In 163 BFC Levi began working at MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center, and was part of the group of scientists who were involved in the founding of Lunar Industrial Engineering the following year. He lived and worked on the moon for 21 years, most of them in a large regolith bunker which he used as an office and laboratory and which famously had the inscription "Ars longa, vita brevis, occasio praeceps, experimentum periculosum, iudicium difficile" prominently carved into the concrete above his desk. During this time, in addition to his work on Fusion Power engineering, he authored many papers on computational chemistry and higher-dimensional brane topological-phase engineering.

    In 141 BFC after a long regime of physical acclimatisation Levi returned to the United States where he and two colleagues established an institute for the development of techniques in generating new gauge interactions and particle families. In 138 BFC Levi met biologist Talia Martin who he married two years later, in 135 BFC their daughter Hannah Weiss-Martin was born. In 121 BFC Levi famously began live streaming a series of controversial experiments with theoretical false vacuum modulation techniques, prompting a ban on the research in the US and elsewhere.