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Information on Mineral Disintegration





(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
PO BOX 1031
Mesquite, TX 75150

There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
files on KeelyNet!

February 27, 1991

DISINT1.ASC
--------------------------------------------------------------------
This file courteously shared with KeelyNet by Dale Pond.

Dale publishes the Journal of Sympathetic Vibratory Physics out of
Colorado Springs. His address is listed in the file CONTACT1.
Dale also publishes many hard to find papers on
- More - [C]ontinue, [S]top, [N]onStop? n Keely and related subjects.
A partial list of his publications is the KeelyNet file SOURCE1.ASC.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Mineral Disintegration
and more of Keely's work and stumbling blocks

A short time ago the mining world in America was seized with an
inexplicable excitement. The value of gold mines in particular
suddenly rose. Mines long since abandoned on account of the expense
of working, awoke, and rubbing their eyes made their way again into
the stock list.

Presently it leaked out that a syndicate of the longest-headed and
wealthiest mining capitalists were quietly buying up all the cheap
and apparently worthless gold mines they could hear of, and people
at once concluded that something was up.

Then everyone of a speculative turn, very knowingly began to buy
worthless gold mining shares at ever-increasing prices, and when the
little speculators had gorged themselves to the full extent of their
financial capacity, they asked: What next? No one knew exactly what
he was after; and everyone looked to the Syndicate for the next
move; but the Syndicate smilingly put its hands in its pockets and
whistled! After the fever came prostration. The small fry had not,
like the Syndicate, bought to hold, so they got first uneasy, then
alarmed, and finally panic-stricken.

The tide of credulity turned and began to run out even more quickly
than it had set in, and thousands of the unlucky, but greedy little
grudgeon of the Stock Exchange were left stranded in a short time by
the receding tide of speculation, kicking and gasping in the mortal
agonies of financial asphyxia.

The panic is easily accounted for by the general laws that govern
the movements of the Stock Exchange; but not so the action of the
syndicate. The problem remains: Why did the long-headed millionaires
buy up worthless mines? That is the point of interest, and the
explanation thereof is as follows:

Page 1



A few weeks before the panic occurred, twelve solid men -
millionaires - met by appointment in a certain laboratory in
Philadelphia to witness an exhibition of the disintegration of
quartz by a new method. They were mining magnates, who had a
tremendous interest in getting the gold out of quartz rock
quickly and cheaply.

The inventor obliged them by simply touching some blocks of
quartz with a little machine he held in his hand; and as he
touched each block it instantly crumbled into atomic dust, in
which the specks of gold it had contained stood out like
boulders in a bed of sand.

Then the twelve solid men solidly said: Mr. Keely, if you will
in the same manner disintegrate some quartz for us in its
natural place, we will each of us give you a cheque for ($1000)
---- dollars.

So off they all went to the Katskill mountains, and there the
twelve solid men pointed out a reef of quartz on the side of a
mountain, as solid as themselves; and Mr. Keely took out his
little machine and said: Gentlemen,please take the time.

In eighteen minutes there was a tunnel in that quartz mountain
eighteen feet long and four and a half feet in diameter. Then
Mr. Keely quietly returned to Philadelphia with his cheques in
his pocket, and the twelve solid men went from New York to San
Francisco to gather in the seemingly worthless stock of mines
long disused because of the working expense, thus producing the
disastrous effect upon the mining world, which we have just
seen. (All these men bound themselves to secrecy; and this is
the first time that this incident has been made public.)

How was the quartz disintegrated?--That is one of Keely's secrets.
The disintegration of the rock is, however, a very small and
accidental effect of that tremendous force that lies behind the
secret. Indeed, that particular application of the force was a
chance discovery.

One day the inventor was studying the action of currents of ether
playing over a floor upon which he had scattered fine sand,---the
ether was rolling the sand into ropes,---when a block of granite,
which was used for fastening back a door, disintegrated under his
eyes. He took the hint, and in a few days he had made a vibratory
disintegrator.

