Re: Tapping the Casimir force

mindtech@nor.com.au
Wed, 14 Oct 1998 12:29:28 +1000

>"Mr. Keely illustrates his idea of "a neutral centre" in this way:
>
>We will imagine that, after an accumulation of a planet of any diameter
>- say, 20,000 miles more or less, for the size has nothing to do with
>the problem - there should be a displacement of all the material, with
>the exception of a crust 5000 miles thick, leaving an intervening void
>BETWEEN this crust and a centre of the size of an ordinary billiard
>ball, it would then require a force AS GREAT TO MOVE THIS SMALL CENTRAL
>MASS AS IT WOULD TO MOVE THE SHELL OF 5000 miles thickness.
>

Yes, and this can also be thought of in terms of a variable time field
which decreases in density as one moves outward. Mass and time are
interdependent. It takes just as much energy to move a small mass through a
dense time field as vice versa.

That is why spherical forms and orbital phenomena take precedence in
nature. A hierarchical and spontaneous organization of mass within time.
It's like living in a giant clock (the solar system) where each part
exchanges matter and/or energy to coexist in the same timeframe.

Accordingly, altered timeflow is implicit in FE. You are imbalancing a
local system such that the compensatory force must enter from outside.

>The imagination staggers in contemplating the immense load WHICH BEARS
>UPON THIS POINT OF CENTRE, WHERE WEIGHT CEASES. This is what we
>understand by a neutral centre."
>---------------
>Some additional comments about this cancellation of incoming aether vs.
>outgoing aether radiating from a central sun inside the planet and which
>would produce just such a shell suspended on this billiard ball sized
>'neutral center' in the case of a hollow earth as mentioned in this
>

As you correctly say, a neutral center is a cancellation zone. Electrical
or otherwise. Actually it is a point of orthorotated energy. A window to
the "outside" that nature, in the interests of self-preservation, will use
anything at its disposal to close.

Peter Nielsen