Welcome to the first of what will be an ongoing series regarding Ancient Technology. Though the topic will differ, the overall theme will be to show some little known facts concerning ancient human history.
Now take a look at the picture above and tell me… does it look like an antenna to you? No you say? Well to me neither. But that was before I found out about Dr. Konstantin Meyl and his very unorthodox, yet completely scientifically sound investigation. You will have to bear with me a little as I try to explain in very simplified terms the work of this rather genial individual. Because of the physics involved, to go through all the technical stuff first so that you do not take me for a complete lunatic (along with the good Doctor Meyl) would be very tedious. Especially if you are not particularly versed in physics, which I assume most of my readers are probably not, and even though I generally am, the concepts are right at the edge of my personal ability to grasp fully, which of course makes it rather more difficult to simplify explanations to others. But fear not. If you are versed in Physics or want to know more, I will provide all the links to the source information as we go.
Basically, Dr. Meyl has come up with the idea that the temples of ancient times were low-frequency transmitters and receivers and that they were at some point quite possibly used to transmit information faster than the messengers of the day could carry it.
There is no doubt this idea at first sounds somewhat impossible, insane or just like a plain old hoax. But Dr. Meyl is first of all not some crazy guy running around with wild theories about crop circles, he is a very successful teacher. The good doctor in fact is a Professor as well as a Doctor and an Engineer. And he teaches the subjects of power electronics and alternative energy technology at the University of Applied Sciences in Furtwangen. (link to his site)
And secondly, unlike most professors and teachers perhaps, he is a doer. And as such demonstrates his ability to recreate the transmission of power without wires on a pretty regular basis.
You can also buy his book on this subject (along with a lot of background and physics for a total of some 640+ pages) to satisfy yourself of his calculations from his site, it’s the one called Scalar Waves: From an extended Vortex and field Theory to a Technical, Biological and Historical Use of Longitudinal Waves.
I’m sure you’ll agree from the title (and size) that it would be a fascinating read, but perhaps not for your average Joe.
I say re-create the transmission of power without wires because it was of course first done (and Dr Meyl recognises the fact of course) by that other genius: Nikola Tesla. About whom, frankly, I can’t really talk rationally because he is without a doubt the most under-valued person in history. Suffice it to say that if any of the other great men of science had not lived, or even several of them put together had not lived, it is doubtful that their disappearing from our past would affect the planet as much as if Nikola Tesla had not lived. The man literally electrified the world. And yes he did it single-handedly. And no, that Wikipedia page does not do him justice. But I digress (as I always will when it comes to Tesla).
Returning to our ancient temples, what exactly is Meyl saying? It is here I say, bear with me. Or if you prefer, brace yourself.
By constructing a tuned cavity instead of an antenna, one can build a transmitter. If money is no object, then the best engineering solution for this is to build as large and as refined a tuned cavity as possible so that the lowest power requirement is enough to produce a transmission that can circle the globe. By also using wave-guides, the transmission can be amplified and thus made more powerful, and if pulsed in coded messages at pre-arranged times then the power requirement drops again. Meyl contends that the temples where in effect these tuned cavities and that in the old days the cosmic radiation noise and field strength of the guided cosmic waves was enough to power such transmissions. He goes on further to state that there exist enough examples in the ancient writings of the Roman Empire of messages delivered and answers returned faster than is possible to do without radios. And this unexplained phenomena is repeated enough times that current historians have apparently expressed the idea that the Romans had a defective sense of time, because they could not have received replies in such short periods of time.
The amazing thing is that the temples of various gods do indeed seem to have specific proportions and this makes sense given that his theory states each “god” represented a specific frequency of transmission, as shown in the plan below.
In this image the length of the resonating wave-guide chamber is show as L
According to Meyl:
Cella-Length: L = Lambda/2 – Where Lambda is the wavelength of the short-wave band. The type of wave best suited for transmission with low power would be a relatively long wavelength hence the large size of the temples.
