A “Teapot” & the Toroidal Universe (Esoteric Twin Peaks I) by Jack Heart & Orage
First published November 19, 2017, in Veterans Today and the Human
“The tall ones, now, the Nordic types, they’re different. More benign. Some say they’ve always been here. Supposedly they come from the Dog Star” – Jack Parsons in the secret History of Twin Peaks, a novel by Mark Frost. (1)
Die Glocke or the “Nazi Bell” has become the twenty-first century’s answer to Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein. Some writers have made a cottage industry out of it. But like Frankenstein always going back to Mary Shelly, the Nazi Bell stories always go back to Igor Witkowski, a Polish writer who has done extensive historical work on WWII.
Witkowski claims to have been privy to court dispositions and transcripts taken by the NKVD during the interrogation of Jakob Sporrenberg the SS-Gruppenführer und Generalleutnant der Polizei for Poland and Belarus.
The Polish courts would subsequently hang Sporrenberg at the end of 1952, having found him guilty of war crimes in 1950. According to Sporrenberg Die Glocke, as it was called in German, was a bell-shaped casing made out of a hard and heavy metal. It was filled with a mercury-like substance, code-named Xerum 525. The metallic liquid was violet-colored and had to be stored in three-centimeter thick, lead encased receptacles.
The experiments always took place under a ceramic cover and involved two cylinders rotating with great centrifugal force in opposite directions. During the experiments, which were about a minute in duration, the bell would glow pale blue in color.
The chamber the experiments took place in was deep underground and had a thirty square meter floor area. The whole chamber was encased in ceramic bricks overlaid with rubber mats. It was thoroughly flushed with a brine-like liquid after every experiment. The mats were replaced after every few experiments; and after every ten, the whole chamber was replaced with only the Bell remaining.
During testing, personnel were kept 150 to 200 meters away. Electrical equipment within that circumference would inevitably short circuit. The first experiments were performed in late 1944. During those tests, plants and animals placed within the Bell’s sphere of influence all died. A crystalline substance would form within the tissue, and the body fluids gelled and separated, killing the organism. The subjects all exhibited an accelerated rate of decomposition but were absent of any odors of putrefaction. Within eight to fourteen hours after the experiment, the plants would have the consistency of axel grease.
Five of the seven scientists who originally worked on the Bell died. In the second experiments in early 1945, the mortality rate was reduced to 10 to 15%. Humans would experience disturbances of sleep, unsteadiness on their feet and loss of memory. They were also plagued with a permanent metallic taste in their mouth.
Following the old railroad tracks out of Ludwigsdorf and up into the Sudeten’s foothills, they intersect the now abandoned Wenceslas Mine hidden in a valley. At the far end of the valley, next to a now crumbling facility once capable of burning 1,000 tons of coal per day, a 30-meter-wide concrete ring is suspended 10 meters high by 10 concrete pillars.
Strong hooks are built into the ring at the top of each pillar, and on the ground, there is a junction for the heavy-duty electric cables that were once powered by the coal burning facility.
Inside of the ring, the ground has been excavated to about a meter and lined with ceramic bricks. During the war, the Wenceslas mine’s underground concrete bunkers had been carefully concealed beneath its buildings and freshly planted trees. The concrete ring had been painted green to camouflage it from planes.
No one goes there anymore, even by foot. The mine shaft has been flooded. Nick Cook, the heavily credentialed author of The Hunt For Zero Point, perhaps following British protocol of presenting the ever evil Germans to history, says that the SS shot all sixty-two scientists involved with the project. Regardless, the Germans considered the Bell to be Kriegsentscheidend or war decisive, their highest security classification. General Hans Kammler, the commanding officer overseeing the bell, melted away like a ghost in the face of the Soviet advance.
There are archived records of Kammler officially denying his desperate Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler’s written request for a “truck.” Truck was an SS code word for the Junkers 390, a state of the art, six-engine monster cargo plane capable of flying to NY and back.
Kammler then just vanished, along with the Bell and one of Germany’s only two prototype 390s. Some stories say he was shot dead in Czechoslovakia, others that he took the Bell to Argentina; and still others the United States. No body, Bell or Junkers 390 has ever been found.
