by Dolly Knight and
Jonathan Stromberg
Center for Implosion
Research
from
CenterFromImplosionResearch Website
“Today, people in the developed
world take water largely for granted
and treat it as a low cost
commodity rather than the priceless elixir it is.”
Water: The Elixir of Life
Water is the single most important substance for life on this planet.
Without water, no life would be possible. Water is so important, it is
everywhere, wherever you look on this planet. It is in the atmosphere as
humidity, clouds or rain, it is in the Earth’s crust within the rock and
soil fabric, and it is in every living being, animal or plant. Humans are
made up of over 70% water.
Ancient cultures and civilizations had great respect for water and
worshipped this “life substance” which they often equated with life force
and surrounded with myths and legends. These people knew the vital
importance of water.
Today, people in the developed world take water largely for granted and
treat it as a low cost commodity rather than the
priceless
elixir it is. Apart for drinking purposes it is used for the disposal and
transport of wastes, washing, cooling, heating and a multitude of industrial
processes. The pollution of our planet through careless and greedy use (or,
should we say, misuse) of its mineral resources has brought about the
inevitable pollution of water, inevitable because water is everywhere.
Our environmental dilemma boils
down to attitude. The Native American chief Seattle once said: “The white
man believes that the Earth belongs to him, we believe that man belongs to
the Earth”. We think this says it all.
Conventional science regards water as the lifeless substance H2O A chemical
compound. But where is its magic? Its subtle energetic powers that ancient
man revered? Dr. Joan Davis from Switzerland writes in her book entitled “Is
water more than H2O" that water has been reduced from a mythical elixir to a
molecular compound.
Once, science comprised the spiritual sciences of Alchemy and Metaphysics
and sought an holistic understanding of nature. With the taking of the
industrial path some 200 years ago, the spiritual enquiry was neglected by
the mainstream scientific establishment in favour of a purely materialistic
and rational understanding of natural and technological processes.
One of the basic premises of science is reproducibility. Any phenomenon to
be scientifically validated needs to be reproducible.
As far as water is concerned,
reproducibility may not always be possible, because water reacts to
extremely subtle influences. Snowflakes, for instance, all have their
individual shapes. There are no such things as identical snowflakes. This
singularity is a characteristic of nature and makes the testing of natural
phenomena under natural circumstances very difficult. As a result, science
has chosen a level of enquiry at which test results appear reproducible.
After all, what isn’t reproducible is not scientific!
Another mysterious aspect of water is its apparent ability to shape organic
forms. Theodor Schwenk investigated this in the 1960s and wrote about it in
his book Sensitive Chaos. What Schwenk came to realize was that organic
expressions of the natural world had locked in them the dynamics of water
motion. The tissue of the walls of the human heart and arteries is formed
with a twist. The fibers of the tissue run in a spiraling way. This means
that blood flowing through these vessels is caused to spiral as well.
At the pre-embryonic state, the information and genetic make-up of that
being was held in a watery solution. Water, as we shall explore later on,
has a natural desire to flow in spirals. This motion is intrinsic to the
very nature of water. In Schwenk’s opinion this intrinsic watery motion is
primary - the cardio-vascular system is secondary and was formed in harmony
with the original flow. Similarly, he observed that animals such as rays and
jelly fish are almost moulded around watery motion. The movement and
propulsion of the ray is very much that of the wave. When the jelly fish
swims, it causes turbulences in the water that are a mirror image of its own
form.
The spiralling form of the
tissues around the human heart
The Memory of Water
Phenomenon and Homeopathy
Apart from the many well researched properties of water, which make it
unique as the life supporter of this planet, there is one ability of water
that mainstream science has tried to ignore and deny. It is the “memory of
water phenomenon”. This phenomenon obviously lies beyond the accepted level
of enquiry and little effort has been made by conventional research
institutes to understand this phenomenon. However there are exceptions, and
an exciting new understanding is emerging of the marvellous substance -
water. Various researchers, such as Prof. Benveniste, Dr. Ludwig and Prof.
