Many physicists and mathematicians have found fault with Einstein’s theories and equations. He has been so heavily advertised as the guy who figured it all out that it can be difficult to question his authority. Einstein did not have all the answers, however, and there is a lot of speculation as to whether or not he was one of those scientific stooges who got paid to paint things a certain way.
Whatever the truth may be, it is naïve to think that anyone’s theo- ries would occupy the throne of absolute truth indefinitely. His theories are as subject to question as anyone else’s.
As stated in Ring One, one of the major conflicts with Einstein was his early declaration that the Ether does not exist. He publicly called it an “antique concept” or an erroneous concept that couldn’t be included in the formal study of quantum physics. Up until he made that statement, the Ether, also known as the unified field, was a plausible concept, and scientific research was conducted know- ing that it might be a factor. Before Einstein’s “antique concept,” most everyone was comfortable searching for causal principles. Until then, it was permitted to believe that there was something greater
behind the five-sensory experience.
When the man who was widely recognized as the most bril- liant mind on the planet proclaimed that the Ether did not exist, everyone figured he had to be right. But when he recanted those statements in 1922, it never made the headlines.
The scientific research that has gone on since Einstein made his original proclamation has been conducted without taking the unified field into account. If you think about it, it is like trying to weave a tapestry without any strings on the loom. Everything falls apart and gets tangled when there is no matrix to hold it in place.
In the 1800s James Maxwell had come to an understanding of the Ether, but he did not live long enough to put his equations forward. After his death, one of his students, Oliver Heavyside, either misinterpreted or doctored Maxwell’s work in a way that caused many scientists to question what Maxwell had found out about the Ether.
Unfortunately a lot of people in the scientific community are systematic pawns who get paid well to put a different spin on im- portant information. There are many theories about Heavyside’s motives. It has been suggested that he was a puppet of powerful interest groups opposing general knowledge of the unified field. A population cannot be controlled if the people know they are con- nected, not just to all of creation, but to the Creator as well. Any
power freak worth his salt knows that it is much easier to manipu- late the masses if they believe they exist separately and apart from everything else, because this keeps everyone in a state of fear. No one knows what really happened to Maxwell’s equations, but it is quite possible that it suited someone’s agenda to keep the Ether concept out of circulation.
Prior to his passing, Maxwell was working on a rather diffi- cult concept that he called the “displacement factor.” According to him, the reason electrons flowing through a wire meet with resistance is because they have to displace something. He died before anyone found out that he had correlated this resistance factor with the Ether.
Slim believes that Maxwell hit the nail on the head. In his mind it makes perfect sense that the Ether is what is being displaced by electrons moving through the crystal lattice of a wire. In a very offhand, spontaneous experiment done in Brush, Colorado, he was able to prove this to himself.
Slim was driving along on a stretch of road crossed by a large power line when his car radio started generating so much static that he could not hear the radio station. Being hopelessly obser- vant and terminally inquisitive, and seizing the opportunity to do an experiment, he pulled off the road, popped an Environmental Clearing tape into his cassette recorder, and placed the recorder next to a Harmonizer.
In about twenty seconds there was no more static on the radio. He was getting perfectly clear reception, much better than what he had prior to approaching the power lines. The great reception lasted all the way back to Denver. Analyzing this event, Slim concluded that the frequencies from the Harmonizer had set up gravity waves or Ether waves. The resulting field caused the electrons in the over- head power lines to oscillate out of step or out of harmony with the sixty-cycles-per-second frequency pumping through the wire. In other words, the Harmonizer frequencies had generated an out- of-phase pulse, causing one batch of electrons to move rapidly through the wires while another batch got held back a little bit.
This action nullified the “displacement factor” that Maxwell had puzzled over, and cancelled the resistance in the wires.
Slim has not developed the mathematics for this effect, but the concept is much easier to grasp than the mathematics it would take to prove it. It is possible that Maxwell “did the math” already, but if that is true, any evidence of it got buried when Heavyside messed with those equations over one hundred years ago.
This spur-of-the-moment roadside experiment showed Slim that the power companies could greatly reduce their “line loss” by using the Harmonizer technology. Thirty percent of the power generated for delivery gets lost in space, so to speak, at great cost to the consumer. The pressure of the high voltage forces electrons out of the wire and into the surrounding atmosphere. These loose electrons result in a static electrical charge in the vicinity of the power lines.
It seems as if the frequency field generated by the Harmonizer created a superconductive state which resonated with the Etheric vibration or allowed some of the electrons passing through the power lines to respond in a different way. Whatever the case may be, a couple of milliwatts of power got pumped through the Har- monizer, and the static ceased to be a problem.
There is so much resistance to electron flow, and it must be caused by whatever the electrons are displacing. If in truth the re- sistance is Ether, it is interesting that something so invisible has so much power, more power perhaps than the high voltages that run to meet it. Mysteries still abound about the true nature of the invis- ible, omnipresent Ether field.
One can draw certain conclusions from these casual observa- tions. If subjected to sufficient scientific scrutiny, the results of these events could be defined in scientific terms, which at this point would have to include the Ether concept. We can include the Ether as part of the gravity field. Gravity field oscillations are the frequency source for the Ether, and it is possible that they give rise to forms in various components of the Ether.
Wachschmidt, a German author who researched some aspects of Rudolph Steiner’s indications. These experiments are repeatable, and it is easy to see that Maxwell’s displacement factor, the thing he was searching for at the time of his death, is actually the Ether pressure or gravitational wave pressure present in the crystal lat- tice of the copper or aluminum wire in these power lines. This pressure provides the resistance to the transmission of electrical power. With this experimental evidence and a frequency analysis of what we can do with sound, some bright, young mathematician or physicist who is well-grounded in reality and able to really wit- ness, meter and measure electrical phenomena could easily put rub- ber to the road and leave some skid marks in the scientific commu- nity.
The real world is where things happen. This is where repeat- able, experimental processes can be analyzed. Sound does not travel in straight lines; it travels in vortextual waves or what are called spinning waves. Any moderately sophisticated laboratory can docu- ment these subtle effects. They can extract data and use computers to show the combined effects of gravity frequencies.
The reader is referred to the work of Wilhelm Reich. What he called Kreistwelle or spinning waves are most likely synonymous with gravity wave fluctuation in vortextual motion. Also consider the formulas of the Austrian genius, Viktor Schauberger, and his understanding of the vortex.