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Chapter Five
STRATOSPHERE REVELATIONS
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"Things are not.. what they seem".
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The pilgrim of 1928 was aware that land discovered beyond the South Pole point confirmed only one aspect of Physical Continuity. He knew that there would have to be photographic confirmation of his disclosure concerning terrestrial sky light and the deceptively globular and isolated appearance of outer sky areas. Only through such proof could he hope to establish the illusory nature of astronomical conclusions dealing with celestial areas.
Hence his pilgrimage was directed toward procuring the required photographic proof through a stratosphere ascent which would permit photographing an area of the Earth's luminous outer sky surface from stratosphere darkness.
Though there had never been a record of terrestrial sky light, he knew the condition would be confirmed if it was pKiible for him to'ascend into the stratosphere. The lens deceptions contingent upon telescopic observation and photography of luminous celestial areas was most dear to him, but duty to Ins cause seemed to demand that he spare no effort to show the comparisons at terrestrial level so that others might comprehend the illusions. Therefore from 1929 until 1935 he sought means whereby he might ascend into the stratosphere. And during that period he recorded the conditions of lights and their movements which produced illusion in the workaday world at terrestrial level.
He relentlessly pursued the mathematical contradictions of theory which had over a period of four hundred years made an incomprehensible patchwork of the universe about us. Though the abstract mathematical values were understandingly applicable in the fifteenth century, when only the abstract could apply in an interpretation of cosmic values, they loomed as poor makeshift in the light of modem research and discovery. For nights without number he patiently observed the brilliant but deceptive beacons of the celestial sky from vantage points on the desert sand and from lofty mountain ledges. In such application he was able to compare the movement of lights observed at every angle on terrestrial level with the seeming movement of lights at celestial level. And he discerned the synonymity of illusions developed from light manifestations at both levels.
The simplest observations held a meaning most profound. And he who dutifully sought the meaning watched and recorded the apparent movement, or "twinkling", of stationary streetlights in Oakland, California. That observation was made from the deck of a ferry plying the seven miles of water from San Francisco to Oakland. Such simple observation proved that the streetlights "seeming motion" was attributable to the motion of water between his sensi-tive optic lenses and the lights of Oakland. And it was therebv discerned that known and unknown conditions existing between a telescope lens and luminous gaseous sky areas of the celestial produce the same illusion of motion.
He never tired of experimenting with the play of electricity in the filament of light bulbs of every size and variety. He observed the light's movement from every angle, and under every condition. And such enterprise afforded proof of the influence all light exerts on the optic lens, and on every other lens, for all of which the human lens has provided the pattern.
Observation of the light distortions resulting from magnification of light at various distances provided foundation for understanding of the observational error leading to the absurd astronomical conclusion of "planetary rings". His perception reduced the so-called celestial "rings" to unreal whirling companions of correspondingly unreal astro-mathematico globular entities assumed to constitute the Univers.
His persistent application and study of the most humble but realistic manifestations at terrestrial level brought discernment of the complete lack of meaning in seeming manifestations at celestial level. The astronomically prescribed celestial features of "puffs of smoke in a barrel", "doubk stars", "galaxies," etc., were reduced to rrrrrpler bat realistic values of cosmic expression adequately described in following pages.
The uninvolved play of searchlights on a darkened sky, or other dark area, proved the inability of the lens to record any area faithfully. As the searchlight disclosed that it was compelled to reproduce its circular lens outline on formations of every nature other than globular, it was made manifest that areas not globular in reality were made deceptively globular by the lens.
The distorting influence of mist and fog on luminous areas and objects of the land and the waters contributed to his elaborate ritual of the years. And the study of such influence at work brought confirmation of Physical Continuity before the first photograph of terrestrial skylight distortion existed. And that single feature materially contrib-uted to the premise that the Universe as astronomically assumed to be can never exist.
It was found that halos and rings, and spheroidal intruders of reality's magnificent scene, are found wherever and whenever one seeks them under conditions making for their illusive development. In consideration of the ease with which they are promiscuously manufactured, there is little wonder that they are observed in telescopic observations of the celestial.
