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Attraction and Repulsion 140

RETURN to Book 02 - Chapter 11 - Attraction and Repulsion


In any mass the preponderance of the apparent ability to attract or to repel is proportionate to its preponderance of positive charge or negative discharge.

In any mass increase of positive charge is accompanied by increase of negative discharge in universal ratio until the conductivity of negative discharge exceeds the inductivity of positive charge, in accordance with the universal law of sequential preponderance of all opposite effects of motion.

PERIODICITY OF ATTRACTION.

 The relative ability of the elements of matter to appear to attract is in the order of their periodicity, as has been shown in the chart of the periodic table of the elements.

 The first gravitational tone is 1+, the lithium line.

 The second gravitational tone is 2+, the berylium line.

 The third gravitational tone is 3+, the boron line.

 There are mid-tonal pressure walls, in the seventh, eighth, ninth and tenth octaves which in their aggregate constitute one tone between 3+ and 4++.

 The fourth tone, 4++, is a bi-sexual tone in which the ability to attract is equal to the ability to repel.

 This progression is increasingly male in sex and increasingly electro-positive in charge.

PERIODICITY OF REPULSION.

 The relative ability of the elements to repel is in the same order. The first radiational tone is 1—, the fluorine line.

 The second radiational tone is 2—, the oxygen line.

 The third radiational tone is 3—, the nitrogen line.

 The same relatively repellent order regarding mid-tonal pressure walls prevails on the female side of 4++, as on the male side.

 The planes of these opposing pressure walls vary from 0° at 0= to 90° at 4++.

 1 + and 1 — are absolutely parallel to each other, likewise 2 + and 2 —, and 3 + and 3 —, in each wave, but in each half of the wave the pressure walls oppose the opposite halves of the adjoining waves.

 The plane of the double tone, 4++ in the fifth octave, is at an angle of 90° to the south inertial and secondary vertical planes of their cubes, and is parallel to the primary vertical plane. The other 4++ positions approximate these relations.

 The relations of the planes of the tonal pressure walls is of vast importance and together they form one of the most important of the dimensions.

 If there is such incontrovertible evidence that the ability of mass to appear to attract and to repel mass is but relative because of the variation in states of motion within each mass, is it not better to rewrite the law as it has been suggested at the beginning of this chapter?

Every mass has the apparent relative ability to attract and to repel every other mass, its relative ability depending on its relative potential.
 

Universal Ratios
Universal Ratios
 

 
140

Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Wednesday May 17, 2017 04:24:59 MDT by Dale Pond.