Table of Contents
For T.S.F., and J.W.S.
And all the other extended Inklings out there.
AS ONE OF THE GREAT ALCHEMISTS
fittingly observed, mans quest for gold is often his
undoing, for he mistakes the alchemical processes,
believing them to be purely material. He does not realize
that the Philosophers Gold, the Philosophers Stone,
and the Philosophers Medicine exist in each of the four
worlds and that the consummation of the experiment
cannot be realized until it is successfully carried on in
four worlds simultaneously according to one formula.
Manly P. Hall,
The Secret Teachings of All Ages,
Readers Edition, p. 508.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book owes much of its contents to the unflagging research efforts of a friend of mine who has asked that her name not be mentioned, who tracked down many of the physics papers I knew were out there, but which, due to my isolated circumstances, would have been rather difficult for me to obtain. Presented with a list of obscure journals and academic papers, Ms. LD went to work and dug them all up within a rather adventurous day in the libraries of a university on the west coast.
I also owe a very large debt of gratitude to Mr. Richard C. Hoagland, of the enterprisemission.com, for many stimulating discussions via numerous emails over these and related topics, and for his extremely insightful observations on the Nazi IRR Xerum 525and the Farm Hall transcripts that are presented in part four.
And a large thank you also to George Ann Hughes, Jack W. Smith, and all the others who have helped and encouraged along the way. Many thanks are also due to all those who have been regular readers and donators at my website, www.gizadeathstar. com, for supporting my continued research and writing. Work of this sort does not occur in a vacuum, and can beas I know all too wellvery time-consuming, and consequently, would not see the light of day without the generous support of so many good people willing to assist financially in this effort with their donations. Many have the opinion that authors, because they are published, are, if not rich, at least well off. But the reality of publishing is that, with but rare exceptions, authors generally do not see much return for their investment of time and research. Accordingly, a word of thanks must surely also go to Mr. Adam Parfrey, publisher of this book, whose kindness and willingness to take a chance have brought it to fruition: thank you Adam!
Finally, and especially, a great debt of gratitude to my dear friend Tracy Fisher, to whom this work is dedicated, for your consistent encouragement and prayers.
God bless you all with every good thing and with His compassion.
Joseph P. Farrell
Spearfish, South Dakota
2008
PREFACE
Every now and then, one has to pause and consider the synchronicities in ones life. As a boy, I, like many other American boys, loved to read comic books. But unlike the majority of my comic-book-reading colleagues, I did not spend my time with Superman, Batman, the X-men, Tarzan, or comics of the superhero genre. Rather, I spent it with and the reader is permitted a laugh, for I too regard it with some amusement Disneys Scrooge McDuck, the worlds richest duck, with a money bin full of three cubic acres of money, making him more-than-fabulously wealthy.
Scrooge and his nephew, Donald, and grandnephews Huey, Dewey, and Louie, would set off on fantastic adventures all over the world in search of this or that famous object or artifact. More to the point, the adventures which stimulated my imagination and thought the most were always those penned and composed by the cartoonist Carl Barks, a master storyteller. Barks was certainly familiar with the odd niche and avenue within human history, archaeology, and esotericism. I remember well specific comics where the Duck family would go off in search of the Seven Cities of Cibola, or where they would find lost Inca tribes (of ducks, naturally), living high in the Andes among ruins that, later, I would identify as having a more than coincidental resemblance to Machu Picchu.
In one of these Barks-inspired adventures, after Scrooge has assiduously searched through numerous self-evidently obscure and ancient texts, the intrepid ducks went in search of, and actually found, the ancient alchemical Philosophers Stone, an object reputedly capable of transmuting base metals into gold. In other words, Barks merely used the Duck family characters as a template for his adventures, which in turn sometimes functioned merely as a means to educate and communicate legends and myths a young boy might not otherwise encounter in the bland and atrophied curriculum of modern American public school education. The concept of the Philosophers Stone thus lodged in my mind at a very early age, and I purposed to learn more about it and, perhaps, to write my own comic book about it some day.
Well, this book is obviously not a comic book, but it is the fruit of my interest and researches on the subject of the Philosophers Stone and alchemy in general. And there are synchronicities in it that readers of my previous books will readily recognize. The whole theme of exotic matter or states of matter was first enunciated way back in my first book on alternative science and history, The Giza Death Star, followed up in The Giza Death Star Destroyed, and pursued in, of all places, The SS Brotherhood of the Bell: NASAs Nazis, JFK, and MAJIC-12. The idea of a transmutative physical medium, similarly, was enunciated in the first book and a whole chapter appendix was devoted to it in The Giza Death Star Destroyed. The whole idea of the non-locality of the physical medium and its strange hyper-dimensional properties, and the peculiar interplay of such hyper-dimensional physics with human history, has been a consistent leitmotif interwoven on many detailed levels throughout all my books.
One of the themes of my book Secrets of the Unified Field: The Philadelphia Experiment, the Nazi Bell, and the Discarded Theory, is a major theme again in this one: torsion. Therefore, a word is necessary on how I use this term torsion in the current work. Torsion, in its normal mathematical and physics meaning, has a very specific description and yields certain very discrete, usually very minute, values, whether one is referring to the Einstein-Cartan or the Ricci torsion tensors. I am not using the word in this specific manner, though I certainly do not exclude these meanings, when appropriate, from my usage here. Rather, I use the word to signify the concept that torsion represents: the folding and pleating of space that occurs in a spiraling rotating system of space. The analogy I used to explain the concept in Secrets of the Unified Field was that of wringing an empty aluminum soda can like one was wringing a dishrag. The analogy is applied here as well.
All this being said, this book concentrates on three exotic materials explored in my previous books, namely the monatomic American Gold of David Hudson, the ballotechnic Soviet Mercury of the red mercury nuclear scare of the 1990s, and the torsion and high-spin-state Nazi Serum of the Nazi Bell device. While the previous books did not go into great depth with their exploration of each of these substances, this one does so, with a view to exhibiting their common underlying features, and the torsion-based physics from which they are derived and upon which they are based.