Who is this man, and what is this force? to whom, or to which,
boring a tunnel into the mountain side is mere child's play? Surely,
were such things true, science would long ago have filled the world
with the renown of such a man---the man who has discovered a force
in nature compared to which all known motor or mechanical forces are
like the scratch of a nail, or the breath of a child.

Surely the press, the platform, and even the pulpit would have
resounded with the glad tidings of so great a victory over the
stubborn powers of nature, a victory which goes so far towards
making man the master of things in this material plane!

Those who argue like that know little of modern science and its

Page 2



votaries. An Anglican bishop never ignored a dissenting preacher
with more dignified grace than the professor of orthodox science
ignores the heterodox genius who has the audacity to wander beyond
the limitations which received opinion has placed upon the
possibilities of nature.

The fact is that men of science have persistently ignored, and know
absolutely nothing about, the great department of nature into which
Keely penetrated years ago, and in which he has now made himself at
home.

Not long ago a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Major
Ricarde-Seaver, went to Philadelphia to convince himself as to the
nature of Keely's discovery. He returned, saying that Keely was
working with, and had the apparent command over forces, the nature,
or even the very existence, of which was absolutely unknown to him,
and so far as he is aware, to modern science.

Beyond disintegration lies dispersion, and Keely can just as easily
dissolve the atoms of matter as disintegrate its molecules. Dissolve
them into what? Well,---into ether, apparently; into the
hypothetical substratum which modern scientists have postulated, and
about whose nature they know absolutely nothing but what they invent
themselves, but which to Keely is not a hypothesis, but a fact as
real as his own shoes; and which ether, indeed, seems to be the
protoplasm of all things.

As to the law of gravity, it appears very like a delusion, in the
light of Keely's experiments, or, at least, but one manifestation of
a law of very much wider application---a law which provides for the
reversion of the process of attraction in the shape of a process of
repulsion.

One of Keely's little scientific experiments is to put a small wire
round an iron cylinder that weighs several hundred weight, and when
the force runs through the wire, to lift the cylinder up on one
finger and carry it as easily as if it were a piece of cork.

Not long ago he moved, single-handed, a 500 horse-power vibratory
engine from one part of his shop to another. There was not a scratch
on the floor, and astounded engineers declared that they could not
have moved it without a derrick, to bring which in operation would
have required the removal of the roof of the shop.

Of course it is but a step in advance of this to construct a machine
which, when polarized with a negative attraction, will rise from the
earth and move under the influence of an etheric current at the rate
of 500 miles an hour, in any given direction. This is, in fact,
Keely's airship.

Lately, he has applied his force to optics, and by means of three
wires placed across the lens of a microscope he makes its magnifying
power equal to that of the great telescope in the Lick observatory -
the largest in the world. Why don't all astronomers and opticians
run to look through Keely's microscope, and to examine into the
process?

Perhaps if Galileo were alive he might express an opinion!

Page 3



But, the reader may naturally exclaim, how long has this been going
on, and we to know nothing about it? Mr. Keely is now over 60 years
of age, and he has worked since he was a boy, at times, upon various
inventions before his discovery of ether.

For the last 18 years he has been constantly employed with
experiments upon the ether; for eighteen long years he has worked
day and night, with hand and brain, in the face of discouragements
that would long ago have killed the owner of a less heroic soul; and
he has worked almost single handed.

Slander, ridicule, open accusations of fraud, charlatanry, insanity-
-- everything evil that it could enter the head of the knave of the
heart of the fool to conceive, every mean insinuation, every
malicious lie that prejudice, bigotry, ignorance, self-conceit,
vested interests, greed, injustice, dishonesty, and hypocrisy could
concoct --- these have been the encouragement which, so far, the
world has bestowed upon the discoverer of the profoundest truths and
laws of nature that have ever been imparted to the profane, or even
hinted at, outside of the circle of Initiates.

