14 - Weight
Weight is a measure of unbalance. It indicates the intensity of desire of any mass which is out of balance to find balance.
Every mass in the universe has its proper potential position. Every mass will find that position if not prevented from doing so by the bindings of other masses.
Weight should be measured dually as temperature is. It should have an above and a below zero to measure the intensity of desire in masses to rise from the earth as well as to fall toward it.
Weight is matter out of place
All matter is a record of its potential at the place of its birth in its wave. Masses of matter, like buoys floating in the ocean to mark courses for ships, are floating in space to register the electric potential of the position of their birth.
Whenever matter is in the place of its birth, it belongs there. It is, therefore, in balance. It floats in its balanced field. In that position it is weightless in respect to anything else in the universe. Whenever it is taken from its field center, or becomes an eccentric part of another field, it is out of balance with the two forces acting upon it. It then has weight, and the measure of that weight is the measure of its unbalance with its out-of-place environment.
Weight of matter and measure of electric potential are one and the same thing.
Weight is unbalance
A body which floats has no measurable weight. It is in balance with its environment. Likewise, a dead battery has no measurable electric potential. The ammeter needle points to zero. Its two unbalanced conditions of charge and discharge have become voided by each other.
The measure called “weight” and the measure called “electric potential” are the expression of force which the two electric opposites of charge and discharge exert against each other at any point in the universe.
The potential of all orbits of matter in space in which matter floats is equal to the potential of the mass which floats in it.
The plane of our earth's equatorial region coincides with an equipotential plane of pressure which is equally balanced in respect to that part of the earth which floats above that plane, and that part which floats below it. In this plane the earth has no weight whatsoever in respect to anything in the entire universe, for it is in a balanced position in respect to the entire universe and keeps moving into a new position only because of the movement of all other masses in the universe.
Our balanced earth is weightless
The earth could have weight only if removed to other pressures farther extended from the plane of the lenslike wheel of which our sun is the hub. If it could be pushed toward the sun by some giant hand, it would seek balance in its own orbit when released, exactly as a man would rise when plunged beneath his own balance level in water. Every freely moving mass in the universe floats in its own equally divided wave field exactly as a man floats in water.
The moon is not falling upon the earth, as generally supposed, for it is in balance with its environment and cannot fall. Its contracted mass is equal to the expanded mass it displaces in its wave field.
For the same reason a cloud floats in the sky. If one could put scales under it, one would find it had no weight unless lifted above or thrust below its equipotential level. If it condensed into heaver vapor, it would fall to seek a new static equator where it would again float. If it condensed to rain, it would fall into the sea to find balance in a like condition.
Weight is not a fixed property of matter. It is as variable as matter is variable.
A man weights less as he climbs a mountain, weights more as he descends into a mine, and weights nothing when he floats in water.
Unless, and until, matter is extended from a plane of equal pressure, there can be no weight, nor can there be electric potential.
Weight curves gravity
The equilibrium of sea level is a good example. If that static equator has no dynamic wave extensions, there can be no electric pressures exerted to express in weight, nor could there be weight of waves when waves are not extended from it. Waves above sea level have a positive weight when they fall toward gravity. Waves below sea level have negative weight when they rise toward space to find balance at sea level.
Weight is, therefore, but a dimension of unbalance. Unbalance alone can be weighed, for there can be no weight to balance.
Weight defined
The following definitions of weight are in keeping with Natural Law.
Weight is the sum of the differences between the two pressures which act upon every mass.
Weight is the measure of the differences in electric potential between any mass and the volume it occupies.
Weight is the measure of unbalance between any mass and its displaced environment.
Weight is the measure of the force which a body exerts in seeking its true potential.
Weight is the sum of the difference between the inward pull of gravitation and the outward thrust of radiation.
Weight is the measure of intensity of the desire within all matter to express motion or seek rest from motion.
“for again I say, each of the two lights which giveth form to My knowing, through My thinking, giveth its all to the other one to become the other one, sequentially.
“Light giveth to darkness to again become light, as life giveth to death to again become life. Likewise darkness of heaven giveth darkness unto suns to become dark, as suns giveth light unto heavens to again become suns.
“thuswise all things of earth giveth unto heavens to again become earth-things by the giving of
heavens. Thus do all My creating things simulate the oneness of My knowing by interchanging their all for Oneness in Me. That interchanging records My knowing in pulsations of My thinking but My thinking is not Me. My knowing is alone Me.”
- from The Divine Iliad
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