This Table was modified after fixing a minor error that Russell made in his 1926 depiction that showed Lutetium incorrectly as the base element for Octave 9. Once corrected (+1 position shift @element 70) this shows the symmetric 12 (5+7) total mid-tones on either side of the base for Octaves 9 and 10 (W.R. had 8/6 split for Octave 9 innermost 14 rather than 7/7). Base elements updated below in General Theory.
Octave theory postulates that within each of 10 octaves, every element is a +/- variation of the base element. The theory uses a periodic spiral/octave construct that comes from a toroidal electromagnetic field assumption (top view of toroidal field might be a Fibonacci spiral). Base elements are from Octave 5 up:
[05] Carbon (6)
[06] Silicon (14)
[07] Cobalt (27) [covered in Part1]
[08] Rhodium (45) [covered in Part1]
[09] Ytterbium (70) [covered in Part1,2]
[10] Nobelium (102)
Per the theory, base elements in Octaves 1-4 are versions of carbon not yet fully created (they become components of internal carbon structure at Octave 5); and the base elements in Octaves 6-10 are degradations of carbon (based on melting temp drops vs carbon in the theory).
How the Spiral Octaves work
OCTAVE ENERGY LEVELS SHOW THE PERIODICITY STARTED AT ZERO (0+) AT THE MASTER TONE, THEN INCREASING +1, +2, +3, 4; AND THEN DECREASING -3, -2, -1 BACK TO ZERO AT THE ENERGY SPIRAL CENTER INERTIA LINE BEFORE PICKING UP THE NEXT MASTER TONE (0+) WHICH IS OFFSET JUST TO THE +SIDE OF THE NEXT OCTAVE PAST THE INERTIA LINE. MID-TONES SHOW UP ON BOTH SIDES OF THE BASE ELEMENT AT THE 4+/4-POSITION BETWEEN THE 3+/3- ENERGY POSITIONS.
Elemental Pairs on either side of the Base Element (each octave)
Elemental pairs have opposite sign positions relative to the base element and will bond to each other to the exclusion of all others when in each others presence. Application of this phenomenon would be to neutralize excess of an element (such as Phosphorous bonding to Aluminim in soil restoration) or possible polarity reversal to create more of the elemental pair (speculation that this is even possible).
It is interesting to note that the two elements that are elemental pairs to Silver (Technetium, 1937) and Gold (Promethium, 1945) were the very last elements "discovered" in their respective groups and most likely were hidden for some reason. It is assumed that they were hidden because of their ability to bond-to and thus extract silver and gold from nearly anything, including seawater. Electrochemical simulations of these elemental pairs may also be used if the elemental pair is rare or hard to get into a usable form.
This has applications for the recycling of silver from electronics applications theoretically. If the price of silver goes high enough, we will figure out a way to extract this "unrecoverable silver".
The elemental pair issue also explains the problems with Manganese supplements. Mn apparently bonds to copper in the body, making it bio-unavailable, thus creating copper-deficiency nutrient problems.
This Table was modified after fixing a minor error that Russell made in his 1926 depiction that showed Lutetium incorrectly as the base element for Octave 9. Once corrected (+1 position shift @element 70) this shows the symmetric 12 (5+7) total mid-tones on either side of the base for Octaves 9 and 10 (W.R. had 8/6 split for Octave 9 innermost 14 rather than 7/7). Base elements updated below in General Theory.
Annotated Extract from “Secret of Light” (1926) by Walter Russell, 3rd Edition (1974), pg 134 PDF (shown in Part1): https://archive.org/details/thesecretoflightbywalterrussell1974
Part1: Copper, Silver, Rare Earths: https://greatawakening.win/p/19BGAnwfTB/an-elemental-matter-part1-copper/c/
General Theory Basics:
Octave theory postulates that within each of 10 octaves, every element is a +/- variation of the base element. The theory uses a periodic spiral/octave construct that comes from a toroidal electromagnetic field assumption (top view of toroidal field might be a Fibonacci spiral). Base elements are from Octave 5 up:
[05] Carbon (6)
[06] Silicon (14)
[07] Cobalt (27) [covered in Part1]
[08] Rhodium (45) [covered in Part1]
[09] Ytterbium (70) [covered in Part1,2]
[10] Nobelium (102)
Per the theory, base elements in Octaves 1-4 are versions of carbon not yet fully created (they become components of internal carbon structure at Octave 5); and the base elements in Octaves 6-10 are degradations of carbon (based on melting temp drops vs carbon in the theory).
How the Spiral Octaves work
OCTAVE ENERGY LEVELS SHOW THE PERIODICITY STARTED AT ZERO (0+) AT THE MASTER TONE, THEN INCREASING +1, +2, +3, 4; AND THEN DECREASING -3, -2, -1 BACK TO ZERO AT THE ENERGY SPIRAL CENTER INERTIA LINE BEFORE PICKING UP THE NEXT MASTER TONE (0+) WHICH IS OFFSET JUST TO THE +SIDE OF THE NEXT OCTAVE PAST THE INERTIA LINE. MID-TONES SHOW UP ON BOTH SIDES OF THE BASE ELEMENT AT THE 4+/4-POSITION BETWEEN THE 3+/3- ENERGY POSITIONS.
Elemental Pairs on either side of the Base Element (each octave)
Elemental pairs have opposite sign positions relative to the base element and will bond to each other to the exclusion of all others when in each others presence. Application of this phenomenon would be to neutralize excess of an element (such as Phosphorous bonding to Aluminim in soil restoration) or possible polarity reversal to create more of the elemental pair (speculation that this is even possible).
It is interesting to note that the two elements that are elemental pairs to Silver (Technetium, 1937) and Gold (Promethium, 1945) were the very last elements "discovered" in their respective groups and most likely were hidden for some reason. It is assumed that they were hidden because of their ability to bond-to and thus extract silver and gold from nearly anything, including seawater. Electrochemical simulations of these elemental pairs may also be used if the elemental pair is rare or hard to get into a usable form.
This has applications for the recycling of silver from electronics applications theoretically. If the price of silver goes high enough, we will figure out a way to extract this "unrecoverable silver".
The elemental pair issue also explains the problems with Manganese supplements. Mn apparently bonds to copper in the body, making it bio-unavailable, thus creating copper-deficiency nutrient problems.