And now it has been proved in a hundred ways, and before thousands
of persons competent to judge of the merits of his machines, that he
has really discovered previously unknown forces in nature, studied
them, mastered some of their laws, invented, and almost perfected,
apparatus and machinery that will make his discoveries of practical
application in a hundred ways --- now that he has actually done all
this, how does the world treat him?

Does Congress come forward with a grant to enable him to complete
his marvelous work? Do men of science hail him as a great
discoverer, or hold out the hand of fellowship? Do the people do
honour to the man whose sole entreaty to them is to receive at his
hands a gift a thousand times more precious to them than steam
engine or telegraph?

It is a literal fact that the world to-day would tear Keely to
pieces if it had the power to do so, and if he fell exhausted in the
terrible struggle he has so long maintained, his failure to
establish his claims would be received with a shout of malignant
delight from nearly every lecture hall, pulpit, counting-house, and
newspaper office in the so-called civilized world!

The world has hardly ever recognized its benefactors, until it has
become time to raise a statue to their memory; 'in order to beautify
the town.' Jealousy, stupidity, the malignity which is born of
conscious inferiority, are at this moment putting in Keely's road
every impediment which law and injustice can manufacture.

Two hundred years ago he would have been burned, a century since he
would have been probably mobbed to death, but thank God we are too
civilized, too humane to burn or mob to death those who make great
discoveries, who wish to benefit their fellow men, or whose ideas
are in advance of their age - we only break their hearts with
slander, ridicule, and neglect, and when that fails to drive them to
suicide, we bring to bear upon them the ponderous pressure of the
law, and heap upon them the peine forte et dure of injunctions, and
orders, and suits, to crush them out of a world they have had the
impertinence to try to improve and the folly to imagine they could

Page 4



save from suffering without paying in their own persons the
inevitable penalty of crucifixion.

Had it not been for the obligations incurred by Mr. Keely, writes
Mrs. Bloomfield-Moore in the Philadelphia Inquirer, of Jan. 20th of
this year, in accepting the aid of the Keely Motor Company - in
other words, had scientists, instead of speculators, furnished him
with the means necessary to carry on his 'work of Evolution,' the
secrets which he has so carefully guarded would now have been public
property, so little does he care personally for financial results.

As it is, those who have witnessed his beautiful experiments in
acoustics and sympathetic vibration were often too ignorant to
comprehend their meaning, and, consequently, even after expressing
gratification to him, went away from his workshop to denounce him as
a Cagliostro, while others, competent to judge, have refused to
witness the production of the ether, as Sir William Thomson and Lord
Raleigh refused when they were in America a few years since.

The company here mentioned has been a thorn in the inventor's side
ever since it was organized. It has been bulled and beared by greedy
speculators, in whose varying interests the American newspapers for
years have been worked, the results of which the inventor has had to
bear.

For many years the Company has contributed nothing towards Mr.
Keely's expenses or support, and in the opinion of many lawyers it
is virtually dead. How far it is entitled to his gratitude may be
gathered from the fact, as stated in Mrs. Bloomfield-Moore's article
above quoted, that when Mr. Keely abandoned his old generator of
etheric force, baffled in his attempts to wrest from nature one of
her most carefully guarded secrets, harassed by his connection with
the Keely Motor Company, some of the officers and stockholders of
which had instituted law proceedings against him, which threatened
him with the indignity of imprisonment, he destroyed many of his
marvelous models, and determined that, if taken to prison, it should
be his dead body and not himself.

