Index Entry
Lever:
“You might think about the total of all our mechanics as being something done in terms of levers. Men were learning how to develop higher advantage gainable out of the use of the hands with a lever and then learning how to capture free energy patterns, bring them into focus, and bring them on to the ends of the lever. For instance, a waterwheel is really a series of levers, first one lever and then another lever–get out on the end of the lever where you can do the most work, move from the center of the hub, the radius of the waterwheel being the length of the lever. You present a series of levers and you learn then to take the great energy pattern of nature: atomizing the waters and making them into clouds and then coming down as rain and landing on the top of hills and coming down the hills as rivers. We learn to take the energy pattern of the water rushing to the lowest level; and they exploited gravity then by canalizing that water into reservoirs and then being able to let it out of the reservoirs at the time they wanted to do the work. So they had it coming out specifically, landing on the blade of the waterwheel.”
“Man suddenly developed a way in which he organized the energy”
