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R E XR E S E A R C H P O B O X1 9 2 s 0
JEAN Nv 89019 USA

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K 1 8 - K U SK U S H I -- BIOLOGIC , I C H IM O - I0 TA RT A-N S M U T A-T TN h iS _< is the Taoist approac th o t r a n s m u t a t i o n s , w i t h . ,e ,n lo ew r g i e s ,c ' :I a s s i f i c a l i o n ' o t " " ! i . r a n t , density, color,-&c.M . a n u f a c t uo l y y i n / y a n g ,m . p . / b . p . , r ie r . , C o . * a N i fron C & 0.. Na +,0=K,6ic.. f f r e - - i u g a to e f C a r " b o& n uxycen.. transmutations i n a i r & w a t e r , b a c t e r i aa , .-.i8 . fo nrl.C , ,-igir.i"ilu n'ot!i'"n,tn e q u i p m ed nita g r a m !s Bibliography R,e s u m e e s . . s g.

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' of "probabilii) Tbe molemenl of life procedes trom the constan! nuclear Dhvsics The latter science b u i l d r r . )g c o n s t a n l r ' d i ' t t c a l o m hotornei'r". tt ar clr;nernL ol ono elem;nl Inlo anolh'r Thr: Ine bluck ol Ihl- unlvorse crealed al lhe Oalrn ol 1 1 r n . - 1 1 L b r r n nl o l h p e d u c a l e d . s c l e n l ' f . c m l n d A l o m s c h a n g ei n t o o l h e r a l o m s tr;nsmut.ltion is a startling imposslbilit!. but for a material unirerse ''simDle nlind,it is alnlost self-e!idenl truth o n l r a , r n g t r . ' o n o r f r s s ; o n : l s s r o n l ' L h en a t u r a l oric.-- or-nucl"ar decal ln lrnslable radloacli!e Sorie liOtr lears ago. Buddha proclaimed that ''eren the tiniest aggregates (oi matrerr are ilpment.. thr' radroattrre cnergl ha' been lappeo alomrc bomb' Fusronhas w i t h o u l e s s e n c e . u e m i g h l t r a n s l a l e h l s ,n nu.i"ir."u.'-' " n d in the laborator], ior thrs i n l ^ m o d c r n j a r P o n b ) s a l i n e l h a t noi been demonslrated -";i. D ^m no ' , iro . unrenen o' cuIs ar cxtremerl] hrsh ;;,';* nat' rro pprmdnenl rdenlrll :rnd lhal lhpr and pres.uret lhe change lrom [ " r ' c h 6 n s eo r i r a . m u t a t p t n e m ' r ] l e s l n t h c 2 0 l h i " . * a o ' u a " . intt heljuh in the sun is an example , . n r L r r F r e r . h s c r e n t r c l L o u r s K . r ' r ! r n h a s i;aiose. Out'ne lhrc reacrr'n a porrion ul lhe l h i . \ ' l e v I n h l s t o P n u n o p u s oi tut'_on cr,rrol,uralpd 'nrott"J rs chaneed inlo encrq] whicb Biolocr.ol Tronsmutation I translaled bt trIlchel -rit"i ' emitied as heat and hghl A b e h s c r a .S u a n H o u s eP u b l i s h i n gC o m p a n l . 1 9 ? 2 r ' i' s ir, f.ri pttr"rt. leacl," rha lransmulalr^n is Betore these t$o mer there have been countless at,,n. approach rhprr a l c h e m l , l . .b o r ho r l e n u l a n d o c c l d ' n L J l\ r h o h a \ e i m o o t ' r b l e A . . t * o ' o a r c h chirged nuclei thet are supposed to repel one h, t.l rha' m{'l.'l: could hF lran:muled Tle unlc"' thnre r' extremnll nrgh ,n, r. p6 1e-p1.r . .ronc b\ \ hrch gold could b. . n o r i . r . a n d p r p s : u r e t L ,l o r c p l h c m t o B ' t h e r , ' r " . ' 4 .' - o n . . x 3 n i p l e l n { o r r u n a r p l \ ' h p i " i i o . i . l r . " n'iA' e n o u e h$ e r e r l n n l { o r t h e itrn: *,unO. reas,'nable "s ,s o f a l c h e l i v h a s b e e nl a u g h e da w a t iirnele scrcnce cnuntiei-l anomaties that abound in nature llr' b \ i t s a d o l { ' s c e n ls o n . c n e m l s r r ! Ker|ran has unearthed man] of these in the course Dr Ker\ran rs a scientist oi tireless curioslt\ ()1 bo\ . I f r i o u e h n u rh r s i r f e t i m e h e h a s c o m p i l e d l l t e r a l l ) *u.f,. He offered na cxpianation "i-fri. happens Il lusl does lrLrnarila. ot examples ol phenomena -explainable l r a n s m u t a t i o n ..1\ b\ the transmutalion ol one elcment lnto ln anolhei For example he observed thal \'_orkers lh'\ i i . : r n o r a a e . t r I n S p : l e dm o r " o d r u m l h a n { . \ c r . t t s , l a r r ou o . i l ) e n o u g ht h e r r l " r e l o 1 - p o t z ' . . i u m .rcr.tron rncre,.id simutaneousl\ After much puzzling. the onll answer \,as transmuulton oI' sodrum rnlo Potasslum 3nd ll] the prescrce o{ high desert temperalures ol' hard labor. this lraI]smulation ls calallzeo oia".r".nu". lhe adrenal hormone$tr'h regulates lhe balance ot s:rllr v itbin the bloodstream ol slu{11 Ker\rln summarizd his .rliJi i""r. rescarcil irr, pern:itiCme lo \eril!: , l h a l t i r e \ r L a l P l ' e n o m e n o nl i nol ol a themit ]i orderi ll toi'' Ceepl\inro rbc ato.r slarirng \r'ir h i.r. nucleus U'ganlc Chemis\-t rs on thefrn.rl stnge ol molecular arra,rgeDrtnl 2 r t h a l t b e n u c l e u so f l h a t o m r n s quite dilferenl l i g h l e l e m n 1 , i< l r o m w h a t n u c l c a r P l i \s l u s r e g a r d sa s t h c a ! e r a g e t t - ' P l.h e lalter haring value onlt for the 3r that Nature moves Particles from one nucleus to another _ particles such as htdrogen and Th Krlchen LoboratorJ ln m\ oqn kilchen $eh:,\emadeironlrompure oxvgenand. ln some cases.the , . , n g o n l ] a t r a n s l o r m c r ' .a c o p p e r d i ' h nuclei o{ carbon and lilhium .ol*, graphrlP rod. (arbon po$oer. and house Plectrlc Ther is thus transmulalion 'L lhat biological transrnulation is a phenomenon comPletelJ diflerent from the alomrc fissions or fuslons of PhYsics and it re\'eals a Proprt! of matter nol Yel recognrzeo. T h e s e c o n c l u s l o n s fly right in the face of the a c e p t e d l h e o r i e s of quantum mechanjcs and

iron You can easil] confirm the results through laborator) anal] srs. reaci.on nerp ls lrs !e56 The lransmul-alron re-l:rc<,5i ?(6ci,+ !or.) = ,, ' tNi'" I ThP Eao and ScicncQ lrom an arises The mr-th of immutable elemenLs esocentric attitude. one mistakes his small bodt silf, revealed 10 him b)_ the senses. ior his real Self To realiz one s true Self. on the other hand frees one from the shackles of senses and provides rne mvstic s experjnce of cosmic consclousness As iong as a man harbours egocentricitl. hrs *hole viiw oi life wjll be tainted uilh the egos s u b j e c t r !r l \ . s o l h a l h P p r o l c c l ' P e u o r p P l n r l ' r , ' lnro all hc ptsrc.r\c- Thp lhPor\ lh"r . J selt'h,,ud atom of a given element does not and cannot changt. is just ona example of egoistic science Others are tha binClng force of the atom. the idea that all m a t t e r c o n t a i n st h e p u l l i n g p o $ ' e r\ \ e c a l l g r i r i t ] t h a t t h e p l a n d s \ \ ' e r ef o r m e d l r o m t h e s u n . I n e a c h case lnp Pgocpntrl. percei\er looks lo$!l l ln' c e n t e r o l l h e p h P n o m e ,i o r c a u s e . b u n P \ P l s " c ihe original cause !'ortunatell. the course of science and