When the history of his discoveries and his inventions come to be
written there will be no more pathetic story in the annuals of
genius than that of John Worrell Keely. The world hereafter will
find it hard to believe that in the last quarter of the 19th century
a man with an insight into the secret workings of nature, and a
knowledge of her subtler forces, which, whenever it is utilized,
will relieve mankind from much of the grinding toil that now makes
bitter the existence of the vast majority of mortals, that such a
man should have been left to starve, because in all the ranks of
Science there was not found one man capable of understanding his
colossal work

- because in all the ranks of religion there was not found
one man able to realize the enlarged conception of Deity
immanent in Keely's great thoughts

- because in all the ranks of commerce, of speculation, of
literature, of art, there was not found one man large
enough, generous enough, unselfish enough, to furnish money
for a purpose that did not promise an immediate dividend.

Page 5



It is to a woman, not a man, that the eternal honour is due of
having come to Keely's rescue, and saved humanity from once more
disgracing itself by doing genius to death with broken-hearted want
and neglect.

That woman's name will go down the centuries inseparably connected
with Keely's discoveries. Probably no more romantic incident ever
happened in the history of invention than the connection between
this wealthy and large-minded woman and this slandered and
persecuted genius, and no stranger one than the way in which she was
led, by a series of most unfortuitous events, to offer her aid.

From that day this lady has been not only his benefactor, but also
his co-worker, trusted friend, and courageous defender. With the
exception of his friend, those who have occupied themselves with
Keely's discoveries have confined their attention to its commercial
value.

This was to be expected, for Science now is the hand-maid of trade,
and Religion has become the fawning follower of Science. There is,
however, a higher aspect to Keely's discoveries, and that their
value as contributions to man's knowledge of Nature and natural
laws.

So far as that is concerned, Keely's success is an accomplished
fact. His work, explaining his whole system, is now in the Press,
and were he to die tomorrow he will be just as great a figure in the
world's history as he would be were a thousand speculators to clear
ten million dollars apiece by his inventions.

Fancy honouring Copernicus or Galileo because the yelping jackals of
speculation, who were their contemporaries, grew fat by feeding on
their brains!

Whether Keely's inventions will be commercial success at present is
another matter. The force, or, rather forces, which Keely handles,
are the same as those known under other names in Occultism, and it
is the belief of Occultists that these forces cannot be introduced
into the practical life of men, or fully understood by the
uninitiated, until the world is fit to receive them with benefit to
itself - until the balance of the good and the evil they work is
decidedly on the side of the good.

Keely himself is persuaded that the world will derive almost unmixed
benefit from his discoveries; but an Occultist would prefer to say
that inventions and discoveries are disclosed to man, rather than to
credit genius with the elaboration of ideas - disclosed, that is to
say, through the brain of the ostensible inventor by one of the
higher powers that guide the destinies of humanity.

The discoveries of Keely have an occult side, which perhaps he
himself may not fully perceive, but it is upon that side that it
depends whether those discoveries themselves are fitted, by reason
of sympathetic vibration of a still more inner ether than Keely has
publicly spoken of, to harmonize with the mass chord of our present
civilization, and manifest in the material life of man.

Occultists believe that there are intelligent powers behind the
visible things and events of life, which powers alone can say

Page 6



"So far shalt thou go, and no further;"

but they do not believe that these powers act as a deus ex machina,
for in themselves they are part of the natural order of things, and
act in and through material and immaterial nature.

We at present in our normal state of consciousness know these powers
only as forces and laws, and when we become conscious of them as
intelligent entities, we perceive at the same time that they
themselves are governed by higher wills and intelligences, which act
through them, as they act through us, and are to them their forces
and their Laws.

Occultists see in everything the (to us) eternal action of two
opposing powers or principles, which are ever seeking equilibrium,
and never find it, for behind them there is a definite tendency
towards that which we call progress, which tendency gives the
preponderance to one of these powers, and thus prevents the
establishment of equilibrium, in other words of stagnation and
death.

Now all great discoveries are manifestations of one of these powers
or forces only, and, however good in themselves, tend to disturb the
equilibrium of terrestrial life more than is required for the normal
rate of universal progress; and therefore they produce a
disproportion of parts, and the opposite power or force gathers
strength to resist and check the exaggeration.

