"The lower diagram, marked C--C, represents their place in the tonal octave of the musical scale. The inert gas is the keynote of the electrical octave just as the note of C in the musical scale is the keynote for that octave. The keynote is omnipresent in all of the elements of matter as well as being omnipresent in the musical scale. By omnipresent we mean that it is in each note as well as its own tone. In music, for example, one is always conscious of
[p. 163]
[p. 164]
the presence of the keynote, no matter which one is being sounded, nor how many of them. [Atomic Suicide, page 162-164]
See Also
carbon octave
Diminished Octave
electrical
electrical affinity
electrical compression
Figure 1.8 - Electromagnetic Scale in Octaves
Figure 12.11 - Russells Locked Potential Full Ten Octave Gamut
Figure 12.12 - Russells Multiple Octave Waves as Fibonacci Spirals
Figure 12.12 - Russells Multiple Octave Waves as Fibonacci Spirals - See Also
Figure 17.03 - Analysis of the Octave Gravity Bar
Figure 7B.10 - Russells Periodic Chart of the first four octaves of proto-matter
Figure 9.16 - Russells 1-4 Octaves of Matter as Integrated Light - The Universal Constant
Law of Octave
Octave
octave of integration
octave pairs of rings
Octave periodicity
Octave Relationships
octave tones
octave wave shaft
Perfect Octave
RULE OF THE OCTAVE
Scale of the Forces in Octaves
seed of the octave wave
The Russell Nine Octave Chart of the Elements
The Six Octave Working Range 105
third octave
tonal octave
wave octave formula
11.15 - Indig Numbers - Inert Gases and Octave Position
12.17 - Note about Octave Relationships in Russells System
12.18 - Multiple Octave Progression