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The fndustry of Love

The toltowtng a.t,cte ctebuts ou, nen cotumn on a e',atNe scence h ts oz,seo,on thtee tectutes gtven bv Mrchto xushi at the Noh cen3t in Boston ounng ranua.v ln this month s cotumn. ur. xusni aiscusses aiinemi iexr month we witl p.int the continuation ot his alicle as he examines atterna!tve

by Michio Kuehi
T H E S I Z EO F S P A C E g a m e p r i n t e d i n S 0 i d a t n : r s p a p e r s . ticns of lhe piysicar wodd are relai ve ''F'nd rhe 50 lhings wron! wrth this Space and time etist rnhl, lhe The December 30 llsue ot Time p r c l u r e Canwe cul througf alt those absolute The onry abeotule. intinrre Magaztne leaturad an anicte rh (s d o t a r l sw i t h a b a s i c c l u e t o ' e s c u e u s ''Scrence is chanq. No mailer sectron about a new thsory rrom our cootusion in ihe tace of now rarge or how sma| a ponion ol ot the universo. Two American asrron_ exPans? t n unrverse is selected, the one omers, Sandage and Gunn, had ca/cLr_ Modern civitization rs buil on c h a . a c t e r i s t i c a t w a y s p r e s e n t r s lated Ihe densily ot matter in ouler s c i e n c e O u r e c o t o g i c aa l n d e c o n o mc c h a n g e . T h e s t o w e r o u r s p e e d , l h e space ano decrded that the universe proorems are rnseparabte lrom thar more sPace and time enter into wrll continu to expand wilhout end. rounctBtion. a n d t h e r ei s n o w a y t o l o e c o n s i d e r a t i o n , A t i n I n i r e s p e e d . ! n t h e The article conctuded with thes r h o s p r o b l e m s .T o s o t v e t h e c u r r n l a D s o r u l e r c a l m , s p a c e d s a p p e a r s and words 'iGuon lind6 ths impticatrons cflses, w have to creare a r.!ty so does lime The matefuai wor d wLth ot an open unrverse thoroughly mtndn a l u r a l t e c h n oo g y w h r c hc a n p . o p e r t y w h i c h s c i e n c e d e a l s r s a r e t a t i v e e d dy. oo grng a n d p a r a d o r i c a t . E v e n met the needs thal scrence has a small rsland wilhin ih o.ean ot though the density ot its mass is erved al such a terfibie cosl io the sma i, he exptains..,ihe t o t a l a m o u n t h u m a n a n d n a t u r a te n v r r o n m e n l T . he o r m a s s i s i n t i n i t e t ' e c a u s es p a c e i s o D v r o u s ctue, the secret everyone THE SPIRAL IN THE VOID i n t i n i t e l y b i g . S a n d a g ea g . e e s . T h i s x n o w s , crops up In the tasl sentence e x p a n s r o ni s s u c h a s t r a n g e c o n c l u - o l , , O n e the fifie ariicie: s lirst The lor.e ot creatton is mt(ord s i o n , ' h e s a y s . , . O n e , st t r s t a s s u m p _ a s s u m p l i o n ls lhal it cannol reaty b wherever we look in the nalural r o n r s t h a l i l c a n n o tr e a y b e t r u e . a n d l r u e . . . " T h e c o m p a s s t o t r e e d o r ni s w o r l d - l h e $ , h o r t s i n o u r o w n f i n g e r _ y e t i t r s a p r m i e rt a c t . oui lnturtlon, our innate sense ot trps, tn sprrat mounling ot branches What do yo! think ol thai? The nalural balance, ouf common snse, on a rre, the cyclone vorter ot cloud r w o a s l r o n o m e r ss a y s p a c e i s i n f i n i t e ' ' o n es f i . s t a s s u m p l i o n ., parterns photo0raph6d by wsather Wrllthe expansion ot the un verse T h e t e c h n o l o g y r e s p o n s i b t el o r s a t e l l i t e s , a n d t h e w h i r l i n g arms ot our c o n r i n u ee n d t e s s t y a s i h e y m a i n t a i no r t h e c u r . e n l e c o t o g i c a t c r i s i s is the galaxy. The spirat ot cralon tooks w r l l r l p e r h a p sb e b a t a n c e d b y a p h a s e p r o d u c l o l s p c i a t r s r st ,h a t i s p e o p l e s o m e t h r n g t i k e r h i s : ( S e F t g . 1) ol contraction, as some previous who have b e c o m e p r o l e s s i o n a l sb y The wortd which a materiatistic lneones claimed? concentratrng on the parland ignoring science can deat with lirst appears in T h e u n i v e r s ei s E u p p o s e d l o h a v e i h e w h o t e . A f u t t y n a t u r a tl e c h n o l o g y lhe lrensition trom wav nergy to begun to expand atter a ,,big bang. will b t r e eo l e x p e r l i s e w i t h t h e t o n o s u o - a t o m r c p a r l i c l e s . tt is a mrnute wnen atl the maltr now in ihe years ot artiiicia schooti.g and th; potnt within lhat panoramic whole unrvrse exptoded trom a trsmeodous- vasr Inveslmentot money which a nesswhich opens loourview when we ly concentrated m a s s . N o o n e , s o t a r , c o m p l e xi e c h n o c r a c y requfes. lt musl use our premre. intuibon. has expiarned the originot that mass. be sinple and avaitabte l o a|. The Taling the retaiive tor the absoT h e b i g b a n g i s t i k e t h e m y t h i c a tt u . b a s i s f o r c r e a t r n go n e p a c e l u tw o r t d l u t e - a s l h e a s t r o n o m e r s do rn ca|ing on wnrch the world was said to rs lusl common sense. spac inlinil-is lhe basrc error ot r e s r - l u s t t h e r e a s s o m e t h i n gl o s t a r t Now, is spac intinile? Can malerialism. But our common sense l r o m t o . l a c k o f a n y t h r n gb t t e r . s o m e l i i n g p h y s i c a t r e a t l yb e i n f i n i t e , Insrsls lhal every short-term prolit is Hot! can onetind hrswa, through lhal is to s a y n d t e s s .a n a b s o l u t e ? O a l a n c e d b y a l o n o - t r m t o s s , t o r the I n e l a b y r i n l h o l s c r o n c e t S e e r n gt h e P h y s i c a l space wilh the ma er i! pnncrple ot batance {which traditionat l a r s e l e a d s s c a e r e d t h r o u g h t h e entolds is the retatrve, not the abso- Chinese philosodhy c! ed yrn a n r c r i n r , r r e r e s e m b t e s and t h e c o p y t n g l u r e w o n d , b e c a u s ea l t o u r o b s e r v a - y a n Q l oroers ih6 entire retatrve wortd.
Yrn produces y3ng and ya.q leads to yrn, perpelualry cr6ating rhe baran.. NATURA|. EDUCATIOII AT LAST '

We must educate ourse les rn a qurre difterent sequence lrom thai r{thich we tottowed al schoot whiie rearnin0 lo become iuture etperts. our reoucatron conlains two deg16es_ larnrng and appticatron or recervrng ano 9rvrng-wrth iour stags lortow Ing lhe mastery of each degre in two areas, lhe menlal and the physicat. I A) Psychologica lreedorn or setfB) Physical lredom of h6allh and

