levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
levitational current - Free Energy
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(=1). A thin layer of pure water vapour<br />
may therefore have the capacity to resist<br />
the transfer of enormous charges, permitting<br />
the accumulation of very large<br />
voltages and potential. The concentric<br />
layers of water vapour with a temperature<br />
of 4°C may thus act like a spherical<br />
condenser, formed of nesting spheres<br />
which charge the Earth with energy.<br />
5. Being in a lower dynamic and more harmonically<br />
stabilized energetic state, the<br />
greater density of water vapour at increasingly<br />
lower altitudes may well correspond<br />
through resonance to the lower wavelengths<br />
of the incident radiation, whose<br />
frequency has been reduced by contact<br />
with the braking effect of the atmosphere,<br />
thus creating the medium with which radio-waves<br />
are reflected back to Earth.<br />
6. For elaboration of how this can be<br />
demonstrated, the reader may read Coats'<br />
description of Lord Kelvins and Walter<br />
Schauberger's experiments (Living Energies,<br />
pp. 95-99).<br />
7. Leopold Brandstatter, Implosion statt Explosion,<br />
self-publication, Linz 10, Fach 20,<br />
Austria.<br />
8. Living Energies, p. 100.<br />
9. Kenneth David and John Day: Water —<br />
The Mirror of Science, p. 149, Heinemann<br />
Educational, 1964.<br />
10. A 1°C rise in temperature causes the retention,<br />
but not necessarily an even distribution,<br />
of an additional 1,000 million<br />
cubic metres of water vapour in the atmosphere<br />
(Living Energies,]). 100).<br />
8. The Nature of Water<br />
1. Our Senseless Toil, Pt.I, p. 11.<br />
2. See The Divining Hand by Christopher<br />
Bird.<br />
3. Davis, K.A. and Day, J.A., Water — The<br />
Mirror of Science, 1964.<br />
4. Implosion magazine, no.8., 1945.<br />
5. How to obtain safe drinking water is<br />
dealt with in Chapter 12.<br />
6. Viktor first came to the attention of hydrologists<br />
in 1922 with his revolutionary<br />
water-flume design for transporting logs<br />
inexpensively from inaccessible untouched<br />
mountain forests without the<br />
usual high rate of damage of conventional<br />
methods. This, his first encounter<br />
with opposition from the scientific establishment,<br />
is well described in both<br />
Living Water and in Living Energies.<br />
7. The extra 'e' enlarges the meaning of the<br />
usual carbon,' to include a whole range of<br />
elements used in forming the physical<br />
structures of life (see further on p. 51).<br />
8. Viktor Schauberger, Our Senseless Toil,<br />
Pt.I, p. 4.<br />
9. The Hydrological Cycle<br />
1. The Memory of Water — Homeopathy<br />
and the Battle of Ideas in the New Science<br />
by Michel Schiff, Thorsons, 1995. Callum<br />
Coats has more on Benveniste's research<br />
and the controversy around it, in Living<br />
Energies, pp. 119-121.<br />
2. The temperatures indicated on the following<br />
diagrams do not necessarily conform<br />
to actual temperatures, but are intended<br />
to demonstrate the process.<br />
10. The Formation of Springs<br />
1. The French for spring is source.<br />
2. Callum Coats adopted an impeller design<br />
taken from Schauberger's 1936 patent for<br />
an air turbine.<br />
11. Rivers and How they Flow<br />
1. From Viktor Schauberger's treatise,'Temperature<br />
and the Movement of Water'<br />
('Temperatur und Wasserbewegung'): Die<br />
Wasserwirtschaft, No.20,1930.<br />
2. Schauberger also pioneered new designs<br />
and built fourteen such dams. For information<br />
on this, see Living Energies pp.<br />
159,160, and The Water Wizard, pp. 101,<br />
121,122-34,209.<br />
3. See also The Water Wizard, p. 207.<br />
4. Schauberger established that turbulence<br />
was a natural automatic acceleration-restricting<br />
brake in flowing water, in a treatise<br />
he published entitled 'Turbulence.'<br />
5. Callum Coats in Living Energies, pp.<br />
176-7 describes one he saw.<br />
12. Supplying Water<br />
1. The Ecologist, May 30,1999.<br />
2. International Water Management Institute.<br />
3. Guardian Weekly, March 14,2001. The<br />
UN Department of Economic and Social<br />
Affairs estimated that six countries will<br />
account for half the increase: India,<br />
Bangladesh, Pakistan, China, Indonesia<br />
and Nigeria. Their startling projection is<br />
based on the assumption that fertility<br />
will continue to decline. The population<br />
explosion would be even more dramatic<br />
but for the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The report<br />
noted that increased international<br />
migration would be one consequence.<br />
The pressure on food resources will be<br />
enormous, but the impact on water supplies<br />
for the developing countries will be<br />
nothing less than catastrophic.<br />
4. National Geographic magazine,'Earth's<br />
Fresh Water under Pressure,' Sep. 2002<br />
5. The Ecologist, May 30,1999.<br />
6. National Geographic magazine, ibid.<br />
7. The Ecologist, May 30,1999.<br />
8. Ibid., Caspar Henderson.<br />
9. Ibid.<br />
10. Viktor Schauberger, Our Senseless Toil.<br />
11. Fluoride — Drinking Ourselves to Death<br />
by Barry Groves is a well-informed<br />
source of factual information on this<br />
subject. (Gill and Macmillan, 2001)<br />
12. Ibid.<br />
13. Waldblott, McKinney and Burgstahler:<br />
Fluoridation: The Great Dilemma, Coronado<br />
Press, 1978:288.<br />
14. Jour. Dent. Res. 1990; 69:723-7.<br />
15. 'Living in a democratic fluoridated country,'<br />
Australian Fluoridation News,<br />
Sep-Oct l995;31(5).<br />
16. Barry Groves, Fluoride: Drinking ourselves<br />
to Death, p. 227. Gill and Macmillan,<br />
2001.<br />
17. Viktor Schauberger, Nature as Teacher, p. 5.<br />
18. The best ones have a four-stage system:<br />
ceramic for bacteria, carbon for chemicals<br />
and organic contaminants, ion exchange<br />
for heavy metals, and block carbon<br />
for final cleansing; the filters being<br />
easy to change, every six months.<br />
19. We discussed higher energies interpenetrating<br />
our physical world in Chapter 2.<br />
20. Our Senseless Toil, Pt. II, p. 14.<br />
21. The energies are essentially dynagens, or<br />
growth-promoting, created by the biometal<br />
composition — silver (male), and<br />
copper (female); the silver also has bactericidal<br />
properties. Dynagens are also produced<br />
by the centripetal movement of the<br />
main water body flowing down the centre,<br />
raising the overall vitality, life-energy<br />
and wholesomeness of the water.<br />
22. Callum Coats describes these experiments<br />
in detail in Living Energies.<br />
ENDNOTES