Thesis#1: "Standard" Periodic Table has been intentionally modified to act as cabal science filter to cover up key fundamental and elemental relationships that are critical to understanding our reality.
Walter Russell Thesis follow-on: The key fundamental and elemental relationships are that the whole table is basically a spiral that is symmetric both +/- on either side of a base element AND +/- on either side of the spiral (i.e. Octave 9-10, Octave 7-8, etc. are pairs). The symmetry extends down to the elemental level because +/- elements on either side of base are also elemental pairs. W.R. says that this symmetry and spiral come from light and the spiral is a kind of energy wave that creates elements which creates matter.
Fascinating. Are all elements stable, or do they degrade over time into lower elements / octaves? I ask that for the limited knowledge I have that uranium degrades over several half-lifes into lead. Or is that a special case and the other elements remain stable?
Isotopes are variations of the elements and may also be +/- variations of the elements themselves as they tend to decay into the next element on either side. This is another deep rabbit hole I have not gone into yet. There are tens of isotopes for each element, typcially with only a few reasonably stable for most.
Isotopes are same element with varying number of neutrons. Element is defined as specific number of protons/neutrons represented by element #.
Thesis#1: "Standard" Periodic Table has been intentionally modified to act as cabal science filter to cover up key fundamental and elemental relationships that are critical to understanding our reality.
Walter Russell Thesis follow-on: The key fundamental and elemental relationships are that the whole table is basically a spiral that is symmetric both +/- on either side of a base element AND +/- on either side of the spiral (i.e. Octave 9-10, Octave 7-8, etc. are pairs). The symmetry extends down to the elemental level because +/- elements on either side of base are also elemental pairs. W.R. says that this symmetry and spiral come from light and the spiral is a kind of energy wave that creates elements which creates matter.
Fascinating. Are all elements stable, or do they degrade over time into lower elements / octaves? I ask that for the limited knowledge I have that uranium degrades over several half-lifes into lead. Or is that a special case and the other elements remain stable?
Isotopes are variations of the elements and may also be +/- variations of the elements themselves as they tend to decay into the next element on either side. This is another deep rabbit hole I have not gone into yet. There are tens of isotopes for each element, typcially with only a few reasonably stable for most.
Isotopes are same element with varying number of neutrons. Element is defined as specific number of protons/neutrons represented by element #.
Interesting... with you so far.