Balder Ex-Libris - Schauberger ViktorReview of books rare and missing2024-03-16T01:56:42+00:00urn:md5:aa728a70505b2fae05796923271581c2DotclearSchauberger Viktor - The water wizardurn:md5:1ae74f1f65854882daa0f73f0ac8ceae2018-10-03T22:46:00+01:002018-10-03T21:51:20+01:00balderSchauberger ViktorAgricultureCIAConspiracyDrugEauIsraëlJewScienceUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img4/Schauberger_Viktor_-_The_water_wizard.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Schauberger Viktor</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The water wizard The extraordinary power of natural water</strong><br />
Year : 1998<br />
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Foreword. It was a Swedish engineer and anthroposophist, Olof Alexandersson, who wrote the first popular introduction to the radical ideas of Viktor Schauberger. I came across this attractive little book in 1979 and had it translated into English. Living Water is now in its eighth printing and has inspired many to go on to Callum Coats' in-depth study of Schauberger's ideas, Living Energies, which was published in 1996. My friendship with Callum goes back to 1981 when he confided in me his wish to write a definitive work on Viktor Schauberger. Callum had met Viktor's son, Walter Schauberger, in 1977 and was to spend three years studying with Walter at his Pythogoras-Keppler System Institute in Lauffen, in the Saltzkammergut near Salzburg. During that time, Callum was given access to all Viktor's writings. Viktor Schauberger did not start seriously to write about his ideas and his discoveries until the age of 44, when he acquired a distinguished sponsor in Professor Philipp Forchheimer. As Callum describes later in this volume, Forchheimer, a world famous hydrologist, had been asked by the Austrian Government to report on Schauberger's controversial log flumes, which transported large amounts of timber from inaccessible locations without damage. He was so impressed with Schauberger's discoveries that he asked him to write a paper which was published in 1930 in Die Wasserwirtschaft, the Austrian Journal of Hydrology. This paper attracted the attention of the President of the Austrian Academy of Science, Professor Wilhelm Exner, and resulted in a commission to write a more detailed study of his theories for that same magazine under the title Temperature and the Movement of Water. <strong>...</strong></p>Schauberger Viktor - The fertile earthurn:md5:3cc895e9eb6043d602111dd418357ed72018-10-03T22:38:00+01:002018-10-03T21:44:59+01:00balderSchauberger ViktorAgricultureCIAConspiracyKennedyRussiaScienceUnited States <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img4/Schauberger_Viktor_-_The_fertile_earth.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Schauberger Viktor</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The fertile earth Nature's energies in agriculture, soil fertilisation and forestry</strong><br />
Year : 2000<br />
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Introduction. What is the essence of a tree ? How does a blade of grass grow ? What do we really understand of the internal events and forces responsible for their upward thrust towards the heavens, and on what conditions do these energies depend ? Where do they come from and how do they interact? What inhibits their proper interaction, and what enhances it ? As the pages in this book unfold the reader will not only come to appreciate the immense contribution to humanity of Viktor Schauberger's life-work, but also that humanity must now seize upon his enlightened, penetrating perception of the energetic phenomena underlying physical manifestation and apply them to safeguard its future. Through his deep understanding of the energies responsible for all organic growth and development, his writings in this volume focus on those domains of Nature which are at this time in the greatest need of massive rehabilitative intervention. These are the world's rapidly dwindling forests and the vast expanses of arable land, today increasingly threatened by drought, desertification, fire and flood. This wholesale eradication of the Earth's lungs simply cannot continue. Present systems of land and forest management are largely responsible for the present climatic instability. Mechanistic methods of regeneration and production, which have no truly long-term view and are wholly profit oriented, give no consideration either to the forest's true function or to a living soil's continuing ability to sustain future generations. As has already become evident, the current practice of over-clearing of forest for agriculture and subsequent tillage leads to soil erosion, desertification, mineral impoverishment and developing salination. The inadequacies in the management, or even the actual mismanagement, of the world's stocks of these important resources have now reached a point where the problems of providing an equitable and adequate supply of food to an expanding global population appear almost insuperable. Despite the fertiliser and pesticide industry's extravagant claims, it is becoming more and more apparent that these methods are no longer effective and are providing both timber and food of increasingly inferior quality. It is therefore time to consider fresh approaches. <strong>...</strong></p>Schauberger Viktor - Nature as teacherurn:md5:2ab014fd927543e7851d5afbafb12d562018-10-03T22:30:00+01:002018-10-03T21:36:55+01:00balderSchauberger ViktorAgricultureCanadaCIAConspiracyIranIsraëlKennedyRussiaScienceUnited StatesUSS Liberty <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img4/Schauberger_Viktor_-_Nature_as_teacher.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Schauberger Viktor</strong><br />
Title : <strong>Nature as teacher New principles in the working of nature</strong><br />
Year : 1999<br />
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Introduction. At the time of writing the world is being engulfed by increasingly cataclysmic manifestations of the disturbance and disruption of Nature's otherwise orderly processes. From reports received almost daily, both nationally and from around the world, we are increasingly forced to become aware of certain life-threatening irregularities in the functioning of Nature's household. Record catastrophes of increasing violence and extent are being reported in almost every country; tornadoes, deluges, widespread flooding, searing drought, earthquakes, unseasonable snowfalls and extremes of temperature, all of which are associated with huge loss and suffering. Strife and starvation are on the increase, coupled with a seemingly endless emergence of hitherto unheard of diseases. The majority of these existence-threatening events, these so-called 'natural disasters', are not of Nature's making. On the contrary, they are directly attributable to the misdemeanours of humanity, the result of its arrogant repudiation or even total ignorance of Nature's sublime laws and the subtle interactions between the all-permeating interdependencies upon which all life is founded. To this catalogue of climatic irregularity must be added the more directly apparent man-made factors. The world's river systems and oceans are gradually collapsing through pollution with chemicals. Fish and other aquatic life are dying. Other creatures are being threatened with extinction or have already become extinct. The environmental overload is being increased at a precipitous rate through excessive land clearing, uncontrollable forest fires, the reduction in the quality of light reaching the Earth's surface due to atmospheric pollution, and the saturation of all living things, down to the smallest cellular organisms, by the cocktail of electromagnetic emissions known as electrosmog. This undoubtedly has a disturbing effect on the bioelectric and biomagnetic information that controls the proper functioning of the cells' delicate metabolism, which in aggregate leads to physical disorder and abnormality. Not only does this affect our physical well-being, but also our behaviour and mental abilities, thus inaugurating a decline in morals and the capacity to think creatively. <strong>...</strong></p>Schauberger Viktor - The Energy Evolutionurn:md5:88eb48dd9bd7c04169c69f239627fc382015-03-22T23:38:00+00:002015-04-03T13:24:19+01:00balderSchauberger ViktorAustriaForbidden HistoryForbidden ScienceNovelScienceThird Reich <p><img src="https://balderexlibris.com/public/img3/Schauberger_Viktor_-_The_Energy_Evolution.jpg" alt="" /><br />
Author : <strong>Schauberger Viktor</strong><br />
Title : <strong>The Energy Evolution Harnessing free energy from nature</strong><br />
Year : 2000<br />
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Coincidence? Or perhaps not! Standing as we are on the threshold of a new era, the first dawning of a new age, there is an air of expectancy of things imminent and better. In a certain sense this has psychologically programmed us with a willingness to embrace new concepts, to inaugurate and accept far-reaching change. It is also a time to reflect upon the very foundations of what we call 'civilisation' and to reassess their validity and where they have led, taking the good things with us and leaving the bad ones behind. So it seems timely that the radical departure in energy concepts presented here, should be made available now, when the tide of human development is turning and the impetus of this renewing flood can be harnessed to launch Viktor Schauberger's pioneering discoveries into a world more ready than ever before to implement them. At a time also, when the activities of humanity are increasingly seen to be on a head-on collision course with Nature's processes. An alarming increase in the scope and ferocity of so-called 'natural disasters' is forcing us to realise that the future is no longer secure; that other solutions to those presently proposed must quickly be found to remedy the present state of affairs. In my view, these will be largely ineffective unless Viktor Schauberger's important contributions towards the production of virtually free energy and high quality drinking water - the foundation of healthy life - are not taken into account a priori. What we are concerned with here is an inversion of all that has hitherto been held to be true scientifically and technologically. As obvious as it is true that one cannot wash one's clothes in the same water that soiled them, so too can no new ecotechnology be founded on existing 'laws' and dogma, which have so disastrously failed. While such new departures in thought are usually referred to as 'revolutions', what is involved here is an 'evolution'. This is no form of repetition, a re-cycling of outworn concepts and processes, but an upward movement to totally new and higher levels not only of perception, but also of application of systems of an entirely new dimension and order. It is a movement away from the ceaseless round, the endless unproductive turning or 'revolution' of the wheel, the chief symbol of our technology and a derivative of the geometrical element of the circle. While progress of a sort is made as the wheel turns, the wheel itself does not evolve and always returns upon itself. Having no in-built capacity for change and transformation it effectively contributes nothing to real evolutive progress. Implicit in this evolution towards higher perception and a new modus operandi is the necessity to think an octave higher, as Viktor Schauberger so often expresses it. Just how fundamentally we will have to change our way of thinking and acting to achieve this we have yet to discover, although the information contained in this book will provide many of the necessary keys. Once inserted into the lock of evolution, new as yet unimagined vistas will unfold themselves and can become manifest, provided the will and determination are present to enter upon them. But what it is that must change to permit this to happen? Basically it is a question of the geometrical system so familiar to us. This is the geometry of Euclid and essentially involves the elements of the straight line, circle and point, all of which are perfect forms and therefore unchanging. Such perfection requires no further input from external factors, nor can it productively interact with them and therefore these elements are sterile 'closed' systems. In terms of their physical appearance, these are the cylinders, spheres, wheels, straight shafts, pipes, flat surfaces, etc. in common use today. As transcendental constructs, i.e. belonging not to the physical world but to the realms of mental ideation, these geometrical elements are physically 'unreal' and in their application to the physical world are therefore 'unnatural'. Consequently their use in the construction and operation of today's machines and the energies they produce are in discordance with Nature's laws. Steeped in the grandeur of Euclidean edifices over the last two millennia and the apparent appropriateness and suitability of Euclidean geometry for all purposes, we must now reappraise our unqualified acceptance of it, for it lies at the very root of our troubles. On earlier European structures the straight lines and hard edges were softened and made pleasing to the eye through their often exuberant embellishment. The Chinese on the other hand, versed in the art of geomancy, constructed their traditional buildings differently, deliberately curving the profile of the roof. In their philosophy the straight line was the path preferred by dragons, the mythical personification of destructive power, whose violence could only be curbed by forcing it to move along curved paths. Intuitively the Chinese were aware that straight lines provoke and foster violent behaviour, a phenomenon on the increase worldwide. Since the beginning of the last century 1900s there has been a rapid reduction of such visual complexity to one of virtual uniformity as this decoration has gradually been stripped away, reducing our built environment to a naked, stark and arid angularity. Concurrent with this unfortunate development, and aided and abetted by the direct application of such geometry, the supremacy of rational straight-line thinking increased at the expense of the intuitive, the beaching from wi t h i n , increasingly crippling our perception of Nature's subtle workings. Because of this the rational mind began to cut out important factors that were deemed extraneous, so as to achieve the most economically effective outcomes. Thus, for instance, the bends in rivers were truncated and the gradient steepened in order to 'improve' Nature's patterns of flow, without any account being taken of their contribution to the health and stability of the river. The result - violent discharges and inundations. Such simplicities of line not only disturb rivers, they also have a disturbing effect psychologically, because the eye, that most complex of organs requires an equal external visual complexity to maintain its health, balance and stability, transferring such states to the brain and psyche of its host. While contemplation of the rich diversity in colour and form of natural undisturbed forest - an apparent chaos but actually the highest state of order - brings us a sense of peace and inner tranquillity, when we are confronted by plantation forests, planted out in rows of same-age, same-species, same-height, sameshape trees, we experience a certain inner discomfort. A higher state of order and complexity has been reduced to a lower one. While such a relatively small reduction produces such a reaction, what effect do more major reductions have on us psychologically ? <strong>...</strong></p>