Saturday, April 7, 2012

REVOREACTION



There is a centripetal force from the periphery, which moves in a circular motion, clockwise, left to right, tending towards the center. This is a reaction.

There is a centrifugal force from the center, which moves in a circular motion, counter-clockwise, right to left, tending towards the periphery. This is a revolution.

There is a point where these two opposing currents meet.

This double motion involves conflict but also interactivity, and the potential for the reconciliation of opposites.

If the two currents are out of balance, the stronger will overpower the weaker, warping the movements and dissipating the entire process, leaving the energy in the dimension in which it began.

If the currents are in equilibrium, their imminent collision will produce a new force, moving at a perpendicular angle, affording the possibility of a level shift.

This third force moves either up or down, depending on a number of volatile and variable factors converging in a decisive Moment.

Herein lies a key.

5 comments:

  1. Hi Dow - I like your revised blog and look forward to reading your posts slowly and meditatively. I hope you will also post some of your own thoughts too. Caryl

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  2. Hey, Caryl. Thanks. And, of course, my voice will continue to be interspersed between quotations that I like. Usually, if I have not annotated something, it means that I wrote it. But maybe you meant in the sense of my own commentary on other texts. I had never thought to do that. But maybe I should, in the comment space.

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  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhVv8eqrRfI&feature=related

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  4. Smart man. Albert Pike wrote about this too. Few see it as clearly as you two, even though this is as obvious as hell.

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  5. Are you familiar with G.I.Gurdjieff's Law of Three?
    https://cac.org/daily-meditations/the-law-of-three-2019-05-16/ and https://gurdjieffclub.com/en/princzipy-raboty/

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