Science

Science deceives through its limited left-brain view.
In Man or Matter, Ernst Lehrs "Working from a detailed history of science, ... reveals and points out the errors, detours and dead ends human thinking took. He shows how science inescapably arrived at the illusions it holds today.. More importantly, how readers can extricate themselves from conventional misconceptions, promoted by conventional-mainstream-corporate education."
A pivotal moment was the Academia del Cimento’s (1657 - 1667) Doctrine of Contra Levitatem, which declared that ‘a science firmly based in observation has no right to speak of Levity as something claiming equal rank with, and opposite to, Gravity.’ (The Academia del Cimento was the first scientific society in Europe and preceded the founding of the Royal Society of London and the Académie des Sciences of Paris by several years.)
At one sweep, science denied Levity, the right-brain divine intuition, and locked science into Newtonian gravity. If only Newton had asked how the apple got into the tree instead!
By denying Levity, Gravity’s balancing force, science set off at speed on the destructive path it’s followed ever since.
Science is the new religion - ‘Follow the science’ is an oft-repeated mantra to control people’s beliefs and behaviours, but the cumulative effects of excluding Levity have spawned entire industries that rest on mistaken beliefs:
Everything we do today is destructive, explosive and centrifugal. E.g. fossil fuels and bombs, where the fastest part is on the outside like the rim of a wheel. Whereas nature is creative, implosive, and centripetal, so the fastest part is at the centre - like the eye of a tornado or the centre of the whirlpool in your sink.
Viktor Schauberger (1885 - 1958), ‘The Water Wizard’ was years ahead of his time. He used the creative power of nature to build over-unity devices, flying saucers (The Repulsine), and structured water applicances.
References
Media | Author/Director | Title |
---|---|---|
Book | Ernst Lehrs | Man or Matter |
Review | Ernst Lehrs | Goodreads - Man or Matter |