Schweitzer, have provided clear proof that water acts as a liquid tape
recorder and is able to receive, store and transmit electromagnetic
vibrations.
Because water molecules have a
positive and negative pole, they behave like little magnets. They attach
themselves to their neighbouring molecules and form clusters of several
hundred molecules. This has been known for some time. These clusters are
very sensitive structures and vibrational influences can impress themselves
upon them. This is what gives water the ability to store information.
This is closely linked to homeopathy. In homeopathy a substance is diluted
so many times, that eventually there is no molecule of the original
substance left. Yet it still has an effect. This has been shown in countless
experiments, and, after all, homeopathy is 200 years old and still going
strong.
Homeopathy works because of the cluster’s ability to store vibrational
imprints. Every substance and element has it’s own individual vibrational
pattern - a bit like an energy blueprint. If you carry out the homeopathic
process of diluting and succussing, this vibrational pattern becomes locked
into the cluster structure of water. When you drink this homeopathically
prepared remedy, the cluster structure is transferred into you and you
respond to the vibrational pattern of the original substance with which the
remedy was prepared.
This phenomenon was shown to occur under rigid scientific conditions by
Prof. Benveniste in France in the late 1980s and was confirmed by
researchers at five different universities. It caused quite a stir and a
subsequent cover-up by the mainstream scientific community
Pollution
If water is as susceptible to vibrational imprinting as this, will it also
take on the imprints of environmental pollutants and chemicals and transfer
them to us when we drink water? It does seem to be so; Dr. Wolfgang Ludwig
in Germany has carried out tests which show that not only do the physical
pollutants have a damaging effect, but also the water which has been exposed
to those pollutants, because the cluster structure has taken on those vibrational imprints. This has huge ramifications for us all. Basically,
conventional water and sewage treatment systems are not adequate.
They may remove the physical
pollutants and produce tap water that is chemically clean, however the
cluster structure of the water is completely unaffected by the treatment and
will, after treatment, still convey the vibrational pattern of toxins and
chemicals to the human body. But the problems do not end with tap water.
There is no water course on this planet that is completely unaffected by
human impact. Atmospheric pollution, coming from industrial processes,
nuclear tests and electromagnetic pollution, coming from the global power
and communications grid, have all had a negative impact world wide.
Nature’s Cycles
Our planet is part of the cosmos. As such it is in constant “communication”
with what is happening in our solar system and beyond. The cyclic phases of
the moon, planetary constellations, sunspot activity, etc. all have an
effect on this Earth and life on it.
Water appears to act as the sensory organ of the Earth for these cosmic
cycles. Tides are a well know examples of how water reacts to the phases of
the moon. Theodor Schwenk, whom we’ve mentioned earlier, was one of the
pioneers investigating the subtle effects of the cosmos on water. He
developed methods which clearly showed variations in water response to
changes in planetary constellation. He found that moving water acts as a
receiver, while still water preserves the received information. He carried
out experiments with water throughout a solar eclipse. Samples of water were
shaken at regular intervals before, throughout and after the solar eclipse.
Grains of wheat were subsequently germinated in the various samples of
water. Schwenk found that the growth of wheat germs was stunted in the
samples of water which were shaken during the solar eclipse, whereas the
growths were normal before and after the eclipse. This correlation of
planetary constellation and plant growth was confirmed using other
techniques.
Lawrence Edwards carried out fascinating work on how the shape of tree buds
changes during the winter months with the planetary alignment. He took
photographs of a beech tree bud every day during the winter months and found
that it changed shape, following a fortnightly rhythm right through the
winter. This rhythm, which was confirmed by studies on many trees from
different areas, coincided with a particular line up of the planet Saturn,
the moon and the Earth. Other trees were found to have cycles coinciding
with other alignments. For example, the oak coincides with the alignment of
Mars, the birch with Venus and the cherry with the
Sun. Similar cyclic
patterns apply to flower buds too.