Ci

Freing others,

by reachLng or

D) Nalural lechnology, or a cherny In order to mastr D, we must pass through A, B, and C. The iirst crass (a) is the most dilficutt tt ts the ooar ol lraditional and moder. paihs loward ,detachment, whether in a secular conlexl such as EST, or a relrgrous conlext, such as tne study 01 spirrlLral techniques Many oi us are now xeenly lnterested ln slaqe A because modern educalron blocked our chrldlik intuillon ano stiled our basjc sanity. We must laboriousty de-brainwash ourselves trom the en licial concepls we have been slltted wilh since inlancy We slill struggte wrlh A the lernnlary schoot of tite, because we lailed lo grow up, and we taited io

TEBRUARY I975

.AST WEST J OU RNAL

l o.ow up any sooner because we didn iave ro we *ere lhorou9hlY spoiled prospeG b v a c i v L l t z a t i o no l s h o r l - l e r r n (y that managed to shield us lrom Bred in the escapisl habils whrch are prodlced bv thal klnd oi d!ca_ l|o.. we wou d lrke to tlee lrom lne rnalefra wond inio spr.iluar(y as an escap lrom mundane matlers. ll we had been born in poverlv we woulo oe .nuch less llkelY to acl so suPeror about our Part cular lnP The sprrnual world and lhe male' r a r w o n d a f e l w o p o l so l a c o n l l n u o u s speclrum: dream and realrly, tie v n circurnlerence and lhe van center ol crealron The goalol enlightenrnent is noi to iso ale ourselvs trom tne materia wofd in a genera relreal baclward along the spiral ol evol!_ tlo. The goal ol enlighlenmenl s 1o ti!e as a lree being In lhe world or ordrnary dally realrly. As we o!lgrow our escapLslhabils. we begrn lo studv B a .oncern oi ma.Y YoLrn! PeoP e now involved in lhe naturai iood movme.l, macrob rotrcs orgai rc

You can't capturea ghost Tho has aPrung our ecologrcal and economlc kom which it l a L l g n t w o r e w e realityis motion' chang6, s c h o o l l n ' h i h .risis is lhe orice lor havrngtlouled panrdes In r h a tl h e t h r e el u n d a m e n t a l t h e c o m r n o ns e n s eo l h u m a n l l y ' u n t i l w . r d s a s l a b e l s h a v eb l i n d e d u 3 lhe leclron'lhe prolon q u r t er e c e n lt i m s p e o p l et o o k o n y o r a n a t o m a r e Try lo w a s e l e c l r o n T h e s ay X moves Whal rs Xt W e n e u t r o n . t h e rhe earlh's etcess For exanpl lne and il whal aclually movesi c i r c l i n g p h o t o o r a p h s p e c k m i n u l e a p r c t u r e d a s a b u . d a n l 0 r o w t h o l t r e e sw a s u s e d l o clump or larger Movingmoves m a k e c h a r c o a ll o r h e a l n 9 H u m a n r l y a r o u n d l h e c e n l r a l Change changes once we nave parlicles, lhe prolons and the neul r v e do t t o u r p l a n e ls n a t u r a l9 r o w l n a s T h e e l e c t r l c r e a l i zed that it is impossible lo n u c l e u s i n t h e rnleresl. wrlhout eler louchrn9 our irons. 1 r n i n u s or arresi chan0e we can i s destroY e l e c l t o n o n e a c h c a o i t a l . M o d e r n c v i l i z a l r o n ,h o w e v e r c h a r g e p r o l o n c r e a t ea l r u e s c i e n c e .T h e l a t a l l l a w i n e a c h o n c h a r g e l e c l r r c t h o u r a n d d e 9 e n c so n l i v r n go l l o u r c a p i t a at school is the is plus 1. Sinc lhe Prolon is at lhe rhe scie.ce w learned o r o s p e . i l yr s a l a l s e p r o s p e r l l vw h ' c h large PersPeclrve' a o f r r s a b s e n c e e x p e c l w o u l d ( y a n g ) w e o v center can be buoyed up onrv so long o l l a p s r n g c h a r g e1 ob e p o s i | v e , a n d t h e e l e c t r o n e a n i i r c i a e x D e d r e n r s b e f o rc THE ELEMENTS w o u l d n a t u r a l l yh a v ea 2 0 0 at the priphery The presenl crisrs really siarled 8ut what rs the y e a r s a g o w i l h t h e i n d u s l n a ! r e v o r u _ n e q a l r v e( y i n ) c h a . g e . no cnargel t i o n w h e n ( t o r a n u m b e r o r r e a s o n s n e u l r o n .w i t h lableot lhe elmenis ThePeriodic Nolhing cair exrsl in lhis rlalrve which we can PUrsue in another w a l l o l e v e r yc h s m r s l r y t h e o n h a n o s p l u s ( v a n g ) n o r e n e i l h e r w h , c h , s wond lecture series on hrstory) PeoP (an shafe p e r m a n e n t l ya t l h e b a l _ c l a s - s r o o mL e l u s s e e r l w e b e g a nr q n o r n g t h i e s s o n so l i n e v i i a _ m r n u s ( y l n ) , c h e m r s t r yb Y s e e r n gl n a l o l l d u s t r h e t h e d i s t a n c e o n p o i n l . F u d h e r m o r e , m a s l e r e o b e a n c e b l e b a l a n c el h a t m u s l b l o c k i s hc h a r i i n t e r m s o l o u r d y n a m r c a . S o m e l h i n gw o n l w r o n g w i t h o i t h e e l e c l r o n t r o m t h e n u c l e u s i s leveL is N o l h L n 9 b e c o n s t a n l j u d g m e n t T h e c u r r e n l l o s u p p o s e d our intuitve thal world E!ery- "o'tu]n" ,,r", rarse Pallern sprrillal quest is an eltod to recover .onslanl rn the relatrve emeroes rs lhe etistnce ol seven N o o n e c h a n g e n u m a n t h r o l g h a J r e e m o v e s o 1 l h i n g t h a l b a s r ci u d g m e n t tne rows across seven 's lhe sacred b i n g a l o n e w i l h t h e l a r g e re n v r r o n - h a s e v r s e e n o r P h o l o g o h e d ol orbits in a complele sprral c o n s l a n t c i r c l e w h i c h r s s u p p o s e dr o n u m b e r lo a wesk in soven (seven i l s o u t e r daYs w i i h a t o m o u r o n r Y a n m o t h e r ' r e p r e s e n t Theearth is oLlr T h e n u c l e u s c e n l r a l I n a l a n d e l e c r r o n s w e c o n s u m e l l matenal ofrqi.