Already, in the estimation of an ever-growing number of thinking
men, the inventions and discoveries of the present century have
proved themselves a curse rather than a blessing.

They have raised the world's standard of comfort, and at the same
time they have lowered the power of purchasing these very comforts,
a desire for which they have generated. The advantages that accrue
from steam and from machinery have not been distributed, but have
become the property of a small minority.

Year by year competition is becoming fiercer, and labor more arduous
and continual, and men are growing more and more like living
machines, and the helpless slaves of machinery and of institutions.

An operative, in these days of steam power, has less liberty than a
slave ever had, except in one particular - he has full liberty to
starve, or to work himself to death, neither of which privileges an
owner would allow him. Keely, however, thinks his discoveries will
restore this disturbed equilibrium.

The direct effect of modern discoveries and inventions has been the
rise of the commercial and economic system; and the inevitable
consequence of that system has been to deepen the gulf between the
poor and the rich.

The natural effect of this is anantagonism between the two poles of
society, which has its roots deep down in human nature and human
passions, and this antagonism is becoming better recognized, and
growing in intensity, year by year, in so much that it is almost
universally felt that the only possible outcome from it is a social
overturning, the date of the actual occurrence of which will depend

Page 7



chiefly upon the activity of the school-boards, and the thoroughness
of their work.

Hardly a thinking man of the present day but foresees, sooner or
later, a great social cataclysm, in which all mere political and
financial considerations will be as straws in a whirlwind. Now, it
would seem that Keely's discoveries tend to develop power over
material nature in the same direction in which that power has been
growing during the last hundred years.

If it be a power into the exercise of which there enter no moral
considerations whatever, then it is applicable alike for good
purposes and for evil; and it will be as ready to the hand of the
bad man as to that of the good.

Were such inventions given to the world in their completeness, the
whole of the enormous power they gave over human life and destines
would, it would seem, fall into the possession of the same small
minority who at present control the power conferred by our present
inventions and discoveries - the capitalists.

If so, that section of the community would then, under our present
institutions, obtain almost absolute power over the great majority -
those who depend upon their labor for their support.

The capitalists who owned the tremendous powers implied in a
monopoly of Keely's inventions would be practically the absolute
masters of the people; and obedience to their will would be far more
really, than even now, the condition upon which those who were not
capitalists also would be allowed the means of continued existence.

Occultists believe that the world is not yet ready for the
appearance of such tremendous forces on the stage of human life.

Mankind is too selfish, too cruel, too stupid, too pitiless, too
animal, to be entrusted with what, in sober reality, are minor
divine powers.

Such powers could not at present be employed for the benefit of
mankind and for the advancement of the race; on the contrary, they
would tend to the further brutalization and virtual enslavement of
the poor, and also to the further materialization and moral
degradation of One the rich.

In a word, the human qualities of justice, mercy, love, generosity,
unselfishness, have not yet grown strong enough in the race, and the
animal qualities of revenge, anger, jealousy, tyranny, hatred,
selfishness, are still too powerful in man to make the acquisition
of almost absolute power over nature, and over one another, anything
but a curse to mankind. It would be less disastrous to give dynamite
cartridges to monkeys for playthings.

For this reason Occultists, in general, do not regard Keely's
discoveries as likely to succeed in the commercial sense. And at
present things have certainly a look that is in accordance with that
opinion.

The powers that might be expected to intervene in order to prevent
Keely's inventions from becoming factors in human life, are, as has

Page 8



been said, through human means, and the stolid stupidity of the
scientists in regard to Keely's discoveries, the bovine indifference
of theologians, the silly ridicule of the press, the hostility of
vested interests, the suicidal greed of some of the largest
shareholders, and the paralyzing influence of the law, which
apparently lends itself in this case to those whose object is simple
robbery.

