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Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
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Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
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Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
SCIENTIST EVOLVES NEW SPACE THEORY
Russell, In Book Out To-Day,
Attacks Present Beliefs
'SOLIDS ARE. ELECTRICITY'
Energy Forces Welded To-gether by Gravitation,He Says
Walter Rus,seU, President of the
I Society of Arts and Sciences, believes he has evolved a. new theory to ex-plain the laws of splltce and the heavenly bodies that move in it.
Let our scientists bend their ener-gies to the understanding of thls
l"simple" principle, according to Mr. Russell, and an ocean steamshlp like the Leviathan could easily produce her own fuel from sea water "in a machine not larger than & newspaper printing press."
This new theory ls expounded in Russell's new book, "The Russell Genero-Radiative Concept, or the Cyclic Theory of Continuous' Mo-tion," which is out to-day. It Is an
Ie . elaboration and expansion, he states in the preface of his book. "The Universal One," published four years ago.
Criticises Modern Science It was in that book, he states. that
he specifically outlined the unity of electricity and gravitation, which, three' years later, was .announced- by Einstein without "crediting hlm with priority of discover'"
In his new book Mr. Russell sug-gests that a "major surgical operation upon the present beliefs" Is the only salvation for present-day science.
The writer opens his attack upon these bellefs by challenging Newton's principle that the planets would fall
a into the sun and the moon into the earth if their orbital motions were stayed. This he claims to have proved untrue by a "solar graVitational" ex-periment in whi-ch a miniature modeH
- of the sc-lar system Is set up, with - 1ts poles Similarly placed. When all
these revolving planets and satellit~s e are stopped they show no inclination
to fall in to one another.
r other Incorrect Notion!! 1 Even our notions of gravitation and .. radiation are , incorrect, Russell L. further asserts. Solids are composed I. of electricity and owe their existence r to the power of gra vi ta tion to keep 1. electrical forces welded together into - what we term solids. Gravitation he
defines as being the "charging posi-tive force which pulls inward from within. while radiation is the dis-charging negative force which pushes outward from within." -~
Betw #3n every two maF \Se~! space, Russell maintains, the l d entre
: of gravitation arou~ 0 -:::11 ~h , 1 revolve In orbit~- 'C"-! Theselti.~ . held together by 'ne pole " ~
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SCIENTIST 'W1ao E'V'ol'V'ed Theory of Space
WALTER RUSSELL
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apart by another, these two poles de- a: ciding the potential relations and Sl orbital motions of any two heavenly II bodies. d
"This hitherto undiscovered spatial CI control of mass," Russell goes 'on, "is fl the connecting link between mind s j and matter, the invisible and the visible universes. All soUds are merely polarized extensions of the et)ntrol-ling poles in space and obey their w11l, just as man-made machines are extensions Of men's minds and obey their will."
,Weight Is DImension ,
On this theory it follows, according to Ru.ssell. that moving bodies have no weight and that weight is a dimension of motion, just as tem-perature in all Its changes rises from and settles back to its position of equilibrium at zero. I
The Russell' t~ory , tries to disprove the generally held belief that like charges repel and OPpOSite charge:; attract one ,~tnother. In point of fact he would have us believe all masses are doubly chiuged, or, to put it dIf-ferently, there is no such thing as a negative charge, for that is but an- a other way of designating a discharge,
"Many new metals of great value to S, industry can be secured," he c'on- v tends, "by understanding nature's '" simple but hitherto unknown princi-plES. Carbon metals, for example, f( will have steel. Silicon steel will be- h come an .. il1eal structural steel, with B more than double its present strength, e: and very much cheaper because of 'P , the unlimited supply of sand as com- S' pared with iron ore." n
Sir Arthur Eddington's theory of a d "running down universe" is treat-ad d" satirically by Russell, who counters b with the assertion: "All things are P growing things, whether stars or ap- Ii , pIes, and all growing things tallow t~ the same law," tc
"I beJ!eve. there!ore," he says, "th3.t all motton iI!I the result of setting up an endless .series of high and low pressure conditions which are inter-changing in their constant and use-less - attempts to equalize. ThIs can never be accompliShed &0 long as the One Force & Hving, pulsating orce."
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
\ , A'll'! LE ON EXHIBITIth' F I'ADTI U\ BY JlALrER RU..:.3ELL "THE INVISIBLE UNIVl
V,al terRussell 2
It is a new idea. Until now, the invisible universe ha.; remained
invisible, even to the phy~ic' s who have measured and re-measured it
-- but who do not appear to have arrived at any satisfactory conclusion
about its fundall'enta.la. lor have the physiciits, to date, been able to
break down any of the laws of the Rus.,ell concept of the universal ma-
chinery. They see them. but are dtill un'l'illing to believe.
A well-known ph1 sicist, on t e staff of a university renowned for
scientific ir.tegrity, said -- after many talks witn the artist -- "I
can see your !:Joint, r. ~us.;ell. But after a lifetime of training aJ.ong
other lines. I find it difficult to go on seeing it:
To W"1 ich the arti st replied cheerfully -- "7ha t, professor , is exac'ly
why I had to paint these p~ tures. so that you could go on seeing them
until YOll accent my two-y~ theory of the one force of the universe."
As a matte" of fact, it. wad at the sugge.;tion of a scientist that the
pictures were l'ainted . Twelve years ago, ,.alter Russell had reached the
top of the artistic ladder in J~eri c~. He had not even begun to think
about how t~e unive1"se works . vixty thc~sand a year was h~s average
earning capacity. for this man's genius is not the kind that starves in
garrets. He is one of the first five Ameri a~ sulptors and portrait-
painters, and has beEn for some time the president of the Jociety of Arts
and Sciences. He has been acknowledged as the father of the co-cp erative
apartment idea. for he was one of the first of the experimentalists in
that field to make the sy~tem practical and se~f-supporting. This is tho
man who ten years ago suddenly became convinced that he, through the inner,
awakened eye of the ~rtidt, nad seen the universe e~actly nd it is, in
terms of color, and who, as a result of his vision, threw his career to
the V' i nds and started in to describe what he had seen. He turned, for
the first time, to the study of science. which alone could provide him
with the neces.,ary vo cabulary.
Institute of CosmoEconomics
www.CosmoEconomics.com
Institute of CosmoEconomics
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Walter Russell :s
History repeats itself. The first expression of a nev idea invariably
fal~s on stony ground -- but if a seed of truth be there, it will find
an earth-filled cranny and begin to sprout. Walter Russell spent a for-
tune in the printing of a book which told of his inspired convictions in
Vlord;;, and in diagrams and charts which are at once so sublimely cle ar
and yet 60 complicated that hardly any bOdy can understand them. Mr.
Russe~l sent copies of thi s book to men prominent in many lines of en-
deavor. but at that time science believed the atom to be indestructible.
and the Russell concept i s not in agreement with tnat theory.
The books were tossed aside. But the ortist held to his beliefs.
and early in 1931 we find him in the study of an eminent few York
physicist. discussing the winding and unwinding of the universe. Paper
and pencil were called irto action that the artist might prov e to the
professor thnt the machinery is not running down. but is functioning
two ways -- tearing down and building up at the same time through polari-
sation. which is the meeting of two opposed forces under the attr ction
of gravitation and the repulsion of radiation for the purJose of repro-
duction. And at last :-- "If only." said Walter Russell passionately. "I
could show it tv you as I see it. in colors!"
"Vlell." said the professor. "you're an artist. aren't yw? ',;hy not
paint it?"
So it happened th, t in an incredib