F i g u r e1

W gradlale lrom E. howevef. bY de0ree lo the ,clivD degree by ass'slin9 0lhers lo reclarm natural healih. When Jesus rerurned lrom lhe deserl he wenl abo!r healing the sickr he could nol slay medrlatrng on a mountarn 1op. The teachrng oi Jesus, like thal ot auddha. al C, was direcled to helping absolul othefs reali2e therr ow. ' lreedom "Take up lhy bed and walk 1 was Their aclrvity. because grounded In wholeness ralher than the lrrnited and ephemeral. conlrnus tc live even now. The maslery ol O, is our The relranceol mode,n socrely on lh way in whrch physrcal needs are s!pp red by sonce is no1 somelh ng God-grve.. Modern Industrial civilizalron was developed by people lrke us: il can be changed radrcally by numan berngs We are tree lo chanoe our i n d u s r n a l c r v r l i z a t r o na l i t s v e r y r o o l ! n

we must prish The.e is no escape irom our rack ol judgment l/ve have created the curre.l crsis and now we must resolv rl ll rs we who musl race lhe probleh bocaus it is we who will be destroyed rt we contrnue to evade rhe basic order or baance, juslice, and proporlton In alr thrnOs. This is why we m!sl now learn lrue sc ence it our spintualily is lo be anylhrn0 bll one more altempl al escape lrom thrs world In whrch we irnd o!rse ves TBUE SCIENCE Lels relurn to hrgh school scr_ ence and review lhe lour stales or

'" o"r. 'aniasy a hypothelr_ .o*.or car 'o;3' The e a'e no such oe.lecl circles in nalure The leatr;n actuallv sp .ars rn toward ihe cenler, contracling ils r.or iuoooseO'y consrarl drslalc' lne rucreus. lo becone *hal s ca ed3 proron. Since the Proton is much t"rg", ln"n tn eleciron, how does i1 ac;uire lls addrlional weighl? The proton s grealer rnass is crealed by lhe change 01 energy inlo mallet Thal tne di{ference in g". io.""ponOi-ro energy between the swiltly revolving electron and lhe prolon rotaling aboul

!as

STUDYING NATURAL TECHNOLOGY cra1in! a nalura lechnology depends on solvlnC lwo problems (1) th ma.Lrtacture ol matenals and (21 Modern the ulrlrzalron ol energy scrnce answers lhe trrsl protrlem by mrnrnq ores and relrnrngthem !nto mela s Cou dn 1 we howevef. cfate metals drreclly t.om lhe elemenls In lhe atmosphere and the ocean insleai ol depenCing on lhe exl.acl!on ol a ready exist n9 malerals In the earth, Whal ,l we !sed lhe enrgy lhat comes lo us lronr wrnd and waler, lhe sun ano evn oute, space, inslead ot relYrng on lhe deplelron ot luer deposns In the lorfir of coal and oil?

Plasma 15 0n the borderirne between the world ol matter and lhe world ol energy The llame from a match, lor exampl. is In lhe plasma slate wher lhe aloms are moving so iasl thal lhey break down inio sub-alomlc parlicles lorbrl 3 ot our splral diagram) Basic exa,nples ol gas, iquid, and solrd are arr wale., anO eann Obvrously. lhe leve oJ energY or rempe.ature, Jrom plasma to sorro rs lowerand lower Thus a solrd such as iceor metal, rsthetrozen,leaslpliabr srale Energy (vibratron or spiril) is tusl lh dr{luse (yrn) torn ol maller, and matter !s nothlng bul a condenseo (yang) manirestation o1 sp,(1. vibra_ tion, or energy In order 10 undersland lhe wor!d of malter $iholistically. we rnLrsl se it In lhe conlext ot spral

i t s o w n a x i s .( S eF i g . 2 ) al menls at thecenle'oi lhe spiral are A s t h e p r o l o n l u r n s b a c kt . r I preso u 1 a g a r n o n i l s w a y t o b e c o m e a n u n d e r t r e m e n d o u se v o u l o n a r y e r e c l . o n . j u s l a l t h e e x t r e m e t u r n l . g s u r e T h e s p r r a l r e v e r s e sr l s d r r e c t i o n p o i n t w h e r e y a n g ( c e n t t i p e t a ll o r c e ) a t l h e e x l r e m ep o i n l o t m a t e n a r z a lo n c h a n g e s r o y i n l c e n l r l l u g a lj o r c e ) t h e a n d i e n d s o u l w a r d a g a r n T h e m a s s ! v e n e u l r o n a o o e a r s { S r m a r l y , t h e p o s i _ r a d r o a c t i v ee l e m e n l s s l a r l 1 o D r e a k t r o n i s a n e l e c l r o nl u r n i n g b a c k l r o m d o w n a n d e m r l p a r l r d e s o n t n e r r w a y xtreme yin toward yang.) the tul back lo the srxth orbil Thus Uranium c y c i e l o o k s l i k e t h i s : ( s 6 e F i g 3 , p . 2 4 ) d e c a v st o b c o m e L a d ( P b ) T h e s e s o - c a l l e dp a n r c t e sa r n o l T n e e l e m e n t sa t t h e m i d d l e o t t h e s t a b l e n t i t i s T h t a l l a c y o l c o n c e p - l o u r t h o r b i l , b a l a n c e d h a l t w a y d o w n tual lhrnkrng pervades malerialislicthe spiral-lron (Fe. number 26), s c i e n c e .l t i s t h e d i s e a s o l n a m i n g . I , c o b a t r ( C o , n u m b e r 2 7 ) , a n d N i c k e l y o u , a n d J o h n S m i l h a r e s u p p o s e dt o ( N i , n u m b e r 2 8 ) - a r e m a o n e t i c W h y be I, you, and John Smrth-once and does a magni, iron ior example, lorall. bul how many dillerentpeople attracl orher metals? Nalure rs a w e h a v e b e e n i n o u r g r o w l h l r o m p r o c e s ss e e k i n ! i t s b a l a n c ep o r n t . w e c h i l d h o o d1 o o l d a g e l W e a r e n o t n r n g s a y l h a l t h e e l e m e n l l r o n p o s s e s s e s
the qualily ot rnagnelrc allraclron, u!t

lhrougnoLt lhe co'lscrousness o' ihe tace bul mooPr^ scrence is barreo lrom reali2rng the conrinu iv ot the phvsrcal and the spirlual world These seven rows wilh Hydrogen (H) and lwo I'ghresl ele_ Felrum {Hel-lte lne loo row and lne menls-rn el9qIl!sradroaclrve massive -in U.anrum (U) Plulonlum (Pu), elc the boltom row are the rJleclron rn th world ot chemistry ol ou' seven orbilal spira oi crealron, clrclrng In toward lhe dense cenler' (See Fis 4 on next paoe) In lne why are lhe eemenls boltom tow radroac!rve) These ele-

T h e w o r l d i s a v e r b , n o l a n o u n . a c t u a l l yr n a q n e l i s mi s t n e l e n d e n c yo r T h e n u c l u so l a n a l o m r s l h e | r , a s s i r , ga l l t i e o t h e r m e l a l s m o v i n g t o w a r d o { I o w e n e r g yl e v e l sa t t h e c e n l r a la r e a b a l a n c ea t t h m i d p o r n l o l l h e s p r a l o l t h e a l o m T h e e c t r o n i s n o l a T h e s p e c r l i cq ! a i t i e s o l r r o n a r e o ! e shiny pellet we wou d see i' our to thal lendency. Mal1er rs ln m i c f o s c o p e s w e r e o n l y p o w e r l u l m a n i l e s l a l i oo nl e n r o y . T h e t e n d e n c yo l l h e e l e m e n l sl o nouqh. li is a cloud and a very d i t f u s e ( y r n )c l o u d . O o n i b e i o o l e d b y m o v e l o w a r d s b a l a n c e i s n o l o n l v ( the naminO 9 a m o l d u a l r s t i ct h o u g h l . v o l u t i o n a r y

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Some elemnls afe qLrte ab!n dant and olhers are v't rare Modern scrnce has no satrsraclorJ,explanerlron ior lh s bas c lacl yet tie reason ior it s quile obrro!s when we see how a I lhe e ements were created by natlra achmy Wlh a lttle arllhmelrc yo! ca. see why carbon ior bll Lrthrum example. s rs relstively rare, depending on lhe number ol possib e combinat ons between atoms and rsotopes necessary lo creale lnem Srnce we know thal Oxygen rs very y n and Carbon s very Yang, we can see why their nuclear combrnatron produces an elemenl as slable a.d

