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Find out why the advanced sciences of ancient Egypt were lost and
where they came from, and furthermore, that this knowledge was
merely a legacy from the earlier days of the original pyramid. The
Great Pyramid was restored and rebuilt numerous times, sometimes
extensively. Find out what its original purposes were and how it
was built. The pyramid will not be understood until man has an
understanding of the much bigger picture of reality, into which the
pyramid fits. Find out what limits official science and how far it
can progress with its current scientific methodology.
Readers and students of this new science of physical training will
be surprised to find that the mechanism of physical mobility is far
more sophisticated than their education has taught them. Current
science assumes that physical movements of the body/limbs of humans
and animals are entirely governed by the central nervous system
(and autonomic nervous system), in which nerve impulses are sent to
the muscles, causing contraction and subsequent motion of the body
parts. If this were the only mechanism present, the limbs would do
little more than twitch; there would be no fine coordination, no
control, and no ability to access the system (keep in control of
the movements) while motion is occurring. The author, after 30
years of research has discovered that physical mobility (voluntary)
is due to a dual system: 1) the central nervous system (CNS), and
2) an energy-field system. These two systems are synchronised
perfectly. This energy-field system is a type of computer mechanism
and is in fact nature's quantum computer system, an understanding
of which is much sought within most scientific disciplines. We are
normally only aware of sensing muscular activity, but if we, say,
imagine moving the arm (no muscular activity), we will feel
kinaesthetically the motion. This is the sensation of information
within nature' s computer system. (The neurophysiologist
will tell you it is the physiological kinaesthetic sense around the
muscles and joints, but in fact the latter accounts for only a tiny
fraction of the overall sense.) What must be recognised then is
that there are two entirely different systems of training for these
mechanisms of body motion: (1) The brain/body mechanism, and (2)
thequantum computer system. Everyone is familiar with physical
training, which comes under (1). There is adequate knowledge and
methods available for this activity and we shall not encroach on
this field except to present a summary covered in the chapters on
physiology and psychology and, in particular, as they relate to the
overall training. The other mechanism, nature' s computer
system, consists of an immense complex of energy fields
(quantum/scalar/electromagnetic fields) around and within the body
and limbs, which are, of course, invisible to the naked eye, and
not detectable by existing scientific instruments, which can't
handle higher-frequency scalar waves. This system requires a very
different kind of training for development as we shall come to
understand later in the book. Now the reader who does not wish to
acquire any knowledge on this subject but merely wants to
concentrate on training can go directly to the exercises and
procedures given in Chapter 10. Nevertheless, it should be pointed
out that any understanding at all will be beneficial to progress.
These new processes are not like those of regular physical
training. With ordinary physical exercises, improvement may occur
after only a day or so, but which can also be lost as rapidly as
gained with a lapse in training. With this new system, however,
although gains will be much slower, or not readily noticeable, they
nevertheless will be permanent. Just as one never forgets how to
ride a bicycle once learned, these mechanisms do not deteriorate or
lose their information. If, however, the reader does wish to
acquire some understanding, then elementary theory is given in the
main text of this book, in particular, there isan introduction in
the chapter on training in case the reader wishes to go immediately
to the training. But for the serious science student the appendices
give some of the fundamental (and difficult) theory of this vast
subject, which generalises to all other phenomena, for example, we
now have a new basis with which to evaluate how insects fly or how
for instance a humming bird beats its wings at such an enormous
rate, creating a huge inertial problem for mainstream science
explanations. Note that there is a chapter on instrumental techni
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