Nexus - 0804 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 53 of 85

Page 53 of 85
Nexus - 0804 - New Times Magazine-pages

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NEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCENEWSCIENCE One final comment. Some think that simple experiments are wasted time, effort, money and resources. They take the "[It] is, of course, altogether approach that "it's all been done before" valueless... Ours has been and so is well understood, therefore "don't the first, and will doubtless bother doing experiments, don't tinker, be the last, party of whites to don't try anything that hasn't been proved". visit this profitless locality." Other frequent comments... What good are "anomalies", tiny effects that have no possible use? What good is running a mag- net past a wire, because it only produces a tiny current? Has that not been scaled up with bigger magnets and more coils to pro- — Lt Joseph D. Ives, Corps of Topographical Engineers, 1861, on the Grand Canyon experiments with the possibility that you might experience something that no one "Landing and moving around else has noticed; or you might build your on the Moon offer so many own version of a "known" experiment that serious problems for human could well produce an interesting anomaly, which could be scaled up for the next big discovery. If nothing else, you are building up your equipment, skills and understand- beings that it may take science another 200 years to lick them." ing that will help you with future projects and experiments. — Science Digest, August 1948 So before you write an email criticising free energy seekers, you might also write to the providers and users of windpower, solar power, hydroelectric and geothermal power as well as anyone who drives a car, mows a lawn or runs a magnet past a coil to pro- duce electrical current, since they are pro- ducing energy from nothing and need to be corrected with your "laws". oo duce massive electrical power? What good is burning a few drops of gasoline or oil, only useful for lighting? Has that kind of thinking not been disproved by exploding the expanded gas or oil in a closed cylinder to transport our nation? There are, of course, many more obvious "anomalies" that have changed the world, conceived by perceptive people willing to About the Author: Jerry Decker is an avid alternative sci- ence networker and the founder and owner of KeelvNet. He has a 22-vear high side of the wave; then, when the vacu- um-release side of the wave comes into play, the rubber pushes the plates apart to "recock" or "reload" it for the next pressure wave that again collapses it. The machines that will present a problem requiring very-long-term monitoring and measurement are those like Bedini's and the Gray motor, which use very little elec- trical energy to get a large mechanical force, thus extending the life of the battery far longer than is normal. John Bedini says he has machines in his basement that have been running for years on a single battery. He says that Bearden visited once and accidentally bumped into a battery which had been running a machine for years; the battery fell apart and was dried out inside, but the machine kept running. Ask him; he'll tell you that him- self. The bottom line is that the device must produce sufficient energy to recharge the driving circuit; otherwise, over a very long period of time, it will run down as it proves out to be an extended pendulum effect, One final comment. Some think that simple experiments are wasted time, effort, money and resources. They take the approach that "it's all been done before" and so is well understood, therefore "don't bother doing experiments, don't tinker, don't try anything that hasn't been proved". Other frequent comments... What good are "anomalies", tiny effects that have no possible use? What good is running a mag- net past a wire, because it only produces a tiny current? Has that not been scaled up with bigger magnets and more coils to pro- "[It] is, of course, altogether valueless... Ours has been the first, and will doubtless be the last, party of whites to visit this profitless locality." — Lt Joseph D. Ives, Corps of Topographical Engineers, 1861, on the Grand Canyon "Landing and moving around on the Moon offer so many serious problems for human beings that it may take science another 200 years to lick them." — Science Digest, August 1948 "Landing and moving around on the Moon offer so many serious problems for human beings that it may take science another 200 years to lick them." "The ordinary ‘horseless carriage’ is at present a luxury for the wealthy; and although its price will probably fall in the future, it will never come into as common use as the bicycle." — The Literary Digest, 1889 "The ordinary ‘horseless carriage’ is at present a luxury for the wealthy; and although its price will probably fall in the future, it will never come into as common use as the bicycle." About the Author: Jerry Decker is an avid alternative sci- ence networker and the founder and owner of KeelyNet. He has a 22-year background in professional electronics, specialising in technical support and machine maintenance. A firm believer that information must be freely shared, particularly about free energy and gravity control technologies, Jerry has kept KeelyNet focused since its inception as a bulletin board in 1988. The goal of KeelyNet was, is and remains quite simple: to assist, inspire and catalyse working alternative science technologies that everyone can dupli- cate, verify and put into practical use to benefit our world. Jerry Decker can be contacted at: KeelyNet PO Box 570309 Dallas, TX 75357-0309, USA Tel/fax: +1 (214) 324 3501 Email: jdecker@keelynet.com Website: www.keelynet.com "X rays are a hoax." "Aircraft flight is impossible." "Radio has no future." — Lord Kelvin physicist and mathematician (1824-1907) "X rays are a hoax." "Aircraft flight is impossible." "Radio has no future." where a clockspring, once wound, will eventually run down unless it can somehow rewind itself—something that every branch of physics says cannot happen due to the first and second laws. In Bedini's case, as I understand it, the battery is recharged in a negentropic, nega- tive resistance effect peculiar to his machines. Research done by Prigogine and others in the fields of chaos theory, criticality, dis- sipative structures and self-organising fields is shedding light on how such processes work—research that I think will provide key design components when the first reproducible, self-running free energy circuit is publicly released and duplicated worldwide. — Lord Kelvin physicist and mathematician (1824-1907) experiment, share and expand on what has been found. Many of our most useful processes resulted from these simple, usele: alies. For that reason, KeelyNet has urged people to experiment wherever pos- sible, even repeating supposedly "known" 52 * NEXUS JUNE — JULY 2001 — Science Digest, August 1948 — The Literary Digest, 1889 www.nexusmagazine.com