He diligently watched and studied the movements of airplane lights reflected against the darkened sky and against the background of other lights in near-by hills and distant mountains. And he was permitted to discern the gross deception the moving airplane lights would impose on the immature mind of tome native from an undeveloped region of our civilization. Such a native, lacking knowledge of the altirudinal relation of hills, mountains, and the moving airplane lights and their relation to other lights in hills and mountains and of the celestial sky, would be unmistakably awed by the indefinable spectacle. It was found reasonable to conclude the native's ignorance of the placement and purpose of the various lights, in relation to those of the unknown airplane in motion, would permit no other determination than that the moving airplane lights represented some fearful unknown entity or condition of the so-called "Heavens above".
Though familiarity with moving airplane lights at night enables the more enlightened to comprehend realistic value of the lights and their movement, they are, nevertheless, as readily confused by corresponding light movement and light distortions developed at their immediate terrestrial level Hence it may be understood that the measure of deception for the average person is multiplied by the seeming movement of known and unknown lights at celestial level. Early experimentation established that illusion can readily be fostered in the most astute minds through land surface observation of the light aura which, under conditions favorable to its development, enshrouds an airplane's lights as well as the plane and produces the Illusion of a luminous disk moving through the night sky. Inasmuch as a saucer is a disk, the illusion of "flying saucers" is imposed.
It was also proved that haze, fog. clouds, and angles of observation contribute to the foregoing and numerous other illusions. It was further establisltecl that even on a very clear night the lights of an airplane in motion present nothing but a "flying saucer" if they are observed through a translucent window glass.
The same illusory developments were found to applv to a bright arclight at the negligible distance of fifty feet from the observing lens as they apply to the "moon" at its estimated distance of about 335,000 miles. And, as distance lends enchantment, the illusion determinable as such at fifty feet is without question accepted as celestial reality when advanced by an astronomical conclusion which holds no possible hope of determination. Though the disguise and projected illusions of lights and luminous areas can be ably penetrated at a distance of fifty feet on terrestrial level, they do, nevertheless, impose temporary deception until investigative determination of their realistic value is had. Hence, consider the enlargement of deception from the same disguise at distances prohibiting a determination of values.
Observation of the unpretentious flame of an ordinary match eloquently affirmed principles of lens function and deceptions resulting therefrom. Experimentation established tliat the perpendicular flame of a lighted match in the darkness is automatically distorted by the camera lens, which, in night photograph, causes the flame to be reduced to a horizontal line. The situation developed in photograph from an airplane at an altitude of only two miles. It was thereby perceived that reducing the perpendicular flame to a flameless horizontal line constitutes primary expression of all lens convergence. An increase of photographing altitude developed the secondary expression in lens function, producing the curve, as previously related. The camera lens curved that same horizontal line up at both ends in the beginning of an arc. On complete lens convergence, achieved at greater photographing altitude, the match presented the photographic appearance of a luminous disk.
The qualification should be made for readers who are unfamiliar with the fact that light is always photographed as white. Hence, though it was known that the white disk represented a luminous disk, the photographed area in a black-and-white photograph was white.
This simple match experiment was not considered too simple or unimportant for the United States Army Corps' application of many hours. Therefore, consider what the lens is capable of doing to a straight line and how it can make globular and isolated luminous sky areas that are not globular or isolated. Then it may be possible to reconcile the illusions developing from observation of the celestial with that two-thousand-year-old dictum: "With eyes ye see not, yet believe what ye see not" That parable, too, merits repetition on every pan of this book. Its meaning may be generally understood after another two thousand years.
It was found on another occasion that the match flame would, through optic lens function, develop an aura of greenish-red light when held in one's Kami and viewed through mildly watering eyes. In other words, there would be formed, by the optic lens detecting the flame through a moisture film, a luminous and colorful circle which seemed to envelop the flame. That illusion in observing a known light not more than six or eight inches from the detecting optic lens, and at a time when the least additional moisture between the lens and its object exerted such influence on the optic lens which distorted the object, holds very definite relation to telescopic lens detection of luminous celestial sky areas. Telescopic detection of luminous celestial areas must be had at tremendous distances and through numerous distorting and obscuring media. In some celestial sky-light areas those media become at times much more powerful agents of the illusory than the eye moisture between an optic lens and a known luminous area close at hand.
Though there need not prevail at celestial level a corresponding volume of moisture influencing illusory lens creations seen in the lighted-match aura, there is unmistakable radiation from the gaseous content of all observed luminous celestial areas. The influence of such radiation between the detecting telescopic lens and a luminous celestial area, in conjunction with other conditions of the stratosphere, can be expected to develop corresponding match-flame illusion of one and even more luminous circles. Such circles, or socalled "satellites" can then deceptively appear to be circling around the observed luminous celestial area.
