In 1929 Edgar Cayce gave a reading to explain
the "law of relativity of force" as applied
to a perpetual motion motor.
Cayce began his dissertation by acknowledging
that the technical language for explaining
such concepts of "vibratory force" was inadequate.
To be sure, physicists are still struggling
to understand gravity and are constantly coining
new terms as they struggle to grasp this mysterious,
primary force of nature.
In this reading Cayce resorted to an alchemical
expression -- "nightside" forces -- to describe
how the opposite aspect of gravity (or negative
gravity) could be harnessed in such a motor.
Traditionally, gravity is regarded as a relatively
weak attractive force whereby the mass of
one body attracts that of another.
The readings acknowledged this straightforward
property of gravity, but went further to explain
other mystifying aspects of gravitational
forces that could be used in mechanical devices.
Cayce asserted that "everything is vibratory"
and that the force of gravity can best be
understood as "octaves" of vibration.
Gravity can be harnessed to push (or repel)
as well as attract.
Advances in theoretical physics have shed
some new light on Cayce's distinctive views on
gravity and the underlying structure and forces
at work in the universe.
Recall that dark matter and dark energy are
invisible and can only be inferred by gravitational
effects.
Specifically, dark matter has a gravitational
effect of attraction whereas dark energy creates
a mutual repulsion (or "negative gravity").
Cayce's use of the term "nightside forces
provides a fascinating parallel to dark matter
and dark energy.
As with dark matter and dark energy, the use
of the word "night" in this context conveys
invisibility (in contrast to the visibility
of daylight).
Thus nightside also implies a dualistic quality
of opposition that we find in the positive
and negative electrical charges of electromagnetism
and the opposing forces of positive and negative
gravity.
Thus, the repulsive gravitational quality
of dark energy is precisely the type of effect
that Edgar Cayce described several decades
ago as the basis for a perpetual motion motor.
Furthermore, several readings discuss an advanced
technological culture in prehistoric Atlantis
that utilized the power of the nightside forces
for transportation, communication, and construction.
Perhaps the ancient Atlanteans were able to
detect and harness the power of dark matter
and dark energy.
If so, the discovery of these universal factors
could be just the latest echo of an Atlantean
influence that has been ringing in our collective
consciousness in recent decades.