Transm!lalion in the an rnal k ng_ dom was documenled bv !ours Kervan rn hrs studles ol French workinen slatroned ln the sahara He noted the i intake of food In terms or crem ca elemenls and comPared t w in lne I nal!ra excreti.r.s. They 9ave otr more Porassrurn a.d less Sodrum lhan thev fle concluded that had taken In Sodrum was bernQ transmuied 1o Polassrurir by nuc ear 1us on w(h the oxygen brealhed rn. accord nq lo lhe

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ThlS process rs ssentLal to our metabolisrn. and the balance ol Soai um with Polass urn P ays a key ro e ir the transmissronoJ imPulses aon! our nerrous systm. The lrouble wrlh demonslratrng lransmulat on 1n lne vegetable or anrma krn9dom rs lhat scienlisls maY immd ale Y oblect that too many unknown var abies are p r e s e n l t o r t h e e v r d e n c el o b e c o n v r n c _ rn9 therelore we musl neallY demon' strare lransmuiation in the mrnersl kingdom under laboralory condilrons aoru*6crr=14s'aa My t.acher. Georges ohsawa lm''6' muled sodium io Polass !m wrlrr the ll s asy lo experirnenl wrth rorlo:wing srmPre aPParalus (Fig 6) lransmutalron in the plant kingdom ln a vacuum tube wrin a posrlrv Simply sprout seeds in nearly disiilled and negalve eleclrode at erlher en3, o u l k e e p g l a s s t o covef waler w.th a he pu1 2.3 .nilligrams ol Sod urn ae elements oiher than lho3e conlarneo passed an electrrc curent betweef the o l s o m e l l l a k e w a i e r in air and Yo! two eleclrodes. healtng lhe Potassium the seeds lo a laborator! lor anaLvsrs l f o m s o l r d l o ! r q u r d t o g a s e o u s r o o r l h e l a b a i a l y s r s a c o m p a r e and lhen plasma slale He lhen r.lroduced 1 6 elements conlained in lhe sprouts. m i l l r g r a m s o l O ! Y g e n t h r o u g h l n e you wilL disco!er an arna2ing dilervalve lhe Producl remarnng rn ln enc tn the number oi erel.nenls lub. as vefliLecl b, speclros.opc presenl. The lransmulatlon or lhose examrnaton. was 39 m rqrads oi elemenis lrom air and lrom waler nas taken place under norma lemperalLrre usin! srmrla' meltcds we car easrly creale rro. !he basrs or neavv Nuclear lusion occurs reaorlY I n d u s l r y . a n d g o d t h e s r a n o a r o o r throughoul nalure becaLrse as we moneiary sYslem: The a cfremLcar s noi a closed saw. tte nlcels r e ! o l u t r o nm e a n s l h e r d o ' n a r e r r a r syslem ol stabre partrc es but rs an n coniinLra open teld ol enerly lcohttnued an page 26)

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cec8y, d e s t h .T h c W e m i S h tc s l l r s d i o a c l i vd "mattcr" of the clcmcntis tcturnedto a simplcrststc as I ligltcr element.As this hppcns. the clemcnt's prcatomic yin components as invistblc ale dischsrged particles and ner8y.But deathis part of thc cyclcof 8nd tlansmulcthc life, for particlcswili tcssscmblc lifc? Is this not likc biological heayy clcments88ai-n. The gJandcycleof the binh and dcathofthc clements, we call thc Fugatcof Catbonand Oxy8en. It begins with a preluder th first cight alements which suSgest the major notes of the fuguc; then durtngwhich src built th. there are sevenmgvcments variationson the ori8rnal thcmc. Morc and more becomeas the elcmants intricate the melodies Itow of thr atoms largerand heavie!. ln eny iloscd system the "surroundlnSs" alc the Conductor whose intensiiy is deependedthrou'!h 3cvcn movements unti.l finally there is a long coda, as the elements dissolve into the "silence"of infinity. Yang changes to yin. As the fugueof the world of matteris endin& those who listen may hear the etcrnalrythm infinite motion, which is calledthe ordcr of the universe.

ln the Orient. t h e n u m b e rs e v e n i s v e r ya c t j v e (yan8),the last number beforethe retuln to intrnity, which is signifiedby the numbereig.ht. In the same way, the scventhoctaireis the end of the spiral of standa s st h e l a s tt t a n s m u t a t i oo nf elements P.l a t i n u m secome . f t e r t h a t t h e c l e m e n tb c a r b o na n d o x y 8 e n A yin. inclcasinSly PIo t i num) Gold)M etcury + Radi oacitve

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for future study: Questions

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\\try'is the center ol the earth thought to be composedof iron? w , hy is it t o b e t h e e n d o f t h e s p i r a lo f m a t e r i a l i z a t i o n If radioactiYe n t e l a l sa r e c o n s i d e r e d e a r t h ? n o t f o u n d a t l h e c o r e o f t h e that thev are trans' is this true? Are there times when lead would progressiYely Under whiit circumstances m u te i t s e l fi n t o u r a n i u m l \ \ h e n ?

of time. nto leadover long periods s r a n i u m d e t e r i o r a t e is 3 . A c c o r d i n gt o s c i e n t i f i co b s e r v a t i o nu

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5.

in the earth's crust that are radioactive haveobserved that the elements Radro-astronomers present Mars. \lhy (uranium in lhe crust of for example) are not is thisS andradium,

questions application of the unifying to be an unnecessary, abstract may seem these Answering in terms of yin andyan8, maybe thekey principle. stated However, the answer to any one,clearly andspititualdestiny. of manand his futurematerial to unlockyour understanding you havea questions, one.Whenever or think up another consider one of these Carefully yang will become more and morereceptiYe and your braincells moment.puzdeoverthe answet, ulll comelike a bolt of lightning. to menlalvibntions(yin).After a whilethe answer

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(38+C) (2B +2c) (B+3C) 1 4 7(4c)

43 44 45 46

(C+rc\+ 0
(2'lC)+ 0

I
I
|

I I I I |

t4
l) lo

3 tle +r H rlg +,H r16+!H 4t He

1 4 8( 3 B )+o I loe(28+ C)+0 ls0 (b+2c)+0

l'

t7 4'He+'H l 8 4 t H e+ t H l 9 7Li +tt 20 ) n e 2l 5'He+rH 22 5 H e + H


B+C

I-:

l:;
lt ,) ^/
| )6

(3C) +) (2c+'C)+o (28 t ,:, - ( b + c) )++2200 | I s a (2C)+ 20

t'__ 1c+'t';+ 2o

24 2 C z) r r 6 + i t
to

Irc

27 B + 0 28 C + 0 29 t l c + o 30 r ! C + ! O
J I

( 2 8+ 3 C ) | . o (B + 4C) (5c) (3B+C)+0 (28+2C)+) 162 | .^ (B+3C)+0 t - - (4C) +0 164 (3B ;+20

l:?
]|61

I Be+B

l u t /tP + ar + tO luu ( B + 2 C ) + 2 0
+ 20 l u t (3C) ( 3 8+ 3 C )

)/.
JJ

20
0 + r?0

34
J)

0
D T

, tt0

lun

2C

1 7 0 ( 2 B+ 4 C ) l ' t ' ( B+ 5 C )

36

3C

l , ) (6C)

+20 t04 (6c) 105 ( 3 8 + 2 C ) + 3 0 t 0 6 ( l B + 3 C )+ 3 0 107 (B+4C)+30 + 30 106 (5C)

x'8t.

composttnn

't gt.