At this point it should be explained that it is not only the distorting influence of media through which light is observed, and the function of light itself at the point of observation, which contribute to production of the illusory. There exists beyond such factors the influence which the observed light exerts on the detecting lens. There is ex pressed the value of "the mora you look, the lew you see."
Too much looking distorts color. Too Intent observation of light and luminous areas produces the distortion of light shadows, or shading Continued observation of too-intense light causes the luminous area to become "black".
"Let there be light". Yet the world of Illusion is cluttered with light emanations. The Sun becomes a positive bevy of multicolored globes when observed at the angle proper for their development And in the multiple globes there are multiple smaller globular patterns. The Universe of illusion has no end of globes ana spheres and whirling globular "bodies," though none exist in fact
The terrestrial parallel of heat radiation's power to distort luminous areas and objects was found in observation of a series of wall lights that were clear glass electric light bulbs. They extended at intervals of ten feet along the interior wall of a room one hundred feet in length. The room was heated from open, ventilation on the opposite wall ten feet away. From a position on the ventilator side of the room, observation was made of the electric lights at the further end of the room, fifty to one hundred feet away. Hence the beat waves from the open ventilation were between the observing sensitive optic nerves and the electric lights. The motion of the heat waves, though not detected by the optic lens, produced the optical illusion that every light was flickering, or "twinkling". A shift of position to the opposite side of the room, where the lights were seen without heatwave interference, at once permitted observa-tion of the realistic unflickering lights, thereby proving the illusion.
It is significant to note that this illusory ooudMluu was found to develop when the heat waves lacked suflscuot force and volume to be m^n by the optic lens. The radiation exerted its illusory action though it was not seen as a barrier to and distorter of light observation.
Earlier a counterpart of heat waves' Influence was shown in the influence of water morion on the sensitive optic nerves as the optic lens detected streetlights fa Oakland.
Under such conditions of observation the larger and more luminous streetlights were subjected to corresponding influence, and they afforded the same illusory performance.
However, it is pertinent to record that the streetlights movement was "more pronounced at a distance of five to seven miles" than the illusory movement of electric lights at distances of from fifty to one hundred feet.
There is a lesson here of greater illusory movement with an increase of distance from observed luminous area. It has considerable to do with the Galilean premise of illusion, "rounded bodies circling or ellipsing in space". Consideration of astronomical distances should bring understanding of Physical Continuity. And it should assist one to know that movement may be had from the terrestrial Poles into the universe about us.
As this is written, a tiny voice seems to bring an astronomer's expostulation that no such deceptions can be imposed upon the magnificent lenses ofi astronomy's workshop. And it contends that the greater power of telescope lenses penetrates the conditions that create the illusory.
Therefore it should be said that no amount of light magnification can produce greater clarity. The light and the lens seem to resent magnifying: increased magnification of light and luminous areas develops a greater volume of light distortion. It becomes evident that the brilliant writer of yesteryear, Tiffany Thayer, was cognizant of such a feature when he referrea to the two-hundred-inch telescope lens then being perfected as "the white elephant of Mount Palomar." That lens is competent "to magnify all the illusions of the centuries". Lens magnification of light and luminous areas, and the light distortion that ensues, is that which produces "canyons" on the Moon and a grotesque array of astronomical entities "dot never did ana never could exist on land or sea or in the universe about us".
Light magnification is the imponderable which produces the light shadings in luminous celestial areas. Such light shadings within luminous sky areas are at times heralded as "clouds in the stratosphere over the celestial sky light area; at other times, they are claimed to be vegetation on the celestial land under the sky light.
At this point it is well to repeat that telescope lenses cannot penetrate celestial sky light. It is true that clouds and vegetation are helpful to human beings. Without the clouds vegetation might not exist. Hence one may take one's choice as to what light shadings represent, other than light shadings. Though clouds and vegetation exist under diss light which extends throughout the Universe whole, such conditions cannot be detected through the luminous sky envelope. All tliat telescope lenses detect is an aspect of the luminous sky.
