Why is the moon round then? And the sun... Venus...Mars...I could go on. Why would our planet be a different shape from all the rest? How is that logical?
(A hollow core makes perfect sense, though. No idea who, if anyone, has actual facts about it, but it sure is a fun concept.)
It seems to fit really well with the Aether theory of existence. As above so below right?
So what we see as matter/atoms are Aether (flow/energy) flowing in the form of a toroidal flow pattern (vortexes on the top/bottom flowing outwards and back around if that makes sense). The same pattern as the magnetic field around a magnet.
The largest toroidal flow pattern would be the universe itself (some scientists seem to think the universe is in a giant toroidal shape, Itzhak Bentov, Nassim Haramein, etc.
We see Black Holes sometimes have galactic jets coming from the poles (what would happen if you accelerate matter/energy really fast into the poles of a toroidal flow pattern, and it can't all make it in, some would be ejected really fast in a narrow band right at the center of that vortex. Pulsars have jets of energy coming outwards right in that same way.
In the case of planets, it would make perfect sense that matter would start to coalesce right on the outer part of that toroidal pattern leading to a hollow space inside.
However nothing would be completely hollow. And I don't know the correct terminology to attempt to describe what that would be at the very center. Perhaps a singularity? Something extremely energy dense. Something "not of this world". Not matter, but the source of matter/the flip-side of matter. Spirit. Pure potential. The non-manifest.
Terrible at attempting to actually articulate/describe what I'm trying to say, but hopefully someone will find this interesting.
I've seen many things from the thunderbolts project but this is the first I've heard about see the pattern. Just checked them out and I already can tell they're awesome! Thanks so much for that!
To those here who do think the earth is flat...
Why is the moon round then? And the sun... Venus...Mars...I could go on. Why would our planet be a different shape from all the rest? How is that logical?
(A hollow core makes perfect sense, though. No idea who, if anyone, has actual facts about it, but it sure is a fun concept.)
It seems to fit really well with the Aether theory of existence. As above so below right?
So what we see as matter/atoms are Aether (flow/energy) flowing in the form of a toroidal flow pattern (vortexes on the top/bottom flowing outwards and back around if that makes sense). The same pattern as the magnetic field around a magnet.
The largest toroidal flow pattern would be the universe itself (some scientists seem to think the universe is in a giant toroidal shape, Itzhak Bentov, Nassim Haramein, etc.
We see Black Holes sometimes have galactic jets coming from the poles (what would happen if you accelerate matter/energy really fast into the poles of a toroidal flow pattern, and it can't all make it in, some would be ejected really fast in a narrow band right at the center of that vortex. Pulsars have jets of energy coming outwards right in that same way.
In the case of planets, it would make perfect sense that matter would start to coalesce right on the outer part of that toroidal pattern leading to a hollow space inside.
However nothing would be completely hollow. And I don't know the correct terminology to attempt to describe what that would be at the very center. Perhaps a singularity? Something extremely energy dense. Something "not of this world". Not matter, but the source of matter/the flip-side of matter. Spirit. Pure potential. The non-manifest.
Terrible at attempting to actually articulate/describe what I'm trying to say, but hopefully someone will find this interesting.
You are probably closer than most on this. Some good channels to check out are ‘see the pattern’ and ‘thunderbolts project’
I've seen many things from the thunderbolts project but this is the first I've heard about see the pattern. Just checked them out and I already can tell they're awesome! Thanks so much for that!