“Is it… future…, or… is it… past” - David Lynch
Die Glocke is a repetitive and pivotal element in the plot of Hollywood icon David Lynch’s recent tour de force in the return of Twin Peaks showcased on Showtime Networks.
Sporrenberg fingered Walter Gerlach as the scientist in charge of the Bell experiments. Since the beginning of 1944 Gerlach, perhaps at the time the world’s most brilliant experimental physicist, had been the plenipotentiary for nuclear physics at the Reich Research Council. After the war, he had been targeted by Alsos for interment and eavesdropping at Farm Hall, along with Werner Heisenberg and a number of other legendary German physicists.
Gerlach had written his doctorate while under the apprenticeship of Friedrich Paschen the discoverer of the Paschen Series, a series of hydrogen spectral lines in the infrared region that he first observed in 1908, the same year the 20-year old Gerlach began his doctoral studies with him. During WWI, Gerlach had worked on wireless communication for the German army under the guidance of the brilliant Max Wien, inexplicably written out of history and only known now for the Wien bridge-oscillator. Wien had collaborated with Paschen by correspondence as early as the summer of 1895.
In the early twenties, although he did all the lab work, Gerlach would share credit for the Stern-Gerlach Experiment which according to academia proves that magnetic fields restrict the spatial orientation of atomic and subatomic “particles.” In 1928 Gerlach would write; “Matter, Electricity, Energy: The Principles of Modern Atomistic and Experimental Results of Atomic Investigations…”
He would be repatriated back to Germany in 1946 and go on to a career as a distinguished professor becoming the first president of the Fraunhofer Society. But he would never again practice experimental physics, at least openly.
But of all the great German scientists the man whose name comes up most often in connection with die Glocke is Viktor Schauberger. Aleister Crowley may have very well had his day as “the warrior Lord of the Forties” (2) and the hopes and dreams of millions would be trampled beneath his thundering chariots but no part of the carnage told a sadder tale for the human race than the story of Viktor Schauberger. Schauberger was an Austrian forestry engineer, a man of awesome genius who dreamed only of building a better world for his fellow man.
Schauberger was no academic. His teacher was the babbling brooks and swirling rivers of the ancient Teutonic forests. It was while observing a trout effortlessly holding its position against the rushing current of a stream that Schauberger realized the trout was utilizing something other than kinetic energy. Schauberger reasoned that the animal was extracting the energy from the molecules of its own body by “condensing” them with extreme temperature gradients, a phenomenon recently proven to occur but predicted in the mid-twenties by Bose and Einstein and picked up on by Schauberger who was a prodigious reader. He came to the conclusion that this condensing process took place in the motion of a vortex swirling into its own center.
From his observations of naturally occurring tornados, whirlpools and the vortexes formed by galaxies, Schauberger reasoned that this is how energy is released in nature. If he could force matter into this spiraling motion, what he called implosion, by rapidly condensing and spinning it until the particles of the atoms became “unglued,” he could cleanly tap into the power of the stars. In Schauberger’s mind, industrialization with its dams and pollutants had interfered with the natural vortex patterns of water. These patterns are necessary for life to flourish. Water, once the lifeblood of the planet, had now become a pollutant sapping this planet’s vitality.
Schauberger advocated the development of “bio-technical” machinery in his writings and soon came to the attention of Adolph Hitler. In 1934 he was summoned to a meeting with Hitler and Max Planck, the founding father of quantum physics. Schauberger warned Hitler that under the current conditions his thousand-year Reich would not last ten. He proposed to Hitler a brand new world, a world with unlimited free energy, clean energy based on a science in harmony with nature. Hitler, a mystic himself, no doubt was enthralled with Schauberger’s ideas. The meeting went long over the time that was allotted for it. After about two hours Planck, who had been brooding through the whole meeting, scoffed at Schauberger and told him nature and science have nothing to do with each other. A few years later nobody would ever scoff at Viktor Schauberger again.