In the above case, which is not taken from Meyl, but rather is my own taken from my visit to Delphi, and therefore not possible for Meyl to have “selected” in order to get the results he wants, L roughly equals 25 or so metres so Lambda is approx 50 metres
Frequency: f = c/Lambda – c being the speed of light (roughly 300,000,000 m/sec) so the frequency would be 300,000,000/50 = 6,000,000 cycles per second (or 6 Mhz) which fits exactly with his thesis since he predicts frequencies between 3 and 10 Mhz or so as being the most suitable. And it pretty much does with any old temples. In fact he goes on further to show far more technical proof than I can do here.
Ok. So let’s assume that the Ancients had radio transmitters. What did they receive with? And here is where if you don’t know about some little-known Russian studies done on living organisms I will lose you.
Animals. Or to be more precise, the entrails of animals. Meyl’s brilliant (and inventive) suggestion is that the animal sacrifices were in actual fact ways to see the effect of the radio-transmitters on their insides. Explaining at once the Ancient’s obsession with sacrifices as well as the practice of reading omens in the guts of the slaughtered animals, both of which are not in question.
By sacrificing the animals on the altars in the temple, thus removing other external influences he claims the ancient Romans could read more precise information in the convulsions of the entrails of freshly slaughtered animals than could be identified by the sages from more natural occurrences such as the flight of birds and so on.
It sounds like a stretch doesn’t it. Well, then let’s take a little pause here and get yourself a drink before you read the next bit because that crazy stuff you just read above is going to seem easy to believe after you read the next part, which has been done in the present day in a lab, by a couple of Russian scientists.
Back with your cognac? You’ll need it, trust me. There is no way to simply summarise this easily, but allow me to just add this excerpt below and if it’s not enough for you you can go read the (long) series of articles here: Garajajev and Poponin.
Since the basic structure of DNA-alkaline pairs and of language (as explained earlier) are of the same structure, no DNA decoding is necessary. One can simply use words and sentences of the human language! This, too, was experimentally proven! Living DNA substance (in living tissue, not in vitro) will always react to language-modulated laser rays and even to radio waves, if the proper frequencies are being used. This finally and scientifically explains why affirmations, autogenous training, hypnosis and the like can have such strong effects on humans and their bodies. It is entirely normal and natural for our DNA to react to language. While western researchers cut single genes from the DNA strands and insert them elsewhere, the Russians enthusiastically worked on devices that can influence the cellular metabolism through suitable modulated radio and light frequencies and thus repair genetic defects.
Garjajev´s research group succeeded in proving that with this method chromosomes damaged by x-rays for example can be repaired. They even captured information patterns of a particular DNA and transmitted it onto another, thus reprogramming cells to another genome. So they successfully transformed, for example, frog embryos to salamander embryos simply by transmitting the DNA information patterns! This way the entire information was transmitted without any of the side effects or disharmonies encountered when cutting out and re-introducing single genes from the DNA.
Basically DNA has capabilities way beyond what we dared to imagine and in fact it seems that DNA as a whole may be a collection of tiny wormholes, possibly permitting us to alter space and time in some ways, which would explain precognitions and premonitions and so on along with a bunch of other stuff.
Given the fact that Garajajev and Poponin have effectively been able to transmute a frog into a salamander, as well as fix or change DNA by just talking to it (!!!) I think Meyl’s idea is no longer crazy sounding but really just a rather sensible view of Ancient Technology. And as far as I know Meyl is not familiar with the work of the Russians either, making his discovery more like an independent corroboration of what Garajajev and Poponin have already proved.
Not to mention a BIG nail in the ever increasingly large coffin for the idea that the ancients were really just a bunch of primitive, superstitious fools. Something which is in any case impossible to believe if you even just visit the Palatini gardens in Rome with a good guide that explains to you what the remaining ruins of Senatorial Villas are and what the old layout was like. There is no way those people though on the mealy-mouthed, petty, small-minded scale we think on now as vile soap-opera watchers.
The political ramifications of these and other discoveries concerning the Ancients will for the most part be ignored on this blog. Not because I don’t have an opinion. As most of you reading already know (and others will find out) there is little under the Sun I do not have an opinion on. But that topic can fill a few books on its own and ultimately I don’t care too much at this stage if you agree with my views on it or not, so for the moment, as they say in the film noirs, “Just the facts Ma’am!”
As for why Hypnosis really works beyond what modern science can explain…I think you and I now know a little more about that, don’t we.