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Viktor Schauberger & “Copying Nature”

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      1750724726 bpfullNoraSpinnor
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      Viktor Schauberger (1885–1958) was an Austrian forester who watched rivers the way a watchmaker studies gears. His maxim, “Comprehend and copy nature,” was less a slogan than a design rule. He believed the aliveness of water and air reveals itself through shape, temperature, and motion, and that technology should follow those patterns instead of fighting them. In his observations, healthy water keeps a cool, shaded core near 4 °C (39 °F), meanders rather than rushes straight, and organizes itself through spirals and centripetal roll. Materials and profiles that respect this reduce shear and turbulence; subtle temperature gradients, he said, can even “steer” fluids with less input energy.

      Working from those insights, Schauberger designed curved log flumes that guided vortices so heavy timber moved with less damage and less energy, and he sketched concept machines (re-entrant vortex chambers, “implosion” turbines) meant to pull rather than push fluids. Some late-life claims remain debated or unverified, but the principles behind them have quietly influenced biomimicry, river restoration, and low-shear pumping: copy the curve, cool the core, and let the vortex do the lifting.

      From an aether perspective, Schauberger’s observations about water point to the same rule he saw everywhere: flow doesn’t like straight lines. Rivers meander, eddies roll, and energy, too, prefers to spin, curve, and return rather than blast forward and dissipate. He often likened this to magnetism and electricity, where the “current” reveals its power when given a geometry that invites rotation: a straight conductor carries charge, but a coiled one concentrates fields (think solenoids and toroids). In other words, the proper shape allows coherence.

      Seen through that lens, the prominence of cyclical, resonant forms in frontier devices makes intuitive sense. Bedini’s rotating motor, the Searl Effect Generator, Tesla coils, and Lakhovsky’s Multiple Wave Oscillator all rely on oscillation, resonance, and circular return paths. Malcolm Bendall, the inventor of the Thunderstorm Generator, claims that geometry is the main reason the device functions. Concerning aether, both careful timing (Bedini) and curvature (Schauberger, Ken Wheeler) are vital.

      Schauberger also argued that trees act like electrical antennas, a view he formed after watching sap rise in gentle spirals along the trunk. In dense forests, he held, trees bleed excess atmospheric charge into the ground through this helical, living circuitry, which is why you’ll almost never get a hailstorm inside a healthy canopy. These observations echo Netism’s assertion that Earth is a bodily system where forests, waters, rocks, and winds are all connected, interacting, and self-balancing parts of a single, living field.

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