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Around the turn of the 20th century, people began experimenting with an
entirely different energy source. They called it names like “subtle
energy,” “life energy,” “orgone energy,” “scalar energy.”
The existence of this energy was first theoretically proposed in the mid
1800's by the Scottish mathematician, James Clerk Maxwell. He predicted
the existence of scalar waves, which are a product of standing wave
patterns – waves which behave differently from electromagnetic waves,
which travel in a vector wave pattern. It was almost a half century
later before Nicola Tesla actually was able to demonstrate
experimentally the existence of scalar energy. When Tesla died, he took
the secret of scalar generation with him, and it took almost another
full century before science was once again able to positively
demonstrate the existence of scalar energy and turn to an exploration of
its potential.
People like Tesla and Wilhelm Reich developed devices which tapped into
this kind of energy and utilized it. They learned to generate it,
collect it, and broadcast it. They tuned into these energies, focused
them, and could pinpoint them onto a target such as a human body or a
garden or an animal.
The standard definition of scalar waves is that they are created by a
pair of identical vectoring waves (usually called the wave and its
antiwave) that are in phase spatially, but out of phase temporally. That
is to say, the two waves are physically identical, but 180 degrees out
of phase in terms of time. |
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