In 1940, Schauberger applied for a patent on an energy generator that could be used for either aircraft or submarines. Schauberger described the device as a multistage centrifuge with concentrically juxtaposed pressure chambers. The self-contained centrifugal system only relied on a small starter motor to bring its turbine up to around twenty thousand revolutions per minute, but once there, it supplied its own energy, and when hooked to a gear shaft could act as a generator.
Shortly after that, Schauberger would write to his cousin saying he had invented a new aircraft that didn’t make any noise. At the beginning of 1941, he was at his own expense still looking for a contractor to build a scale model prototype of what he called the ‘Repulsator.’ He planned on using it to investigate “free energy production” and to prove his theory of ‘levitational flight.’ But in the ensuing months, Schauberger would put away his wallet and the SS would give him carte blanche in the Third Reich, swearing him to work only for them in total secrecy and tipping him off that the industrial giant Heinkel had been stealing his patents.
Schauberger became uncharacteristically secretive about what he was doing for the SS for the next couple of years but it is known that he was working around the Sudeten Mountains. During one experiment the Repulsator had actually shot up with such force that it had smashed against the hanger ceiling, severely damaging itself. In June of forty-four, Schauberger was summoned to Breslau ostensibly to be drafted into the SS. But a month earlier he had been ordered to the Mauthausen Concentration Camp to select his own team of technicians from among the inmates to build as many as five different types of machines. It is stated in his archives that the SS wanted him to stop tinkering around with prototypes and begin serious construction work.
In his diaries, Schauberger says the machines were a water purifier, an energy device capable of generating high voltage electricity, a machine for ‘biosynthesizing’ hydrogen fuel from water and another that ‘naturally’ produced intense heat or cold; the fifth was dubbed the Fliegende Scheibe, or flying saucer.
The Fliegende Scheibe was scheduled for its first flight on May 6th, 1945. Schauberger’s team stopped work on May 8th. The German armed forces officially stopped fighting that night. A few days later, Schauberger would be apprehended by American intelligence forces in Leonstein. Almost simultaneously across the country in Vienna, the Russians would enter his apartment, confiscate whatever they could find, then blow the building up just in case they had missed anything. The Americans would intensively debrief Schauberger for the next nine months, releasing him in March of 1946 under the oath that he would never again work on what he called “atomic” technology again.
By 1958, Schauberger was seventy-two years old and suffering from a bad heart and emphysema. Karl Gerchsheimer, a transplanted German acting as an agent for American financier Robert Donner flew to his home in Austria and promised him glory and riches in the United States. Gerchsheimer had prior links to the intelligence community and NASA. Donner was tied into the National Atomic Research Laboratories at the Brookhaven Lab on Long Island…
Schauberger, still dreaming of giving the human race his free energy technology took the bait. Upon his arrival in America, he met with implosion experts from the Brookhaven Lab supposedly to assess the feasibility of his ideas. After dickering with the sick man for months Donner finally got him to sign a document, not even translated into German, turning over to the Donner-Gerchsheimer consortium everything Schauberger ever did with his implosion technology. They swore him to secrecy and put him on a plane back to Austria. Schauberger died five days later… (3)
Stories of Die Glocke did not surface in the West until the beginning of the twenty-first century with the publication of The Hunt For Zero Point by Nick Cook. Cook is not you’re run of the mill “UFOologist.” He was, in fact, their antithesis in his capacity as the Aviation Editor of Jane’s Defence Weekly all through the nineties, the international defense journal read by everybody who is anybody in the military-industrial complex, East and West. After publication of his wildly popular book written for the layman, Cook stayed on as Aerospace Consultant and contributor to the journal from 2002 to 2008 and has won four journalism awards from the Royal Aeronautical Society…
Cook believed Die Glocke to be an attempt by the Germans at creating an anti-gravity machine but others have speculated that it was a time machine or even a machine that is able to punch holes in the wave function, which is presently being attempted at CERN…
Around about nightfall on December 9, 1965, thousands witnessed an orange fireball streak across the purple sky heading from northern Canada to western Pennsylvania. Over Ohio, witnesses saw it stop still in mid-air, momentarily hover then change course towards Pennsylvania. It would crash into the forest about a mile and half outside of Kecksburg. The military, along with elements of NASA was on hand seemingly within moments and would clamp Kecksburg and the surrounding area under “virtual martial law”(4) till the object was removed on a flatbed truck with a tarp over it. Witnesses that saw the object all described it as acorn shaped and remarkably similar to later descriptions of Die Glocke. The only difference being the unidentified inscriptions, perhaps runic considering SS involvement with Die Glocke, around the raised band at the bottom of the Kecksburg Acorn.