The 16th century herbalist and astrologer Nicolas Cullpepper
realized that
all plants and herbs are associated with different planets and need to be
picked at specific times. Water is highly susceptible to changes in cosmic
constellation and, because the Earth is largely covered by water, it acts as
a mediator between Cosmos and Earth. It is receptive to cosmic information
and conveys this information to all living organisms, since they are largely
composed of water.
The whole Cosmos works on harmony; that’s what keeps it all together. The
Earth is part of the whole and is governed by cosmic laws. That’s why the
Earth’s magnetic and electric fields are all in tune with the whole cosmic
set up. All living organisms, including humans, need these natural outside
influences to function well and to keep themselves in tune with the cosmos.
Let us look at the hydrological cycle. Water evaporates from the seas
providing the atmosphere with water, which condenses forming clouds and
rain. Rain falls to the ground where part of it runs off and flows back into
the seas via river systems. The other part of it permeates into the ground
and replenishes the groundwater reserves before, after a period of time,
feeding back into the river systems. When water runs off without percolating
through the ground, it is passing through what could be termed an half
hydrological cycle. When it takes the detour through the ground as
groundwater it is carrying out the full hydrological cycle. This detour of
water through the ground is immensely important. When the hydrological cycle
is tampered with and the natural full cycle is reduced, we are making
ourselves prone to natural disasters.
These should not really be
called natural disasters, because they are a result of man’s intervention.
For example, in the last couple of hundred years the area of concrete and
tarmac cover has increased tremendously. The surface of the Earth is being
covered over. Water is channelled, rather than being allowed to percolate
through the ground. Forests, which promote the percolation of water through
the ground, are cut down. What are the effects? -changes in climate and
freak weather patterns, droughts, lowering of the water table, soil erosion,
river floods, desertification, etc., etc., etc.
Viktor Schauberger (1885
-1958)
“People consider me mad.
This may be so, in which case it does not matter if there is one more
imbecile in this world. However, if I am right and the Sciences are
mistaken, then may the Lord have mercy on mankind”.
Viktor Schauberger lived in
Austria in the early part of this century. He came from a long standing
family tradition of foresters and became a forester himself. As a child the
old traditional knowledge about trees, water and log transport were passed
down
to him. As a forester, he had ample opportunity of studying the workings of
nature in unspoilt Alpine forests. Being a very intuitive man, very much in
tune with nature, he soon developed ideas and theories regarding nature and
particularly water that were in conflict with conventional scientific
understanding.
In the 1920s he designed log
transport flumes incorporating his unconventional ideas, which were very
successful. “Understand and copy nature” was his maxim. He criticized the
scientific and technological establishments very sharply for being ignorant
about the true workings of nature and for the destructive effects their
understanding in the areas of forestry, agriculture, water management and
energy generation had on the environment.
Early on he discovered, by studying nature first hand, that there was an
underlying principle governing all natural processes. This principle he
called “implosion”. He became a prolific writer and inventor. His inventions
were linked to water supply, natural river regulation, agriculture,
propulsion and energy generation and were all based on implosion.
Implosion
We all know that explosion is a sudden expansion of matter. Fuel, for
instance, is exploded in our car engines, which is what makes them go. So,
what is implosion?
Implosion is a suctional process that causes matter to move inwards, not
outwards as is the case with explosion. This inward (centripetal) motion,
however, does not follow a straight (radial) path to the centre; it follows
a spiralling, whirling path. This is called a vortex and it is the secret of
nature. Have you ever wondered why bath water, when emptied, flows through
the plug-hole in this spiralling vortex fashion? Water will always try to
follow the path of least resistance. This is what the vortex is enabling it
to do. It is reducing resistance by curving more and more inwards thereby
avoiding the confrontational resistance of straight motion.
