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SVP
Cosmology Part 17 - Gravity and Levitation |
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Author: Dale Pond
Sir Isaac Newton: "That one body may act upon another at a distance
through a vacuum, without the mediation of any thing else, by and
through which their action and force may be conveyed from one to the
other, is to me so great an absurdity, that I believe no man who has in
philosophical matters a competent faculty of thinking, can ever fall
into it." (Newton did not consider sub-quantum phenomena such as
sympathy...)17.01 - Discovering Cause of Gravity - "In the paper of
the Rev. H. W. Watson, on "The Progress of Science, its Conditions and
Limitations," he tells us that every thinking man recognizes the
subjective Self and the objective non-Self, and that this non-Self, so
far as it manifests its existence through the senses, is the object of
investigation of natural philosophers; but he admits that their
investigations have not bestowed upon modern science any results to
justify the language of causation. Universal gravitation is declared to
be a vast generalization, telling us that there is no more, but yet
just as much, of mystery in the whole sequence of astronomical
phenomena, as in the most humdrum processes of every-day experiences.
The unfamiliar has been explained by the familiar, and both remain in
their original mystery. The mystery, attendant upon gravitation, Kepler
prophesied would be revealed to man in this age: and the cautions and
inductive investigations which Keely has been pursuing, since 1888,
have enabled him to demonstrate that the unknown force, which for
fifteen years had baffled all his skill, is the same condition of
sympathetic vibration which control nature's highest and most general
operations:- the identical force which Faraday divined when he wrote,
in 1836: "Thus, either present elements are the true elements, or else
there is the probability before us of obtaining some more high and
general power of nature even than electricity, and which at the same
time might reveal to us an entirely new grade of the elements of
matter, now hidden from our view and almost from our suspicion."
[Bloomfield-Moore, Keely and His Discoveries]17.02 - Gravity Defined
by Keely - "Gravity is nothing more than an attractive, sympathetic
stream, flowing towards the neutral center of the earth, emanating from
molecular centers of neutrality; concordant with the earth's center of
neutrality, and seeking its medium of affinity with a power
corresponding to the character of the molecular mass. Gravity, he
defines as transmittive inter-etheric force under immense etheric
vibration. He continues: - The action of the mind itself is a vibratory
etheric evolution, controlling the physical, its negative power being
depreciatory in its effects, and its positive influence elevating."
[Chapter 5 of Keely and His Discoveries]
Pages: 10
Item # COS017
PRICE: $29.95
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