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Attraction and Repulsion 134-135

RETURN to Book 02 - Chapter 11 - Attraction and Repulsion


They are so expanded that they integrate readily.

Their opposing streams join.

 Hard substances on the contrary, do not unite so readily in the low pressures of this planet. They require the force of such high opposing pressures as those of our sun to make them unite.

 Two gases such as fluorine (501—) and lithium (501+) will leap together with explosive violence in ordinary atmospheric pressure.

 Pour several liquids in the same stream and soon they will all blend if the planes of their atoms are not too far removed.

 A stream of metal balls would require the pressure force of a very high temperature to expand their particles so that they would blend as one liquid metal stream.

 The constant of activity would not in any way be changed by thus changing its dimensions.

 The metal would not become more active by expanding it. The expansion would but retard one time dimension and accelerate the other.

 It was not less active while it was contracted. What it lacked in activity of rotation is made up for in activity of revolution.

 Activity never lessens and inactivity never increases because of any change of dimension.

Every expression of motion has its equal and opposite expression.

There can be no increase or decrease in any effect of motion without a balancing increase or decrease in its opposite effect.

 Apparent decrease in activity of a dense mass is merely a lessening of the speed of rotation and a balancing increase of the speed of revolution.

 There are two speeds, two opposing speeds, which are equal and opposite.

 To apply the brake to one is to accelerate the other and vice versa.

Just so with volume.

Expanded volume has less apparent ability to attract.

Therefore, there must be relatively less positive charge in expanded than in contracted volume.

 The volume of a hydrogen or lithium atom is greater than that of a berylium atom, and the volume of berylium is greater than that of boron. The boron atom has greater power to attract and greater power to repel than the berylium atom.

The power to attract lessens as volume increases.

 The power to repel also lessens as volume increases.

 This is true in every one of the octaves of the elements, in every element, in every atom of every element and in every planet and light unit of every atom.

 Each element has a different volume and mass and each one, in accordance with its potential position, has a separate and individual ratio of attraction and repulsion power.

 In any mass the decrease in volume is in exact proportion to the increase in its potential.

In any mass the decrease in volume is in exact proportion to the increase in positive charge, contraction pressure and temperature.

 Mass of less volume is of relatively higher potential, greater positive charge and greater pressure than a similar mass of greater volume.

 Mass of less volume is contracted mass, and similar mass of greater volume is expanded mass.

 Contracting mass draws away from similar, expanding mass in the opposite direction, forming an eccentric orbit of revolution around the nucleal center of its system.

 The orbit of any contracting mass is ever drawing closer to the nucleal center of its system in closing spiral lines. [See vortex]

 All mass with a decreasing orbit is ever accelerating its speed of revolution in that orbit.

 All of the conditions precedent to the appearance of increasing ability of mass to attract and to repel have eight conspicuous effects in

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common. These are increasing centripetal preponderance, pressure, temperature, speed of revolution and positive charge, and decreasing volume, area of orbit and speed of rotation.

 On the contrary, all of the conditions precedent to the appearance of decreasing ability of mass to attract and to repel have the eight opposite effects in common. These are decreasing centrifugal preponderance, pressure, temperature, speed of revolution and negative discharge, and increasing volume, area of orbit and speed of rotation.

 In any mass the greater its speed of revolution, the greater its power to attract and to repel.

In any mass the greater its speed of rotation, the less its power to attract and to repel.

As all mass is constantly changing both of these dimensions, all mass is varying in its ability to attract and to repel.

 Revolution is the opposite of rotation.

 One exactly balances the other in accordance with the law that there can be no increase or decrease in any effect of motion without a balancing decrease or increase in its opposite effect.

Also, one eventually overtakes the other, in accordance with the universal law of sequential preponderance in all opposite effects of motion.

 Revolution is an effect of motion employed by electricity to increase surface tension pressure in order that it may accomplish its desire of converting the universe into solids.

 Electricity conquers magnetism in its sequentially preponderant power of generation and regeneration.

 Rotation is an effect of motion employed by magnetism to counteract the desire of electricity by dissociating that which electricity has associated.

 Magnetism conquers electricity in its sequentially preponderant power of degenerating that which electricity has generated.

 All mass is simultaneously electric and magnetic, but preponderantly one or the other cumulatively in endless repeative sequence. [See Law of Assimilation]

All mass simultaneously revolves and rotates though one effect is always preponderant while the other one is preparing for its right of preponderance.

 All opposite effects of motion are simultaneous in the expression of their sex opposition but preponderant in sequence in each sex expression. [See 14.35.1 - Keely 3 6 and 9]

 Each oscillation of the opposing electric and magnetic forces is simultaneous, but one is greater than the other.

 In this universe of more and less, all division into the more and the less occurs simultaneously, but both unequal divisions are cumulative in their inequality. One always overtakes and overbalances the other though both are progressing in opposite directions. [See 14.35.1 - Keely 3 6 and 9]

 Man's inhalation, for example, is simultaneously accompanied in a less degree by his exhalation, and conversely his exhalation is accompanied in a less degree by his inhalation.

 While he is inhaling in preponderance through his nostrils, he is exhaling in a less degree through every pore of his body. Conversely, while he is exhaling in preponderance through his nostrils, he is inhaling in a less degree through his body.

 The time will eventually come when the inhalation-exhalation sequences will become preponderant through his pores. He will then gradually lose vitality until disintegration has conquered his ability to integrate sufficiently to hold his body together as a unit.

 Degeneration will eventually conquer generation until regeneration again has its turn.

 All idea is repeative and no effect of motion once started ever ends.

 The end of an octave is but the beginning of another octave.

 The end of a cycle is but the beginning of another cycle.

 The end of a wave is but the beginning of another wave.

 Also, the end of a life is but the beginning of another life.

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Created by Dale Pond. Last Modification: Wednesday May 17, 2017 04:23:49 MDT by Dale Pond.