Rare but natural effect (does not fit)
God caused the effect (plausible)
Some field created by the body (plausible)
Telekinesis (plausible)
Or, Shauberger got lots of lift from his vortexes, Shauberger said that our
heart does not pump blood, That the resistance of all those little veins
would be too much, unless they had some negative resistance structure to them
they could not work as they do, so that the heart times the pulses of blood
but the veins helped out a lot.
One could propose that if the blood had the right energies and mixtures of
elements in the blood that there may be an antigravitational effect helped
out by magnetic fields created by the body.
It is known that a north pole increases the energy in water and the late
Bruce depalma found that pouring drinks through the center of a stack of
magnets alters the wetness of the water depending on which way the drink is
poured from north to south or visa versa.
Yogis say that by breathing correctly you can do amazing things, Well that
would effect the oxygenation of your blood, what if by some process the blood
can be come slightly diamagnetic as water is, You then may expect the
levitation for the same reason that shauberger got levitation.
Shauberger was said to use the diamagnetic qualities of water and he equated
diamagnetisim with antigravity, Diamagnetics do not gain true levitational
effects by repelling of the earths magnetic field but there is a true
antigravitational effect, R. L Clark has some theories in that direction.
John Berry
Jerry W. Decker wrote:
> Hi Folks!
>
> Back to basics.
>
> It is reported that a person by the name of Jesus walked on water in the
> presence of witnesses. How would you duplicate this?
>
> If you try to stand on water, it will not support you and you will sink.
> There is a insect called a water glider which literally glides across teh
> surface of water, often stopping, but never sinking. This is because
> these insects are very light in 'weight' and have a small bubble of air
> trapped under the 'foot' of each leg, thus providing the buyoancy.
>
> Jesus must have weighed in at about 150 pounds. So there is no way a
> bubble of air under his feet could support him. For movie stunts
> duplicating this walking on water feat, a thick sheet of clear plastic or
> glass is placed slightly below the surface of water, making it invisible
> to anyone looking into the water.
>
> A person can easily walk on this supporting sheet giving the illusion of
> 'walking on water'. I doubt this was the case with the Jesus account.
> There was reported no helium or hydrogen balloon providing ballast to
> reduce his physical weight while walking on the water.
>
> If you could reduce your physical weight, you would not sink because your
> weight was not sufficient to penetrate the cohesiveness of the water
> molecules.
>
> So, as I see it, either Jesus had some way of altering either the surface
> of the water so that it would support him (as with the clear sheet), OR
> he could alter HIS OWN WEIGHT so that he represented a piece of walking
> styrofoam that could not sink.
>
> I will opt for the latter, he somehow reduced his physical weight to a
> degree that he could not sink. Anyone see any other way to do this?
> --
> Jerry W. Decker / jdecker@keelynet.com
> http://keelynet.com / "From an Art to a Science"
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