composttlon

w81

compotthon

1 0 9( 3 B + C ) + 4 0 l l 0 (2ts+2C)+40 ill (B+3C)+40 1 t 2 ( 4 C )+ 4 0 ".ar"l l 3 (3B+4C)+20 Il4 (28+5C)+20 I l 5 (b+6c)+20 I t 6 (7C)+ 20 tt7 (38+3C)+30 l l 8 (28+4C)+30 ll9 (B+5C)+30 120 (6C)+ 30 121( 3 8 + 2 C ) + 4 0 122 ( 2 B + 3 C ) + 4 0 t23 ( B + 4 C ) + 4 0

Iras
| 150

I l4'7

l(B+6C)+40 (7c)+ 40 |

+ 50 t 8 5 (38+6C) r 8 6( 2 8 + 7 C ) + 5 0 1 8 7( B + 8 C ) + 5 0 1 8 8 (9C)+ 50 1 8 9( 3 8 + 5 C ) + 6 0 190( 2 8 + 6 C ) + 6 0 l9l (B+7C)+60 t92 (8C)+ 60 (38+4C)+70 194 ( 2 8 + 5 C ) + 7 0 lv) (B+6C)+70 A + ?0 196(7C) TLUDWII 197 ( 3 8 + 7 C ) + 5 0 lotd 198( 2 B + 8 C ) + 5 0 199 ( B + 9 C ) + 5 0 200 ( l 0 c ) + 5 0 201 ( 3 B + 6 C ) + 6 0 202 ( 2 8 + 7 C ) + 6 0 203 ( B + 8 C ) + 6 0 204 (9C)+ 60 205 ( 3 8 + 5 C ) + 7 0 206 ( 2 B + 6 C ) + 7 0 207 (B+ 7C)+ 70 20E (8C)+ 70 209 ( 3 8 + 4 C ) + 8 0 210
tt,I

I r 4l e (38+3c)+s0

l r s| 2 l3 (38+2C)+60 l1 r5 s4 Itzo*:c)*oo | (B+4C)+60 l r sl s (sc)+ 60 r s 6 I | (3B+5C)+40 l r sl T


(2B+6C)+40 l r 5l8
|

l(2B+4C)+50 r l r sl ( B+sc)+50 (6c) + s0

I1 r6s le (B+7c)+40 0 (8C)+ 40


|

+4 0 t24 ( s c ) 1 2 5( 3 8 + C ) + 5 0 126 ( 2 B+ 2 C ) + 50 t27 ( B + 3 C ) + 5 0 1 2 8 (4C)+ 50 129 ( 3 8 + 4 C ) + 3 0 (:B+4C)+30 r301 t 1 1 l( B + 6 C ) + 3 0 (7C) + 30 (38+3C)+40 rldl (28+4C)+40 . r r-) ll( B + 5 C ) + 4 0

I r 6Irt : r * + c i * s o
lt62 l(28+sc)+s0

rrct l t 6I 4 (3B+3C)+60 I r 6l 5 r 6 6( 2 8 + 4 C ) + 6 0 I 67 ( B + 5 C ) + 6 0 l't (6C) l r 6 8 l S 60


lr70 l ( B + 8 C ) + 4 0| l r T (ec) r l + 40 l'72 1 | f R" + ( a l + ' 5'nI I r ? 3 1 , l" ' ' I
(28+

(B+6C)+50 l r 6l 3 *

so

,-Y..*".]

;;;l

;;; I

(3B+6C)+40 l'6e i (2B+7C)+40]

il

(6C)+ 40 r36l (38+2C)+50 r37l

138 I( 2 B + 2 C ) + 5 0

1 (B +6C)+60 r T e l I (7c)+ | (28+6c)+30] r4r r 8 0 l 60 I I ( 3 8 + 7 C ) + 4| 0 r 4 3( B + 7 C ) + 3 0 ] | lrsr l 1 (2B+8C)+4 r 4 4(l 8 C ) + 3 0 | 10 l r 8 2 l l4s tn * r c i * +Io l ( 3 8 + 4 C )+ 4 0 | l ' 8 3 1 ( : s + s c l + + o l ( +4 0 | r46| il 841 r 0 c )

(B+4C)+50 r3e I (5C)+ 50 r401 carub

l'7s l + I (8c) r 7 6 l so I ( 3 B+ 4 C ) +6 0I
ltl1l
I

6C)+50 l t l 4( lB+7 1 C)+50


1

; ,;l "'l
.,"I
) l ? l

) 141

I 781( 2 8 + s c ) + 6 0

r 4 i(l3 B + 5 C ) + 3 0

: ._ l rr)l zl6l t - , 't l zl8l I zl 9 l


t20l
I

'i

'\
7

P o f t h eO r d e ro f t h e U n i v e r s e .',Sevet rrinciples
.

:'

i .d tpp,rrtto ul s O r t cI n l i n i l l . lifftrcnti.rtc l. A l l t l r i r r g s . rc rc Eve L r y t i ri n g c h a n g c : . A l l i t r ] t . l g o n i s ra nr sc c o n l P l e n l c l l t i . r r y . ; J. . 1 . T h c l cq s n o t h i n gi d c n t i c r l . 5 . \ \ ' h l t h u si Lf r o n t h l s a b r e k . 6 . T l r t ' b i B g c lt h 8 f r o l r l . t h e b i g g c rt h c b a c k . 7. \\'h t hls;l beglnning h a sl n e n d . T*elve Theorems of theUnifvinsPrinciple L L l. i tss e i fi n t o Y i n a r t dY a n g u h i c h a r e t h c p o l e st h a t c o m ei n t o o p c r OneInfinin differentiate u t i o ni \ h e n t h e i n f i n i t cc e l r t r i f u g r l l t y arrives r l t l l e S c o n r e t r ip coint of bifurcation. Y i n a n dY a n gr e s u l c t o n t i n u o u s lf.rv o m t h ei n f i n i t e centrilugalily. Y i n i s c e n t r i f u g a lY . a n g i s c e n t r i p e t a lY . i n a n d Y a n g t o g e t h e rp r o d u c ee n e r g l a n d a l l p h e n o t ne n t . Y i n : r t t r a c tY s a n g .Y a n ga t t r a c t Y s in. Yin repels Y i n . Y a n gr e p e l s Yang. T h e f o r c e o f a t t r a c t i o na n d r e p u l s i o n is proportiontl to the difference of the Yin and Yang componentsY . i n a n d Y a n g c o m b i n e di n v a r y i n gp r o p o r t i o n sp r o d u c ee n e r g ) a n d a l l p h e n c > melte. All phenomena a r e e p h e n t e t a lc .o n s t a n t l ]c h a n g i n g t h e i r c o n s t i t l l t i o no f Y i n a n d Y a n g c o n t ponenls. r . ' - o t h i nig s s o l e l l 'Y i n o r s o l e l l Y a n g .E r , e r y t h i n g p o l a r i t l. involves T h e r ei s n o t h r n gn e u t e r .E i t h c r Y i n o r Y a n g i s i n e x c e s s i n e v e r ; 'o c c u r r e n c c . L a r g eY i n a t t r a c t s s m a l lY i n . l - a r g e Y a n ga t t r a c t s smrll Yang. s ang. A t t h ee x t r e m e s Y . i n p r o d u c eY sin. a n dY a n gp r o d u c eY A l l p h y ' s i c aflo r m sa n d o b j e c t s a r e Y a n ga t t h e c e n t e ra n d Y i n a t r h e s u r l a c e . C l a s s i f i c a t i oo nf Y i n ( V 1 a n d Y a n g ( A ) I'in Tcndencl, Position Structure Direction Color
Tpmnpret'r'"

5. 6.
7. 8. I. 0. L 2.

