- Page 4 and 5: 7. The Atmosphere and Electricity 9
- Page 6 and 7: Foreword Water is the commonest sub
- Page 8 and 9: Introduction 'I no longer own my ow
- Page 10 and 11: One such that would set him on a lo
- Page 12 and 13: Certainly by a complete reversal of
- Page 14 and 15: interpret all natural phenomena by
- Page 16 and 17: y a science with a materialist worl
- Page 18 and 19: 1. Viktor Schauberger's Vision Our
- Page 20 and 21: Viktor's abiding interest was to di
- Page 22 and 23: able to carry a greater weight of l
- Page 24 and 25: water, waiting for the flume to ove
- Page 26 and 27: periphery (as in a wheel), a form o
- Page 28 and 29: complexity of interrelationships an
- Page 30 and 31: Viktor Schauberger came from a back
- Page 32 and 33: ancients, he saw Nature as the mirr
- Page 34 and 35: or petrol. But what is its essence,
- Page 36 and 37: has a blueprint for what is require
- Page 38 and 39: Fig. 2.1. Different dimensions or l
- Page 40 and 41: collectively he called 'ethericitie
- Page 42 and 43: Fig. 3.1. Cosmic fertilization. Sch
- Page 44 and 45: Without the attraction and repulsio
- Page 46 and 47: species. 2 Levitation force may ind
- Page 48 and 49: describes how the Alpine farmers wh
- Page 50 and 51: Thus a given physical structure is
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were being passed between plants wi
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is subservient to cosmic laws, crea
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is essentially a controlled, closed
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Fig. 4.3. Vesica piscis. 'The Vesse
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Fig. 4.5. Pine cone symmetry. The l
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PART TWO How the World Works
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Entropy and ectropy James Lovelock
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aise fears about the safety of micr
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Fig. 5.1. The fateful choice. impor
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kinds of fish can live in poor qual
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see the blood, but we don't see the
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of mechanics with little knowledge
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the internal combustion and steam e
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Fig. 6.2. Three basic forms of moti
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Fig. 6.3. The planetary vortex. The
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7. The Atmosphere and Electricity I
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Fig. 7.1. Section through Earth's a
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is decreased. 3 If the area of one
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Earth as an accumulator of energy V
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alternately attain their maxima. Ac
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8. The Nature of Water The Upholder
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the rhythmic crescendo and fall of
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minute. Unfortunately, his efforts
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The qualities of different waters A
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Water, when it is alive, creates th
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storage and transport through pipes
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9. The Hydrological Cycle In the sa
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elements. Rainfall generated from t
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mally raise to the benefit of other
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atoms. The hydrogen then rises beca
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fertilizers and pesticides, making
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Fig. 10.1. Seepage spring. Seepage
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Fig. 10.2. True springs and high al
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HIDDEN NATURE
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11. Rivers and How They Flow If we
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the shortest and straightest route
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prevailing air temperatures and the
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3. By installing flow-deflecting gu
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eing subject to the least turbulenc
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organic substances are spun into th
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This is probably the origin of the
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Fig. 11.9. An experimental egg-shap
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years since 1985 has failed to reac
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the naturally occurring calcium flu
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Typically, in modern cities, public
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Fig. 12.2. Flow dynamics of the dou
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once the initial impetus has been r
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Moreover, Walter Schauberger calcul
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PART FOUR The Life of Trees
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the world's historical climate. In
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left behind), and a sophisticated c
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Fig. 13.1. The Amazon heat engine a
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Preservation of this precious fores
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an arid or desert environment devoi
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completely, exposing the soil to th
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14. The Life and Nature of Trees Tr
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the by-product of which is oxygen,
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absorbs all colours except its part
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During the course of its life, a hu
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Tree types are determined to a grea
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Light-induced growth You can tell t
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increasingly prone to blood disorde
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The creation of water There is an i
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of the tree, the two systems of dis
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15. The Metabolism of the Tree All
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9.81m (32.18ft). Viktor Schauberger
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carbon dioxide, which forms bubbles
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outside > warmer inside) during the
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cooling of the sap which, sinking a
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having only the finest materials wi
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humus that is necessary for even hi
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16. Soil Fertility and Cultivation
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The golden plough Wherever we look,
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Fig. 16.3. The bio-plough, 1948. ac
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would watch the cows on the fertile
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Excess nitrogen can also introduce
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are a vital moderator of climatic e
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not only protect the tree but, once
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Fig. 17.2. Motor-driven mixing devi
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Fig. 17.3. Egg-shaped fermentation
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atmospheric energies ready for fert
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priests at least had a little roof
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PART SIX The Energy Revolution
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made him realize he had to undertak
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iosynthesize hydrogen from water. H
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(especially conventional scientists
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The man behind this research is Dr
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Fig. 18.1. Tornado home power gener
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potential of the Schauberger physic
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undergoing a double spiral centripe
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Fig. 18.3 & 4. Repusaltor prototype
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19. Viktor Schauberger and Society
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every country on the globe; a total
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supreme consciousness to harmonize
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with his son Walter and met many of
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Members of the Group have given man
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designed to solve the increasing pr
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Endnotes Introduction 1. Living Ene
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(=1). A thin layer of pure water va
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15. The Metabolism of the Tree 1. V
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Clean Water, in Denmark, is the man
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Cobbald, Jane The Spiral Dance —
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List of Illustrations Frontispiece: