I was just at the Wilhelm Reich museum, Orgone, in Rangeley Maine, and there is a wealth of overlooked and misunderstood technology that needs to be brought back out by competent researchers.
In the borderland research museum is an absolute treasure trove that I fear has been relegated to oblivion.
Thanks Gregory, definitely overlooked and misunderstood technologies! We can look at such as mechanical occultism, as some consider it, at least as a nascent excursion into that realm that requires higher effort from humans than simple materialistic oriented devices.
From a recent post on the Aetherforce telegram list:
"Three expression of Mechanical Occultism may include: Atomic technology which manipulates atomic forces with the same energy of which thoughts are made; Resonance technology which will operates machinery from immoral and moral oscillations of the soul; and Moral technology which may be built from selfless deeds of veneration. What will it take to make "machinery" that is not antagonistic with the human vital forces but interacts and is actually driven by them. Many prerequisite may be required and not explicitly limited to sense free thinking (moral imagination) and manipulation of the formative forces, to how we interact with the laboratory and scientific method in general. Employing a Goethean approach to feel the soul "after-image" impressions of the investigation at hand as well as treating the lab bench as an altar, bringing in states of sacramentalism and veneration to the process, will yield much more than purely mechanical outputs. It will provide a gateway to interacting with the elemental beings that work in between the etheric and formative forces and the substantial world of matter.
One of the biggest issues at hand with our current technology, aside from its biological and ecological detriments, is the role of the elemental kingdom in both the materials used and the technological processes themselves. Breaking down and pulverizing natural materials expels nature spirits from their assigned places, freeing them to flutter around unbound. Reassembling these materials into machines invites new spiritual beings into constructed objects, while humans become filled with Ahrimanic spirits through interaction with technology."
Sadly the Borderland research museum has been scattered to the winds, unfortunately, as those I entrusted with it didn't uphold their words. Such is life these days. At least we made of record of it when we could.
language doesn't currently have the words and terms to articulate the technology you talk about. Moral resonance in itself needs some unpacking. I finally suspect that at least three technology types are related to the three higher states of human thinking namely, imagination, inspiration and intuition. Using those three capacities, or others pending better language, hand in hand with the material technologies will need to be explored and described from experience so that others might follow along with these important developments.
I was just at the Wilhelm Reich museum, Orgone, in Rangeley Maine, and there is a wealth of overlooked and misunderstood technology that needs to be brought back out by competent researchers.
In the borderland research museum is an absolute treasure trove that I fear has been relegated to oblivion.
Thanks Gregory, definitely overlooked and misunderstood technologies! We can look at such as mechanical occultism, as some consider it, at least as a nascent excursion into that realm that requires higher effort from humans than simple materialistic oriented devices.
From a recent post on the Aetherforce telegram list:
"Three expression of Mechanical Occultism may include: Atomic technology which manipulates atomic forces with the same energy of which thoughts are made; Resonance technology which will operates machinery from immoral and moral oscillations of the soul; and Moral technology which may be built from selfless deeds of veneration. What will it take to make "machinery" that is not antagonistic with the human vital forces but interacts and is actually driven by them. Many prerequisite may be required and not explicitly limited to sense free thinking (moral imagination) and manipulation of the formative forces, to how we interact with the laboratory and scientific method in general. Employing a Goethean approach to feel the soul "after-image" impressions of the investigation at hand as well as treating the lab bench as an altar, bringing in states of sacramentalism and veneration to the process, will yield much more than purely mechanical outputs. It will provide a gateway to interacting with the elemental beings that work in between the etheric and formative forces and the substantial world of matter.
One of the biggest issues at hand with our current technology, aside from its biological and ecological detriments, is the role of the elemental kingdom in both the materials used and the technological processes themselves. Breaking down and pulverizing natural materials expels nature spirits from their assigned places, freeing them to flutter around unbound. Reassembling these materials into machines invites new spiritual beings into constructed objects, while humans become filled with Ahrimanic spirits through interaction with technology."
Sadly the Borderland research museum has been scattered to the winds, unfortunately, as those I entrusted with it didn't uphold their words. Such is life these days. At least we made of record of it when we could.
language doesn't currently have the words and terms to articulate the technology you talk about. Moral resonance in itself needs some unpacking. I finally suspect that at least three technology types are related to the three higher states of human thinking namely, imagination, inspiration and intuition. Using those three capacities, or others pending better language, hand in hand with the material technologies will need to be explored and described from experience so that others might follow along with these important developments.