According to a 1998 account of the Kecksburg incident, given prior to Cooks book, an alias Myron “worked as a truck driver for a cement factory belonging to his family at Dayton, Ohio. Two days after the incident occurred at Kecksburg, his firm received a large order for specially glazed bricks from the Wright Patterson Air Field. A representative of the base had had a look at the bricks in stock at the factory and finally ordered 6,500 double-glazed processed bricks, which, he said, “were for building a double-walled shield around a recovered radioactive object.”” Myron would get a look at what they had stashed in a hanger at Wright. He described ““the shadowy outlines of a large bell-shaped object….perhaps about 9 feet wide and 12 feet high. Through a small opening in the tent, Myron could see that it was metallic, like some kind of whitish bronze…” (5)
Die Glocke is a repetitive and pivotal element in the plot of Hollywood icon David Lynch’s recent tour de force in the return of Twin Peaks showcased on Showtime Networks. That a mainstream media –that no longer has any justification for even existing– has made an orchestrated attempt to ignore that fact in their coverage of Lynch’s occult epiphany should surprise no one.
That it has not even been blogged about yet is perhaps symptomatic of the Zombie Apocalypse Hollywood itself has been warning about for years.
Lynch also covers these phenomena in Twin Peaks 2017, among other things. When the Giant or Firemen, who is representative of the tall Nordics in Frost’s book, is depicted with his floor model Bell it is shown with dents on it, presumably from shaving off treetops which were reported by witnesses of the Kecksburg incident. Special Agent Jeffries is touring the multiverse in the seemingly more mobile but less functional Anglo-American edition, typical of German versus American engineering…
Lynch, like all great artists, will never explain his work but even he appears to be growing impatient with his audience’s lack of sophistication in the esoteric. Of Jeffries touring Bell he was recently quoted as saying “I sculpted that part of the machine that has that tea kettle spout thing,” he told Pitchfork, “But I wish I’d just made it straight because everybody thinks it’s a tea kettle. It’s just a machine.” (6) He might have wanted to add that his tea kettle was not blowing smoke rings either but a Toroidal Universe…
*
The Toroidal Universe was first proposed by Arthur M. Young back in the late fifties. (7) Young, philosopher, author and inventor of the Bell Helicopter,” was an occasional stand in as ringmaster for Andrija (Henry) K. Puharich at his estate at 87 Hawkes Avenue in Ossining, New York.” The Puharich estate burned to the ground in 1978 under suspicious circumstances. Prior to that, known to those that knew it as the Turkey Farm, it had been the site of some of the strangest experiments in the West during the twentieth century, many involving children. “In Hudson Hawk, the 1991 mega-budget flop about Alchemy, Secret Societies, the CIA and the Vatican, actor Bruce Willis who plays Hudson Hawk is asked where he got his tattoo of a Hawk from. He answers “in Ossining, New York…” (8) Hudson Hawk is what the locals call the cold wind that blows down the Hudson River.
Bell Laboratories was also closely affiliated with Puharich through the fifty-six patents he held on devices he’d invented spanning the gamut from medical electronics to neurophysiology, to biocybernetics, many with the stated purpose of being hearing aids for the deaf… Bell worked feverishly all through the fifties attempting to solve what they labeled “The Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays,” in a 1957 film produced in collusion with famed Hollywood director Frank Capra. (9)
In 1964, using a supersensitive prototype antennae Bell had originally been using to detect radio waves bounced off Echo balloon satellites, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered a persistent radiation in a wavelength of 7.35 centimeters. They determined the source of that radiation to be outside the galaxy; and in 1978, they were awarded the Nobel Prize for the discovery of cosmic background radiation. Many believe the Toroidal Universe Theory is the logical conclusion of Bell’s work with cosmic rays.
