My favorite term for energies of this type is aetheric stress waves and I
have the lab tests and math to bring all this to a more "scientific" basis.
Also, if you can get ahold of Paul Stowe's papers on treating the aether as
a hydrodynamic superfluid you will see a lot of the math and physics behind
this.
Dan
At 05:42 PM 2/8/98 +1000, you wrote:
>At 22:26 7/02/98 -0800, you wrote:
>>
>>
>>On Sat, 7 Feb 1998, Jerry W. Decker wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Folks!
>>>
>>> There are a few of us who are of the opinion that many ancient drawings
>>> and artifacts might well be representative of lost technology that
>>> differs from our concepts. A friend from England recently mentioned the
>>> discovery of large Egyptian tuning forks whose function is currently
>>> unknown. We also think some of the devices are Pavlita style
>>> psychotronic generators that use combinations of elements to bias the
>>> flow of subtle energies including aether. A recent post from a Russian
>>> scientist friend provided this interesting tidbit;
>>
>>Interesting that this should be brought up -- there are so many
>>indications that ancient civilizations were privvy to knowledge and
>>technologies handed down from previous civilizations unknown. It's almost
>>as if a singular or multiple civilizations rose up to a level of
>>technology equivalent to or in excess of our own, and then absolutely
>>vanished. Boom. Gone. Absolute catastrophic failure. The remanents of the
>>knowledge of the ancients was passed down and spread to emerging cultures
>>and manifests itself in Indian, Egyptian, Incan, Mayan, and other ruins.
>>What I find interesting is the various words present in sanskrit
>>vocabulary in the Vedic texts which correlate to modern interpretations of
>>the aether and it's nature (was it Tesla who supposably began using
>>Sanskrit terminology to describe scalar waves?). Fascinating stuff.
>
>
>Hi all,
>
>did Tesla describe scalar waves? I know that Tesla did NOT have much regard
>for the "Hertzian" notion of transverse electromagnetic wave propagation
>through space. In a literal sense Tesla was quite correct, I believe, as
>the so called "transverse wave" is something that exists in matter - NOT
>VACUUM.
>
>The writings and utterances of Tesla provide reference to what he called
>"electrical sound waves" or "longitudinal waves" in the ether. This was
>Tesla's conceptual solution to the "mechanics" of electromagnetic wave
>propagation through Vacuum. He provided some convincing coceptual and
>experimental arguements to backup his case.
>
>I don't think Tesla ever described "scalar waves", did he?
>
>Bill.
>
>
>
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