Yattg C o nt r a ct i o n I nw a r d Time Descent Red llot Heavy Fire Proton H . A s ,C l , N a .C . . . Brigh t Inside Long \\'avc Physical A c t i v e ,P o s i t i v e Animal Cereal Nlale p at h e t i c Parasym Hot Selson S'rliv. IJit er i( ': C'rl,l

\\'eight Catalvst Atomic Eiements Lig.ht Construction Vibration Work Attirude Bi o l o g i c al Agricultural Sex Nerves Birth Tast e V i t a mi n s C o u n t r yo f O r i g i n Seasona l fluence In

Expansion Ou tward S p r ce Ascent Purple Cold Lig.h t \\'ater Elect ron K , O , P , C a ,N . . . D ar k Surface Short \\'ave PsycholoEcaJ C e n t l e .N e g a t i v e Vege table Salad F e ma l e p at he ti c Orthosym Cold Season H o t ( i r i n ) ' ) , S o u r ,S * ' e e t C T r o pi ca l S u mn re r

KushiInstitute STUDY GUIDE

sh <5

SPECIAL ISSUE on

Atomic Transmutations
lectures with Michio Kushi
Number10

Nl

L-c:i., E G/i

AvAt uAB t-c

J lr ?t : t. 1 t? , 8 C , A n ye r r o r s i n c o n r e n r o r e d i r i n g " r " i t , u - i " . p o . , _ Dy rr y2 4o he editor. C o r n m e n t s ,s u g g e s t i o n s o r c r i t i c i s m s sirould


be addressed to the editor, care of"che Kushi Institute. is to provide stimulating Jh9 purpose of this publication material that will broaden and deepen our undeistanding of ttre natural or:der of life.. Our.hope ii to awaken che memoiy of our relationship wirh che infinite universe. lrudy_ Guide is published monrhly and Th" Kushi lnstiture _a -_ e c .n r s s u e c a r r l e s a c o r ] D l e t e l e c t u r e , p l u s d i a g r a m s a n d ' i L l u s _ tratr-ons, given by ){r. Kushi to studenrs of the"Kushi rnstiiute.

The contenEs of this, the tenth issue of the Kushi Inscitute Study Guide, were taken from the transcriptions of-atransmutatign given bv )fichio Kushi at thb Kushi Instirute on

Subsci-iptions are available at: - l0 issues for $32.50 ($:a.50 outside - 1 8 i s s u e s f o r 9 5 8 . 5 0 ( 9 6 2 . 5 Co u r s i d e u . s . ) U.S.) - Single issues - 3.75 each.
L'holesale inforrnation upon request. Write to:

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STAFF:
Edi Ecr : LonsulErng

Ldl t o r :

Trrncnrin4 r ri e r v r r ^ -

Typing: Illustracions Consultant:

Charles Hugus John llann Kathleen l,laumann Lilv Kushi Lily Kushi OIivia Oredson

P u b1 i s h e c l b y t h e K u s h i I n s t i t u t e Kushi. AI1 rights reserved.

Copyright @f980 by Michio

hlie r n we eat, let us reflect LhaE r.rehave cone from food vrhich "r"a has cone fron nature by the ordcr of thc infinit" - -- ".-' let rrs be grateful "'"ri." f or aIL thac \,,c have been gi.,,",'"r... Ltren we meet peoplc, 1et us sce then as brothcr and sister remember that r,,re havc a1l cornc fron the inf inico Iet us be graceful f or: all that r,"-e h a v e o e e n f r v e n"." 1 " " i " " , and u"a

when r'.re meet peopLe, ret us scc then as brother anc sister and remember that r,reha.,'e alr conre fron the inf init" , r r - r i . , , o i s ot-h r o r r . h our parcnLs and ancos:ors, and 1eL us lrly as Oue r.:ith aLI oi--.' hunanitv for universal love and pcace tn earth. I t r h e nw e s e e t h e s u n a n d m o o n , t h e s k y a n d s t a r s , n o u n t a i n s and rrvers, seas anC forests, fields and'val1eys, birds n"in,nr., and all the wonders of nature, Let us r"renber: that r ","JJet u r " ' . o n u with them all from tr-re infinite universe. L e t . s b e t h'a tir . in i- rru t iu for our environment on earth, and live in harmonv ,-"i tr, s u r r o u : r ds u s . \,,tren we see farns and villages, tor"ni and cities, arts and t u r e s , s o c i e t i e s a n d c i r , ' i I i 2 a r i o ns , a n d a l l t h e w . , i i s - o i " ; r ; , c u l _ let us recall thar our creativity has come fron rhe i"ii"il; universe and_has passed g e n b r ation to generation and spread frorl over the entire earti-r. Let us be gratcfrrl tor our bir:th on this planet with interligence and r"isdoi, and 1er us vo\\, ,"iii-, ,ir .o realize endlessLy our eEernal drean of one peaceful l.torld lhr.,,,r,r, health, freedom, love and iuscice OliE PIACEFUL I\IORLD PR\y[R Having cone f ror^r, being rsithin, and going realized towards infinity, r:pon this serve for eartll , Ehe upon

May our endless drean be eternally

May our unconditional dedication perpetuallv creation of love and peace.

May our heartfelt thankfulness be devoted universallv everyone, everything and every being.

- - - -llichio

Kushi

A PEACEFULREVOLUTION This year healing as manv of you knov:, our macrobiotic using only verv natural comDress or cerfain approach to condiments, case

sickness,

home cooking and very

simple remedics such as ginper has begun to spreag very rapidly entire world. Alreadl', histories biotic

throughour- Ehe country and the

foIl ov'ing several weII-publicized

of cancer patients who bepan macrobiotics, several ----^.^r.^.r ,,. -^ l-itiare kindS Of macrOSOrne m n oJ q " e dPP ! r h ..v l - n . i r e l s h a 'w ' oa J iu activities in their facilicies; and many other similar d e v e l o p m e n ts a r e g o i n g o n . we have totally changed the ir-rstitulion of modern medicine icself - not by attack-^ wrurrE' lu-u"}F !u.f" t h e i r o l , m i n i t i a t i v e , -d -. \.rant"\'n.. d rE . rr l B c r l Lru s _.. i. rn rlB Verv, \'ery soo;1 , \ie will discover tha:
ino r_^ in.^r_n^ratp an ' rd L eu d vo/ n a r orrr methods
w v r s

^1^

a l ' P r v o L ' r .

^^*-^^^L

llnr.rarror

r'l thnrrc'h

ihi

i q

of

cortrse

v vo Yr. rv -)

u per! f r t l wo ! 'r ' rd \-

t-hc'^

'v^

also other peaceful revolutions near


^ r^r^ StaLe

t h a t \ ^ r em a y n e e d t o n r a k e i n in medicine
^r1

the

future
^t

in
-

adCition

to the revolution

and food. in a
ulr

For exanple, the whole area of people's spiricual


Ol-

view is
Jd)lrrb

^1 -. C na o^ s^ ,

'\ 1l .l . m v different ^ jL' L ' . .A on .J re:'l meaninc

r e !l -i E ^ i' r^- -u^ !L rrr

d Lr

^^"i--

rrfefent ^r their

thirroc.

qrrJ rho

and rrnders - l- d-l l u " r l-l ^ S

L^Lr-'J

^t t

tradiEions
r ^ r v
u rr i( " r ! J

have been 1ost.


