Okay, so I've read my way through 3 more related books.
1) The Heretics Notebook (Pulse of the Planet Vol. 5) edited by Dr. James Demeo
2) New View Over Atlantis by John Mitchell
3) A System of Caucasian Yoga transcribed by Count Stefan Colonna Walewski
'Heretics Notebook' is a collection of articles on orgonomy from various authors and dates to 2001. Of particular interest are several articles going into great depth on the Dayton Miller 'dynamic ether drift' experiments which, in agreement with Michelson-Morley, show a ~20km/second directional drift of the Earth and if nothing else prove to be a thorn in the side of relativity theory. Also, Dr. Demeo provides evidence of the efficacy of cloudbusting for breaking up desert conditions following work in the deserts near Ethiopia for 5 summers in the late 1990s. There are a couple articles on pleomorphism which finds parallels in the work of Antoine Bechamp, Gunther Enderlein, Gaston Naessens, Bong Han Kim, Hyun-won Kim, Pierre De Vernejoul, and Jeewanu Bahadurvc
'New View' is really 2 books sort of stuck together. The second half outlines various ancient systems of measurement (greek, roman, jewish, etc.) and how said measurements correspond to various geodetics. It is very similar to some chapters in Peter Thompkins 'Secrets of the Great Pyramid'. The first half discusses the role of ley lines across the surface of the earth connecting various sacred spots (e.g. churches, barrows, etc.) and the use of terms like 'ley' and 'dod' for locations along these lines, especially in the British Isles. The author relies heavily on Alfred Watkins 'The Old Straight Track'. He points out the correspondence of barrow construction (alternating layers of organic and metallic materials) and Reich's ORAC. He also mentions "Mysteries of the Cathedral at Chartres" by Louis Charpentier and his use of the term 'woivres'. Vassilatos claims this as the origin of the term 'wavril' or simply 'vril'. There is a bit of discussion of mixing the solar/celestial (via spires, lightning rods) and earth/terrestrial energy (via grounded iron, paramagnetic stones) and portioning these off into various qualities corresponding to various plenary, geomantic, or bodily energies.
3) 'Yoga' is a tad bizarre. It is hand-written and appears to be notes and diagrams scrawled out in an attempt to keep up with a speaker expressing an oral tradition. Most of the postures and mantras and such are similar to those seen in other systems of yoga or in western magic traditions. On a couple of pages though, the author describes the use of an (magnetized) iron (or magnetite) rod held in the left hand ('moon') and a hardened carbon rod held in the right hand ('sun') for the purpose of quick revitalization and claims this originated with Egyptian rights. That part at least appears to have some visceral truth to it.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment