Notes

APP-Sounding Engendering Resonance Movements – SERM

Based on Scientific Power (link ..) and IBED (Individual Behavioral Evidenced based Documentation we launch an APP which (a) explain what we suggest you to do, (b) what we suggest it, (c) how you can tailor your “way” as well as its possible contribution to health promotion including also rehab in very many different psychological and biological fields.

In other words, the with our APP SERM you will be able proposed to influenced basic systems which are relevant to biopsychosocial health promotion, especially lifestyle related dysfunctions/diseases/problems/…

Sounds too good? Maybe, but this is what we have knowledge based reasons to suggest. NB this means not that you can eat anything known to be destructive, or drink/smoke/use drugs … without any destructive effects! But with the APP SERM you will approach your health promotion and influence negative health in a, not very new way (used for thousands of years in Eastern Medicine, see e.g. … LINK .. based on a quite new scientific knowledge which we so far, extrapolate from a based on this modified old eastern medicine according to this kind of knowledge. NB, in our opinion this renew a respect for old medicine validated in an western medicine paradigm approach.

 

Litet nedan om Tesla

https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola_Tesla
Föreslår du skumläser …  ovan länk sedan nedan ..

https://www.history.com/news/6-brilliant-tesla-inventions-never-built?fbclid=IwAR2-NDp6dEg95AejrwmnQYKfnoA1PQA3bu74AgfOF3cyEndRF3xKowgGj6I

6 Brilliant Tesla Inventions That Never Got Builthttps://www.history.com/news/6-brilliant-tesla-inventions-never-built?fbclid=IwAR2-NDp6dEg95AejrwmnQYKfnoA1PQA3bu74AgfOF3cyEndRF3xKowgGj6I

  1. Earthquake Machine

In 1893, Tesla patented a steam-powered mechanical oscillator that would vibrate up and down at high speeds to generate electricity. Years after patenting his invention he told reporters that one day while attempting to tune his mechanical oscillator to the vibration of the building housing his New York City laboratory, he caused the ground to shake. During the test, Tesla continuously turned up the power and heard cracking sounds. “Suddenly,” he recalled, “all the heavy machinery in the place was flying around. I grabbed a hammer and broke the machine. The building would have been down about our ears in another few minutes.” Police and ambulances arrived on the scene to attend to the commotion, but Tesla told his assistants to remain quiet and tell the police that it must have been an earthquake.

BvS-> Need to try to extrapolate from quantum physics, while asking “is there a possible extremely unusual third version of comprehence, extreme kind of comprehence as explanation of his mechanical oscillator to the vibration of the building housing”

 

  1. Thought Camera

Tesla believed it could be possible to photograph thoughts. The inspiration came while he was doing experiments in 1893, Tesla told a newspaper reporter decades later: “I became convinced that a definite image formed in thought must, by reflex action, produce a corresponding image on the retina, which might possibly be read by suitable apparatus.” The inventor conceived of reflecting an image on an artificial retina, taking a photograph and projecting the image on a screen. “If this can be done successfully, then the objects imagined by a person would be clearly reflected on the screen as they are formed,” he said, “and in this way every thought of the individual could be read. Our minds would then, indeed, be like open books.”

BvS-> NB with thoughts above “image formed a thought” means probably that a limbic image “symbolized an integrated limbic image associated with neocortex associated verbal thought”, in other words, an kind of image of cognitive information processing.

 

  1. Wireless Energy

In 1901, Tesla secured $150,000 from financier J.P. Morgan to build a 185-foot-tall, mushroom-shaped tower on the north shore of Long Island capable of transmitting messages, telephony and images to ships at sea and across the Atlantic Ocean by using the Earth to conduct signals. As work began on the structure, called Wardenclyffe Tower, Tesla wanted to adapt it to allow for wireless power delivery, believing from his experiments on radio and microwaves that he could light up New York City by transmitting millions of volts of electricity through the air. Morgan, however, refused to give Tesla any additional funding for his grandiose scheme. (Some speculate that Morgan cut off funds once he realized that Tesla’s plan would have crippled his other energy-sector holdings.) Tesla abandoned the project in 1906 before it could ever become operational, and Wardenclyffe Tower was dismantled in 1917.

READ MORE: 9 Things You May Not Know About Nikola Tesla
saa7th0056_clr_kb The Mystery of Nikola Tesla’s Missing Files

  1. Artificial Tidal Wave

The engineer and physicist believed the power of science could be harnessed to prevent war. In 1907 the New York World reported on another of Tesla’s military innovations in which wireless telegraphy would trigger the detonations of high explosives at sea to generate tidal waves so vast that they would capsize entire enemy fleets. The newspaper reported that the artificial tidal wave would “make navies as useless as the paper boats that babies float in bathtubs” and, foreshadowing later claims about the development of nuclear weapons, “by its horrors hasten the day of universal peace.”

 

  1. Electric-Powered Supersonic Airship

From the time Tesla was a boy, he had been fascinated with the idea of flight. Combining his knowledge of electrical and mechanical engineering, he began to think more about aviation after the failure of Wardenclyffe. In an article in the July 1919 issue of Reconstruction magazine, Tesla discussed his work on developing a supersonic aircraft that would travel eight miles above the surface of the Earth and generate speeds allowing passengers to travel between New York City and London in three hours. Tesla’s concept called for the aircraft to be powered by electricity transmitted wirelessly from power plants on the ground, eliminating the need for aircrafts to carry fuel. “The power supply is virtually unlimited, as any number of power plants can be operated together, supplying energy to airships just as trains running on tracks are now supplied with electrical energy through rails or wires,” Tesla said in the article.

BvS-> “be powered by electricity transmitted wirelessly from power plants on the ground” – NB, what may he refer to with “power plants on the ground”, photosynthesis?

 

  1. “Death Beam”

Tesla’s creative mind continued to spark new visions even late in his life. On his 78th birthday, he told The New York Times that he had come up with this most important invention, one that would “cause armies of millions to drop dead in their tracks.” The invention? A military weapon that would accelerate mercury particles at 48 times the speed of sound inside a vacuum chamber and shoot a high-velocity beam “through the free air, of such tremendous energy that [it] will bring down a fleet of 10,000 enemy airplanes at a distance of 250 miles.” Although the press dubbed it a “death beam,” Tesla believed it a “peace beam” that would foil attacks by airplanes and invading armies and save lives by acting “like an invisible Chinese wall, only a million times more impenetrable.” Tesla offered his particle-beam weapon to numerous governments, including the United States, but the only country to show interest was the Soviet Union, which conducted a partial test in 1939.