These and innumerable corresponding truths of experimentation and brain observation have been developed dirough unremitting effort to refute or to verify the disturbing perceptional portrait of the realistic Universe. For that portrait was presented to that early pilgrim as a burdensome and heartbreaking gift from the Force which ordains our individual destinies. The gift could not be re-jected, because the Force persisted in its endowment. But is it to be wondered that he who was so endowed made periodic attempts to abandon the gift? The hours he consumed in tedious combing through the centuries accumulation of astro-athematical data embodying glaring contradictions Out resulted from organized endeavor to sustain the postulate of terrestrial isolation constituted a period which could have thrice told the fables of "a thousand and one nights" fame. And time would have been left to erect all the unreal mathematical universes that history records.
To accomplish a project of such magnitude tbat it opened the centuries ice-blocked pedis to the universe about us, that early pilgrim's elaborate laboratory was generally the uncluttered platform of the desert sands. And his customary astronomical observatory was an unsheltered mountain ledge. But his equipment was superior to the most powerful 'elescopes of Mount Wilson and Mount Palomar. At the latter, the two hundred-inch lens was then being ground and primed "to sec all and know all". Absurdtrm! Abturdum! It ...
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It may be perceived that the same time measurement could have applied if, contrariwise, it had been assumed that the Sun described a daily course around the Earth from east to west Then it would have made little difference if the Earth were assumed to be globular, cylindrical, or tubular in contour. Sun movement could provide hours of the day as readily as Earth movement did.
The assumed circling movement of the assumed Earth sphere was made to conform to the time gauge, and the time gauge conformed to the assumed movement of the assumed Earth sphere. Hence the rnathematlzed approximate twenty-four-thousand- mile circumference of an assumed globe Earth invited mathematical determination that one twenty-fourth of the Earth's assumed daily turn in space would constitute one hour. Therefore, since one assumed complete rotation of the assumed globe Earth of twenty-four-thousand-mile circumference would constitute an Earth day of twenty-four hours, there had to be twenty-four different starting points for time. Every thousand miles of the twentyfour-thousand-mile circumference would factually experience a different twelve o'clock noon and a different twelve o'clock midnight. Such mathematizing was by no means com plica ted.
It then followed that the diameter of the man made globe Earth would have to conform to global dimensions. Accordingly, there had to be formulated assumed northern and southern diminishing points for the assumed globe Earth assumed to be isolated in space infinite. Reality could not be consulted, and it could in no way control designation of the assumed northern and southern ends sustaining the globular concept and the isolated Earth globe.
Man, having established the Earth's contour and limits to meet the need of that time, had very little interest in the physical aspects of the northern and southern extremities which his mathematics had ordered. His interest was centered in travel east to west from the "Old World' for conquest of the western "New World."
After the assumed globe Earth's assumed ends were mathematically fixed in time and space, there had to be provided an independent orbit, or space path, for its assumed daily and yearly movement in relation to other assumed cosmic "globes" scattered throughout timeless infinity. They, too, had to be made to conform to the mathematical order perfecting man's illusory Universe.
Hence it may be perceived that man, rather dian Creative Force or Deity, was responsible for the fifteendveentury pattern of the Earth and the universe about the Earth. Nevertheless, the pattern woven from illusion served a purpose and filled a need of that time.
It can be readily realized that the interest of four hundred years ago could not, and need not, be in any constructive manner directed toward the assumed ends of the assumed Earth globe. Lack of factual knowledge of the Earth's northern and southern extent explains why the meet famous of American explorers as recentiy as February, 1047, was impelled to describe the endless land extending beyond the assumed northern end of the Earth as "thecenter of the great unknown."
Though the Universe structure imposed by the Copernican Theory was developed from illusion, the misinterpretation of values bestowed certain benefits upon men of that era. It afforded adequate general understanding of this "New World" reality. And it provided a necessary and most help-ful gauge of time even though, in so doing, it prescribed a series of fanciful movements for assumed cosmic "globe bodies" which, in common with the assumed Earth "globe body," seemingly constitute the Universe whole.
Unfortunately, in providing such benefits there also developed the very questionable benefit of belief that man would "fall off" the Earth ends north and south instead of the Earth's "edges" east and west. Theory may persistendy oppose theory, out only fact can displace theory. The facts of our time disclose the fallacy of assumptive Earth ends north and south. Such facts of modern discovery provide abundant evidence that land and water extends indefinitely beyond both assumptive ends prescribed by theory of 1543.
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[In the Errata Corrige, it is explained that the following images, be considered as if it were a 1-Single -NdT]
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