Newton's one-way laws and hypothesis account for falling bodies which are within the same wave field, and as a consequence have weight in respect to their common centers of gravity. Falling bodies are polarizing bodies. They gain weight as they fall.
Newton’s laws do not account, however, for rising bodies which have reversed their polarities and lose weight as they rise.
Neither do they account for floating bodies, such as suns, planets of moons, which center their own wave fields, and as a consequence have no weight in respect to any other body in the universe.
Apples do expand into gases, however, and rise. And liquids do expand into vapors and rise. Cycles do not end in gravity. That is but their halfway point where they simultaneously reverse their every attribute.
They reverse their directions, their potentials, their polarities, their densities, their spectrum colors and their weight. One attribute cannot be reversed without reversing all. The polarizing direction of gravity multiplies the power of all expressions of force while the depolarizing direction of radiation divides them all in equal but opposite ratios.
The attribute of attraction which Newton gives to falling bodies exploding inward toward gravity should also apply to rising bodies exploding outward toward expanded space. To apply that truth we would have to say: Every particle of matter in the universe repels every other particle with a force which varies inversely as the product of the masses and directly as the square of the distance.
Can it be true, that every particle of matter attracts every other particle of matter in the universe and also repels every other particle? How can either or both be true when each denies the truth of the other?
Matter neither attracts nor repels matter. Matter moves in two opposite directions for the sole purpose of simulating IDEA in formed bodies by dynamic action-reaction sequences, and then seeks rest in the Light of IDEA to reawaken desire for again simulating IDEA.
All motion is unbalanced. All motion is forever seeking rest from its unbalanced condition by seeking voidance of its motion. [Walter Russell, A New Concept of the Universe, pages 49-50]
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