This is the fundamental reason
for the plug hole vortex phenomenon. The
Coriolus Effect due to the Earth’s
rotation determines the direction of spin of large scale natural vortices
such as whirlwinds. The direction of small-scale vortices, such as your bath
tub vortex, are more determined by movement of your bath water before you
pulled the plug. A plug-hole vortex only needs a small impulse to set it in
motion either way. Try it out the next time you empty the bath. And listen
to those sucking, gurgling noises. That is implosion in action.
A characteristic feature of a vortex is that the outside of the vortex moves
slowly and the centre moves fast. As water is imploded in a vortex, suspended
particles, which are denser than water, are sucked into the centre of flow,
frictional resistance is reduced and the speed of the flow is increased.
This was verified through experiments conducted by Prof. Franz Popel at the
Stuttgart Technical University in Germany in 1952.
The vortex motion, which also causes a drop in temperature and an increase
in density, is paramount for water to stay healthy and disease free. Natural
watercourses are naturally spiralling and meandering and the water in them
forms whirls and eddies, which are vortices. The vortex motion can also be
observed in whirlwinds. The suctional force generated within tornadoes is
typically strong enough to lift houses and uproot trees.
In nature there are virtually no straight forms, and whenever possible
vortices, spirals and curves are produced to reduce resistance. Yet in
conventional technology, explosion/combustion and straight motion are
employed, both of which increase resistance and temperature and are
fundamentally against nature and every living thing. The realization of this
caused Viktor Schauberger, the father of implosion technology, to proclaim
emphatically:
" Our technologists are moving matter incorrectly. Their
technologies and interference with nature is detrimental to us and our
planet”.
Viktor Schauberger’s idea and explanations regarding
implosion, however, go
further than the physical vortex phenomenon. He was a very sensitive man,
gifted with an intuitive insight into the subtle reality that lies beyond
our senses. He realized that the physical vortex motion he observed
everywhere in nature is the result of etheric energy dynamics caused by the
interplay of Cosmic and Earth energies. Repeatedly in his writings there are
exclamations such as,
“Trees do not grow, they are
grown! Migrating birds do not fly, they are flown! River trout do not
swim, they are swum!”
What he was trying to express
was that there is a causative, energetic reality at work in Nature. what we
see in the physical world as material objects and motions are merely
expressions and reactions to these etheric dynamics. Needless to say, these
etheric dynamics follow vortex paths. For water to stay healthy, it needs to
be allowed to exercise its preordained spiralling motion, which enables it
to tune itself to the Cosmos and to stay energetically charged. Modem water
treatment and supply systems, with their pressurized straight pipes, do not
consider these aspects of water. What can be done to improve the energetic
qualities of mains water, before we drink it?
Viktor Schauberger proposed a system of mechanical vortexing of water in egg
shaped are merely expressions vessels as a means of re-energizing and
revitalizing water; the action of the vortex also has a ‘retuning’ effect on
the molecular cluster structure of water, erasing detrimental informational
patterns.
After researching Viktor Schauberger for a couple of years we were convinced
that he had been on the right track. We started our full time research in
September 1997 and developed an implosion machine.
References and Further
Reading
-
Alexandersson, O. 1996.
Living Water Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy.
Gateway Books, Bath, UK.
-
Coats, C. 1996. Living
Energies: Viktor Schauberger ’s brilliant work with natural energy
explained, Gateway Books, Bath, UK.
-
Hall, A. 1997. Water,
Electricity and Health. Hawthorn Press, Stroud, UK.
-
Ludwig, W. 1991, in Treven &
Talkenhammer, ed., Umweltmedizin, Mowe-Verlag, Idstein, Germany
-
Popp, EA. 1979, in
Bioresonance and multiresonance therapy, Hans Haug International Vol. 1.
1993. Holland
-
Schiff, M. 1995. The Memory
of Water: Homeopathy and the Battle of Ideas in the New Science. Harper
Collins, UK
-
Schwenk, Th. 1962. Das
Sensible Chaos. (The Sensitive Chaos) Verlag Freies Geistesleben,
Stuttgart, Germany
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