Glad to see this thread didn't die.
Ed refered to 'perpetual motion' specifically in his experiments, not levers and stones. Also, I don't think he tried to magnetize the blocks.
Rather, I think he used a specific frequency(ies) of EM pulsed into the blocks to achieve an 'anti-gravity' effect, which he could feel through
vibration in his hand in the block when he 'sang' that note against it, (feedback through a mechanical wave). And the configuration of the
magnet/spokes/coils in this type of machine is the key to it's perpetual motion. It doesn't break the laws of thermodynamics any more than a
waterwheel in a flowing river does. Location may be an important factor in the rate of accumulation of this energy, and it may even be seasonal, in a
sense.
I'm torn... I think this has to do with far more than just perpetual motion and antigravity but I'm very reluctant to say more. Please take no
offense, but I don't think this kinda stuff should be handed over to humanity on a silver platter; not in our current state of social development.
This is paradigm shifting stuff; the power 'of the Gods' so to speak, and I don't think we're ready to crawl around outside the playpen just yet,
well not as a whole anyway.
But here's a clue...
See Cymatics
en.wikipedia.org...
and resonance
en.wikipedia.org...
Ed was a 'geomancer', just as was the mythical Merlin, who supposedly floated the stones and created Stonehenge. The druids supposedly had/have
this knowledge as well. Was it passed on to them by this mythical figure? Most myths have some basis in fact, but just grossly embelished upon.
The Egyptians show the symbolic concepts of this knowledge in many hieroglyphs, (for example, look at the pictures/glyphs of Nefertari). Don't
forget the weird tuning forks found in an ancient Egyptian archaeological site, some being several feet tall with a draw string attached taught
between the ends. They look like a common hieroglyph angled sideways a bit. What were those used for? Giant musicians? Art for the sake of art?
I'll give you another hint. As you look through the actual hieroglyphs you'll come upon the glyphs of a shallow bowl with 3 strait lines above it,
and a shallow bowl (usually in close proximity) with a single wavey line with 3 peaks. It's a very common hieroglyph. Think cymatics, or should it
be Kemetics?
The stonemasons had this knowledge. The stonemasons morphed into the freemasons in order to bolster membership (hence the word, 'free') and to give
a facelift to the organization after growing unpopularity and suspicion of the original group's motives..., but only high ranking members have even a
chance at gaining this knowledge outright. They subtly codify this knowledge in symbolism as well. I wouldn't pay too much attention to their
rituals, (as most were added during our century by a freemason leader of... questionable judgement). But the symbolism is all over in their lodges.
They also focus on moral and ethical teaching. There's a reason for this...
I think this knowledge has been with some of us for quite some time, if not from our beginning. But recorded history has shown that in one form or
another we, the human race, have a habit of suppressing knowledge, whether through warfare, greed, social conditioning, scientific conditioning (in
some instances), etc. The real question is, if you had this knowledge (and it is technical, NOT mystical) what would you do with it? What did Ed do
with it? (I'm being rhetorical)
I hope this makes more comprehensive sense.
[edit on 29-1-2009 by Flux8]