“I suppose you don’t know that the phone company killed Kennedy because he was trying to break it up and they’ll never let that happen. They control everything… What you say in the mouthpiece is never exactly what comes out the other end…” The words are spoken by Cecil a paranoid schizophrenic in the 1989 movie True Believer. He is a key but unusable witness for the defense in the movies murder trial. (10)
Ma Bell is just a colloquial term, an attempt to humanize a conglomerate that monopolized communications, particularly in America, from the nineteenth century till 1982 when Bell Systems finally agreed to break itself up rather than lose the anti-trust case the Department of Justice had filed against it in 1974. The Bell System Divestiture became effective in 1984, wherein Bell would lose control of the local telephone service in the United States and Canada, but keep its long distance service and retain control of Western Electric along with half of Bell Labs. There were actually four major American Telephone & Telegraph (AT&T) companies comprising Bell Systems.
Bell Operating Companies (BOC) provided local exchange telephone services. Upon the effective date of the Bell System Divestiture, January 1, 1984, they were split into seven independent Regional Bell Operating Companies, henceforth to be known as Baby Bells.
Before that, the Western Electric Company was responsible for all devices connected to the AT&T network. All phones connected to it, household and otherwise, had to be leased from BOC’s. Telephones not supplied by the Bell subsidiaries had to first be transferred to the local BOC who leased the phone back to the customer for a monthly charge in addition to a re-wiring fee.
Western Electric deployed a small army of inspectors checking household voltage levels to determine if non-leased phones were being used by consumers. Western Electric was known for being run with military precision and until this day its heyday remains the gold standard to which corporate management aspires. The American Telephone & Telegraph Long Line Company installed and maintained all wire, cable and the microwave radio relays necessary to provide long distance service to customers. Those are their wires prominently featured in Twin Peaks.
Nuclear hyperbole aside, the transistor was the most important invention of the twentieth century. That scientists working out of Bell Laboratories were given the Nobel Prize for inventing it is indicative of Bell’s status as the cutting edge of communication science in the post-WWII western world.
In fact, it was A Mathematical Theory of Communication, a two-part article by Bell mathematician Claude Shannon appearing in the 1948 July and October issues of the Bell System Technical Journal, which spawned Information Theory; a variation of von Neumann’s Game Theory that deals with the quantification, storage, and communication of information. Information Theory is used in quantum computing, artificial intelligence, cybernetics, neuroscience, electrical engineering and black hole calculations…
Perhaps ‘Cecil’ read the beginning of Shannon’s article… “The fundamental problem of communication is that of reproducing at one point, either exactly or approximately, a message selected at another point. (11)
In the summer of 1931, Karl Jansky working out of Bell Labs in Holmdel, New Jersey and using a specially built rotating antenna designed to receive radio waves at a frequency of 20.5 MHz detected a faint steady hiss of unknown origin. After a year of scientific scrutiny, he determined that the source of the noise was the center of the galaxy. In 1933, lauded by no less than the New York Times in their May 5, 1933 edition, Jansky published his classic paper “Electrical disturbances apparently of extraterrestrial origin.” The paper would give rise to the science of Radio Astronomy and its now widely agreed among the scientific community that he should have won a Nobel Prize for it but inexplicably Bell refused to finance any further research on the subject and transferred Jansky to another project. He would die suddenly at age forty-four of a heart attack…
Since then scientists working out of Bell Laboratories have been awarded a total of eight Nobel Prizes, seven in physics. The first was in 1937 when they shared it for demonstrating the wave nature of matter. In fifty-six three Bell scientists were awarded physics most coveted prize for inventing the transistor even though Germanys Oskar Heil “held several patents for “transistor-like” devices before the war.” (12)
In seventy-seven, the celebrated prize was shared for improving the understanding of the electronic structure of glass and magnetic materials. Then there was Penzias’ and Wilson’s in seventy-eight. The prize was shared by Steven Chu in 1997 for his development of methods to cool and trap atoms with laser light. In ninety-eight, the Nobel Prize in physics was again awarded to three Bell scientists, this time for discovering and explaining the Fractional Quantum Hall Effect. In 2009 two Bell scientists shared it for their invention of the charge-coupled device; a device that moves an electrical charge, usually from within the device itself, to an area where it can be manipulated. In 2014 it was shared in chemistry.
By the seventies, Bell had established a “worldwide network of scientists, industrialists, writers and philosophers at the cutting edge of new developments in physics, parapsychology, psychology and other fields.” The network, composed of three hundred and fifty experts from twenty countries, was loosely supervised by Ira Einhorn, the man who invented ‘Earth Day’ and history’s most influential hippie. Einhorn was most likely being handled for Bell by Arthur Young, who was a close personal friend of Henry Puharich, MK Ultra’s real-life Keyser Söze and Ira Einhorn’s mentor. Bell’s “network was the subject of a study by the Diebold Corporation in 1978, with the grandiose and somewhat impenetrable title of The Emergence of Personal Communication Networks Among People Sharing the New Values and Their Possible Use in Sensitizing Operating Management, which compared it to the ‘Invisible College’ of seventeenth-century Britain,” now known as the Royale Society… (13)
If anybody knew just what was really in Ma Bell’s lingerie draw it was Arthur Young. He was arguably Bell’s best scientist; they employed so many great ones. But he was certainly their most visionary. Many other scientists looked up to him as their spiritual guide and guru.
Guys like Puharich and Jon von Neumann worked for no one. They had their own agendas, and the corporate oligarchy of the West literally threw money at them to stay in their loop. Young was not in that league. Outside of the scientists coming out of Germany from Operation Paperclip nobody was. Young had to go to Bell to finance his helicopter project. They didn’t come to him. But what Young had that von Neumann, Puharich and others like them seemed to lack was a strong moral compass. In his later years he would remark “it’s the erosion that science has made in our moral fiber that I’m trying to combat.” (14)
To Young, everything had a purpose and value and to know them was as essential to understanding the universe as knowledge of time and space. He ridiculed scientists who believed that, because man is a biological machine, his automated state implied that he had no purpose. By their very nature, all machines have a purpose. After he perfected the helicopter Young set about working out a “systematic theory of process, a theory that includes purpose or first cause as a formal ingredient.” (15)
“Young’s theory of process began when he was an undergraduate in the mathematics department at Princeton.” He would leave Princeton in 1927 two years before von Neumann got there. But he already shared von Neumann’s distaste for the Theory of Relativity and a determinate universe, if not for Einstein himself. “Thirty years later he developed his toroidal or donut-shaped model of the universe, a model which is only now coming into favor to explain problems in fundamental physics.” (16)
In Young’s own words “the theory of relativity describes the universe in terms of space-time and events, events distributed in space-time. You could think of them like dots on a Christmas tree or dots in space. Only the space includes not just three dimensions but the dimension of time. Events in the future are listed as well as events now. So the whole thing becomes a rather static picture, but to me I’ve been through a very drastic personal experience in 1927 and time could not be represented as structured. Time carried surprise, carried the unexpected. The direction of time was essential. So this led to my calling of the theory of time structure, and then I assumed shifted to a theory of process, but at that time I didn’t have any concept of stages or finite number of stages or especially that the stages should have a distinct character. If structure can be represented, be this fear that everything there fixed in space-time, then this other dimension of folding in on itself which is supplied, which is supplied by the torus deals; with the possibility of change, this growingness. Because this growingness is not just a subsidence of an agitation that started with the big bang, it’s a growing from within that the universe does to itself. The universe creates creatures that can grow and move and eventually reflect on the nature of the universe.” (17)
In a lecture given during the eighties, after pointing out the mathematical problems presented by a spherical universe Young puts his globe prop away and tells his audience “I’m not responsible for that…” He then produces a large white artificial donut as a new prop, saying “but I have an alternative universe.” Young rotates the two-dimensional skin that is the surface of the three-dimensional donut horizontally and it can be seen that there is a black circle drawn on the white skin. As the circle emerges from the hole in the top of the donut, it is expanding; and when it enters the hole on the bottom of the donut it is contracting, “closing in on itself.”
Young tells his audience “in a way this is what’s already recognized by science in what’s known as the Einstein Eddington Hypersphere. But it’s only on the condition that the universe which we now have will eventually close back on itself. The concepts involved in the notion of black holes where you have all things going back into this hole and disappearing, let’s hope coming out the other side as a white hole. But see we have that concept contained here, that the white hole would be when its generating out, expanding. And the black hole when it’s going back in.” (18)
NeuroQuantology is a peer-reviewed scientific journal that synthesizes neuroscience with quantum physics. In a thesis published in the September 2017 issue, Dirk Meijer Emeritus Professor in Pharmacokinetics and Drug Targeting at the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and his co-writer Hans Geesink a credited expert in Mineral Nanotechnology postulate that consciousness resides in a “4th spatial dimension” outside of the brain and the three dimensions plus time that are apparent to man. Although phantasmagorical to human senses “ Its functional structure is adequately defined by the geometry of the torus, that is envisioned as a basic unit (operator) of space-time.”
The authors also note in the Abstract that the brain itself appears to “be embedded in a holographic structured field that interacts with resonant sensitive structures in the various cell types in our body.” They propose that the neural system is a receiver, receiving frequencies from standing waves that resonate through the universe and interpreting them into the sensual world it exists in. It is this translation of “wave information into brain tissue, that thereby is instrumental in high-speed conscious and sub-conscious information processing” known to take place in the human mind but that neural science alone is unable to account for. (19)
The authors assert that “the nested torus in modeling fractal aspects of the cognitive process” is essential in gaining a full understanding of neurobiology. They cite among others Karl Pribram famed neuroscientist and the true father of the “fractal-holographic universe” as to why they “prefer to postulate a nested torus modality in modeling cognition.” In figure 3 illustrations of the universe, black holes, a galaxy, the earth’s magnetic field, plant geometry, photon geometry, electromagnetics, and DNA, are given as examples of “rotational geometry at all scales of reality.” Included is a graphic of a torus superimposed over the human body as the theoretical “nested toroidal geometry of the human body, heart and brain.” (20)
The Torus is the basic unit of time and space, the recursive fractal that is the smallest possible piece of the entire hologram. Every Torus is interconnected in a universal network with every other Torus and every Torus photon contains the information of the whole Torus universe. In fact every Torus can contract into a photon when it enters a black hole and expands into a universe when it is expelled from a white one. It is happening simultaneously and in perpetuity, providing the space in which consciousness floats, ever expanding and ever contracting…
In Minkowski Space, there is no time; “the concept of the “now”, the brief interval that divides the past from the future, is absent in all fundamental mathematical formulations, both in classical physics and in quantum physics.” As noted by Hermann Minkowski himself, the man who added the fourth dimension so his student’s theory of relativity would be mathematically feasible; “our actual universe, being all our moments, past, present and future, coexist, but we can’t directly see or experience that fact. We experience our moments serially, one after the other, such that only the present moment is what’s actual for us.” (21)
Special Agent Dale Cooper has waited twenty-five years in the Red Room to kill “two birds…with one stone”22 and now the time has come. A gust of air blows the red drapes up revealing an endless black and white chevron floor stretching into darkness. Standing in the middle of the endless black and white wave pattern is a white horse, beyond it the black void. The wind dies down and the Red Room is calm again. The disembodied entity named MIKE reappears across from Cooper and asks “is it…Future…or… is it… past?” (23)
Twin Peaks Package
From Silent Hills (P.T.) to Twin Peaks (T.P.) “Fire walk…with me.” by Jack Heart & Orage
Twin Peaks, Miguel Serrano & the Hard Science of Orgasmic Energy by Jack Heart & Orage
Twin Peaks & the Return of the White Queen by Jack Heart & Orage
A “Teapot” & the Toroidal Universe (Esoteric Twin Peaks I) by Jack Heart & Orage
Esoteric Twin Peaks II by Jack Heart & Orage
Doppelgänger & Orgasmic Energy Esoteric Twin Peaks III by Jack Heart & Orage
Tookie Memorial Post, Sīrius Calling I
Chaioth ha-Qadosh - Tookie Memorial Post, Sīrius Calling II
Citations
1- FROST, MARK. SECRET HISTORY OF TWIN PEAKS. S.l.: PAN, 2017. Print. page 255.