All these things seem very like the operation of the higher
controlling powers, acting with a consciousness other than our
consciousness for the attainment of ends that transcend our narrow
calculations.

Be this as it may, Keely's discoveries, and Keely's personality
also, have a peculiar interest for Theosophists, for the force with
which he is working is without doubt the ether of the ancient
philosophers, which is one aspect of the Akasa, the underlying great
force in nature, according to the Secret Doctrine, a force whose
existence has been recognized from time immemorial under various
fanciful names, and whose property is sound, whether audible or
inaudible to us; or, in more modern language, whose characteristics
are vibration and rhythm.

It corresponds to the seven-fold Vach of Hindu Philosophy, and is
the raison d'etre of spells and Mantrams. It is the basis of
harmony and melody throughout Nature. This force is alluded to many
times in Madame Blavatsky's Isis Unveiled. On page 139, vol I., we
read:

The Akasa is a Sanscrit word which means sky, but it also
designates the imponderable and intangible life principles, the
astral and celestial lights combined together, and which t
wo form the anima mundi, and constitute the soul and spirit of
man; the celestial light forming his nous, pneuma, or divine
spirit, and the other his psyche, soul, or astral spirit.

The grosser particles of the latter enter into the fabrication
of his outward form, the body. The Akasa is connected on the
one hand with physical matter and on the other with WILL, that
intelligent, intangible, and powerful something which reigns
supreme over all inert matter.

Of the Akasa in this respect we read on page 144, vol,I., of Isis
Unveiled:

The mysterious effects of attraction and repulsion are the
unconscious agents of that will; fascination, such as we see
exercised by some animals, by serpents over birds, for
instance, is a conscious action of it, and the result of
thought.

Sealing-wax, glass, and amber, when rubbed, i.e., when the
latent heat which exists in every substance is awakened,
attract light bodies; they exercise unconsciously Will; for
inorganic as well as organic matter, however infinitesimally
small it may be, possesses a particle of the divine essence in
itself...

Page 9



What is, then, this inexplicable power of attraction but an
atomical portion of that essence that Scientists and Kabalists
equally recognize as the 'principle of life' - the Akasa?

Granted that the attraction exercised by such bodies may be
blind; but as we ascend higher the scale of organic beings in
nature, we find this principle of life developing attributes
and faculties which become more determined and marked with
every rung of the endless ladder. Man, the most perfect of
organized beings on earth, in whom matter and spirit - i.e.,
Will -are the most developed and powerful, is alone allowed to
give a conscious impulse to that principle which emanates from
him, and only he can impart to the magnetic fluid opposite and
various impulses without limit as to the direction.

Isis Unveiled was published nearly eleven years ago; and in her
forthcoming work, The Secret Doctrine, the authoress enters more
fully into this and other matters only sketched or hinted at in her
former volumes.

It is the fact that Keely is working with some of the mysterious
forces included under the name Akasa that makes his discoveries
interesting to Theosophists. It is the fact that he has shown
magnificent courage and fixity of purpose under every kind of
opposition, and the fact also that he has been supported all through
by the generous belief that his discoveries will be of inestimable
benefit to mankind that make his personality of interest.

If he can succeed in making his marvelous discoveries pay dividends,
science may begin to give attention to them; for men of science,
like other men, require a sign before they can accept as truth the
things that are beyond their comprehension, and the value of a
scientific discovery is now determined by its market value.

R. Harte (Sec. T.P.S.)
July, 1888
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Vangard Note...

Other files relating to the above topics are in the Keely
section of KeelyNet, we recommend KLYANEC1.

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If you have comments or other information relating to such topics
as this paper covers, please upload to KeelyNet or send to the
Vangard Sciences address as listed on the first page.
Thank you for your consideration, interest and support.

Jerry W. Decker.........Ron Barker...........Chuck Henderson
Vangard Sciences/KeelyNet

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Jerry at (214) 324-8741 or Ron at (214) 242-9346
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