Toby Grotz

Alternative Energy Institute: Nikola Tesla (missing page found on web.archive.org)

"Nature and Nature's laws lay hid in night: God said, 'Let Tesla be,' and all was light." These words, spoken by B.A. Behrend in 1917, illuminate the respect society held for Nikola Tesla early in this century. Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor and researcher who discovered the rotating magnetic field, which forms the basis of most alternating-current machinery in use today. Born in Croatia (Austria-Hungary) in 1856, Tesla's father was a Serbian Orthodox priest. His mother was unschooled but highly intelligent. It wasn't long before Tesla's parents realized that their son was gifted with unusual insight. In her book, "Tesla: Man Out of Time, " Margaret Cheney, a California science writer, offers an interesting anecdote from Tesla's childhood. "The child began when only a few years of age to make original inventions. When he was five, he built a small waterwheel quite unlike those he had seen in the countryside. It was smooth, without paddles, yet it spun evenly in the current. Years later he was to recall this fact when designing his unique bladeless turbine."

Toby Grotz, Patrick G. Bailey: Nikola Tesla, Walter Russell, Hans Coler

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"A Critical Review of the Available Information Regarding Claims of
Zero-Point Energy, Free-Energy, and Over-Unity Experiments and Devices"

Patrick G. Bailey
P.O. Box 201
Los Altos, CA 94023-0201

Toby Grotz
760 Prairie Avenue
Craig, CO 81625-1346

 

Abstract

KeelyNet: John Draper: The Navajo and the Buddhist

KeelyNet/Energy/The_Wave (October 19, 1992) THE NAVAJO AND THE BUDDHIST

"There are worlds within worlds Christa. Everything in our world is connected by the delicate strands of the web of life, which is balanced between forces of destruction and the magic forces of creation". The Magi to Christa in the movie 'Ferngully'.

THE FORCES OF NATURE

Google: Walter Russell, Periodic Table of Elements and Transmutation

There are many different periodic tables of elements. The most famous one is the Mendeleev Periodic Chart of Elements. However, Walter Russell also suggested a periodic chart of elements, so did Sir. William Crookes. Whilst not much progress has been made in combining all three together (and the recently discovered Walter Schauberger chart), there is definitely something of worth in combining them all together, in order to emerge with better knowledge of the Platonic Solids and how sacred geometry ties in with this whole process.

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