Ancient and Modern Physics by Thomas E. Willson
page 81 of 83 (97%)
page 81 of 83 (97%)
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The point is that along this axial line connecting the
laya centers play all the seven solar forces--light, heat, electricity, etc.--that affect the earth, and on every side of this line is the "electric field" of these forces. To this line any escaping solar energy is drawn, as the electricity of the air is drawn to a live wire or magnet. But there is little or none to escape. From the laya point in the sun to the laya point in the earth, the solar energy is transferred as sound is carried along a beam of light (photophone), or electricity from one point to another without a wire. To the advanced student of electricity the ancient teaching is easily apprehended; to others it is difficult to make clear. These laya centers, it says, are "the transforming points of energy." From the earth laya to the solar laya centre, the energy, we may say, is positive; beyond both the solar and the earth laya centre, in the fields touching at them, it is negative --or vice versa. The line connecting the layas is the "Path of Fohat"--the personification of solar energy. This is a very crude and brief way of putting many pages of teaching, but the important point is that this line between the layas is one of solar energy, with a dynamic "field" of solar energy, elliptical in shape, connecting with the reverse fields at the laya points. These "dead points" are the limits of each electric field, which "create", we say in electrical work, opposing fields beyond them. Each one of these planets has its laya centre inside the sun's photosphere. Each planet has a line of solar energy with its |
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