2- Heart, Jack, and Orage. “Peter Pan meets Pyramid Head.” Nexus Magazine. June/July. 2017. Print.
3- Heart, Jack, and Orage. “Black Sun Rising — Part 5.” Veterans Today, 17 Apr. 2014, www.veteranstoday.com/2014/04/17/black-sun-rising-part-5/. Except citation 1 and 2 all information above citation 3 sourced in Black Sun Rising — Part 5
4- Farrell, Joseph P. “THE KECKSBURG ACORN RINGS THE BELL.” Reich of The Black Sun – 17, http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/sociopolitica/reichblacksun/chapter17.htm.
5- Ibid.
6- DOM, PEITER. “David Lynch Explains Phillip Jeffries Is Not A Tea Kettle And Why We Didn’t Hear David Bowie’s Voice.” Twin Peaks, 23 Sept. 2017, welcometotwinpeaks.com/news/david-lynch-phillip-jeffries-david-bowie/.
7- Arthur M Young. “Arthur M. Young: The Reflexive Universe (1981) – Documentary video by Arthur Bloch.” 4:52,YouTube. YouTube, 26 Apr. 2011. Web. 30 Oct. 2017.
.
8- Heart, Jack, and Orage. “Shadow of Nemesis 5: Weird Scenes Inside the Goldmine.” Veterans Today. N.p., 24 Sept. 2015. Web. 30 Oct. 2017. https://www.veteranstoday.com/2015/09/18/shadow-of-nemesis-5-weird-scenes-inside-the-goldmine/.
9- The Strange Case of the Cosmic Rays. Directed by Frank Capra and William T. Hurtz. By Jonatan Latimer and Frank Capra. Performed by Richard Carlson, Frank Baxter, Bil Baird |. USA: Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) (1957) (USA) (TV) (original airing), 1957. Television. March 10, 2014. Accessed October 30, 2017.
.
10- Strick, Wesley. True Believer . Youtube / True Believer – The Telephone Company, Columbia Pictures, 0ADAD, www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxpbGcx1Yic.
11- Shannon, Claude Elwood, 1916-2001. The Mathematical Theory of Communication. Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 1949. Print. http://math.harvard.edu/~ctm/home/text/others/shannon/entropy/entropy.pdf.
12- Heart, Jack, and Orage. “Black Sun Rising – Part 5.” Veterans Today.
13- The Stargate Conspiracy: The Truth about Extraterrestrial life and the Mysteries of Ancient Egypt: Lynn Picknett, Clive Prince:The Unicorn – 362 – 363 (PDF). http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/archivos_pdf/stargate-conspiracy.pdf .
14- Arthur M Young. “Arthur M. Young: The Reflexive Universe (1981) – Documentary video by Arthur Bloch.”00:17.
15- Ibid. 3:05 – 3:11.
16- Ibid. 4:38 – 4:59.
17- Ibid. 5:03-7:05.
18- “Introduction to the Torus (0:27) — Arthur Young –.” YouTube, TetragrammatonMan, 4 Oct. 2007, www.youtube.com/watch?v=BYEG60e7S54.
19- Meijer, Dirk K.F., and Hans J.H. Geesink. “Consciousness in the Universe is Scale Invariant and Implies an Event Horizon of the Human Brain.”NeuroQuantology, vol. 15, no. 3, Sept. 2017, pp. 41–48., 6- 1079 ART (prsinstitute.org).
20- Ibid.
21- Ibid.
22- Lynch, David, and Mark Frost. Twin peaks Season 3, episode 1 (5:00-6:00). Showtime Networks, May 21, 2017.
23- Lynch, David, and Mark Frost. Twin peaks Season 3, episode 2 (16:00-25:00). Showtime Networks, May 21, 2017.
Funny, I had just shared this article yesterday with some friends to let them in on the Torus and the toroidal universe. No reply, but maybe planting seeds.