,h,l crrrri-hpe i 7a ihpqp

We may also use our nacrobiotic


rhi noq

view

f r/

Another example, which may becomevery future field is science, which I would like Especially,

critical

in so

the near
a^,'FL^

to study \tith

you r n n i o h r

lec us study the background and findings

of atomic cransmutations.

cT-ASSTFTCiTTn\ n V IF

F. 'l E ".f T r LM I IF LI\ I J

p v D.I

v rrr J II/

AI\U

^\,n v ^rr. YArIU

LeE's see how our understanding of yin and yang applies to yang temperarure is l^rha _ the world of elemenrs. t m o r e h i g h t emperaaure or more low temperature? High tenperature ( h o t ) i s more yang; low temperature (cold) is rnore yin. yang size is what? It is smaller and more compact; larger is rnore yin size, Heavrer is more yang; tighter is rnore yin. In terms of density, yang is more dense, more hard or solid; less dense is yin, Red color is more yang; purple or violec is more yin; various colors are there in beEween- red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet. Beyond red is infra-red, vrhich we don't see anymore as actual color. beyond violet is ultra-violet. YANG

YIN CoIder Large r Lighter Less Dense G r e e t r , b r u e , v r o l e t , U - V i o I et

TEI,{PERATURE
.LLT,

Hotter S m a Il e r Heavier More Dense

WEIGHT DENS ITY COLOR

I-Red, Red, Orange, Yellbw, rhis kind

ler 's see among elements which are more yang and which are more yin; please re fer to the alphabetical table of elemencs. (Next page). of understanding, ATOI{IC IIEIGIIT An alorn's orbiting they are so small. nucleus. A large more yang element,

Now by applying

electrons

do not is

influence

Atomic weight atomic weight

essentially

much, as the weight of the heavier, a

weight

means this

atom is

\ | () \ r I ( \ \ l . . t ( ; I lI s
l l . r . r r l( ' r I r r r i \ \ r , , r r r l . 1 , l r \ . i 1 r , r f 1 r . r , L \ \r , l ( = ll

'

: : '_ :' '


It

lr\rr t' :

(,l

lrrl :l l

t-: I -." :(, rr

rr,illor t ,| l r r :rt, r1trr

:l

rr 1

! r jr o rt: rLr

T a k e n f r o m R o b e r c C , l l e a s t , P H . D , C R CIlandbook of Chemi s trv


and Physics (52nd Edition l97L-1972). 18901 Cranwood ParkwaY, Cleveland, Chemic:alRubber Co. t'4128. ohio

I,IASSOR DENSITY
r cir y - l-o. n .-

Apain

hi ohar

means a more yang element

}IELTINGPOINT/BOILING POTNT These indicate melcing poinr Liquid. this Above the melting borderlincs

of transformation.

Belol.rthe

an element is point

So1id, or gross narter. point is what form? and up to the boiling thi-s becomesggg, Furrher beyond

in what form?

Beyond boiLing poinr

becomesplasma, the interrnediate stage between matter and energy. Further beyond, this plasma becomeswhat? Here matrer dissolves into vibrations, \raves, or you may say spirit. So, matter has four sfares, plus vibrations. huge - we don'E know linit; but we do know the low temperature 1imit. That we Absolute Zero, -2730 Centigrade, or 2730 belor,rthe freezing of temperature is very of \,rater, earth. i.le cannot make anvthing planet or in to go much lower, colder than that place her e on in the On sone other is some other The uprvard linit

this call point this is

universe

we may be able

but as far

as the earth

concerned, thar
n^-^--^J

the absoLute limit-

,irL v u u r p ac r u ,w r L n -w aLer, which has a melting point of Oo C. and a boiling poinc of 1000 C., some elements have a very 1ow melting poinE, these elements are more yin. Others have a very high

melEing point, Let's boiling,

these are more yang elements. right here room Eemperacure is

take some examples: in this

about 320 C.; such as iron

in a liquici

t e m p e r a r u r e , \ . v a t e r i s b e E w e e nr n e l t i n g a n d state. At the same time, some elements.

or copper, are already similar

they appear solid, copper and other

frozen at this temperalure; you may say, for iron, which means frozen. elements, ice formation is already taking

'

l\rt'

c L)C;_

6,;

\ ll Q'

\r- r-

\Jtr., \
lc

/RON; MAKING
Equ,iplnent transformer wire 2 two foot lengthsof well'Lnsulated 2 alhgatorclips I squareof copper (approximately 3" bent uPto x 3"), with the edges form a dish. I three inch graPhiterod 2 - 3 oz. pure carbon (obtained fiom a house chemicalsuPPlY Attach the wires to the positiveand negatiyeterminals of the transformer.Secure an alligatorclip at the end of each wre. A t t a c h o n e t o t h e c o p p e rd i s h a n d t h e o t h e r to the graphite rod. Spnnkle powdered carbon in the copper dish, so that it makes a t h i n , e v e nl a y e r . T u r n o n t h e e l e c t r i cc u r r e n t and touch the graphiteto the carbon This p r o d u c e sa n a r c f r o m t h e g r a P h i t e t o t h e carbon. As it sparks, pull the rod away T h e c o p p e r d i s h w i l l b e c o m ev e r l h o t . R . e peatedly touch and withdra\\ the graphite for about fifteen minutes. Let the dish cool down and then pour the carbon pJqder onto a pie;c of paper' the piper anddlaw P u t a m a g n e tu n d e r n e a t h i t a l o n g t h e p i l e o f c a r b o n .Y o u s h o u l d n o t i c e t i n y f l e c k so f " c a r b o n " t h a t a r e a t t r a c t e d to the magnet. These contain very small a m o u n t so f i r o n i n a d d i t i o n t o o t h e r h e a v i e r e l e m e n t s .C a n y o u p r e d i c t w h a t o t h e r e l e m e n t s a r e p r e s e n t ?S e n d y o u r r e s u l t st o a laboratory for chemical analysisif you wish to confirm the results. ,e m p e r a t u r e T h i s i s f u s i o na t l o * e n e r g l ' t t clentlw i t h p r e s e ns . ontrasted a n d p r c s s u r eC it secms f i c u n d e r s t a n d i no g f n u c l e a rp h y s i c s . but it is onll' a simpletechnomiraculous. l o g i c a la p p l i c a t i o no f y i n a n d ) a n g . o f f i n a n dy a n g I n n a t u r et h e a t t r a c t i o n , nd is greatest bet$een carbonand ox1'gena i r o n i s p r o d u c e db y t h e f o l l o r v i n gr e a c t i o n :

dish copper

r - 6 ' F' e . r t a + )- t 6 c ) >


e" t" 2S

The electrical energy releasedin sparks activ a t e st h e c a r b o n a t o m s o n t h e d i s h a n d t h e random oxygen molecules(O2) that are in the a i r . A s t h e y b e g i nt o c o o l r a p i d l y surrounding and contract, they fuse logetherand form i r o n . Y a n g e n e r g l p r o d u c e sy i n , e x p a n s i o n , ,a u s e s e x c i t a t i o n ;t h e n y i n . c o o l t e m p e r a t u r ec f u s i o n a n d y a n g i z a t i o nc ,ondensation can occur at S i n c es u c h f u s i o n r e a c t i o n s t, n e y a r ec o m and temperatures low energies mon in nature, particularlyin plants and a n i m a l s .l n f a c t . w i t h o u t t h e t h e o r y o f l o w to exe n e r g y t r a n s m u t a t i o ni t i s i m p o s s i b l e plain the origin of the flrst cellular lifc. A c c o r d i n g t o t h e o r y , c e l l s a r e p r o d u c e db y t h e d i v i s i o no f p r i o r c e l l s .W h e r ed i d t h e f i r s t that bacterc e l l sc o m e f r o m ? S o m e s p e c u l a t e t ransported h a v e b e e n m a y ial or viralspores a v o i d st h e b a s i c T h i s s y s t e m s . b e t w e e ns o l a r l i v i n g m a t t e r organize q u e s t i o n :h o u d i d ? e l e m e nts w o r l d o f itself from the the hw of transmutation, To understand y i n and yang. Withln this we are studying g r a s p the unity of life which is study we can o v e r l o o k e d b y s c i e n t i f i c s e n s o r yj u d g m e n t . T h u s \ I e c a n n o t o t t l ) s e c t l l c r c l a t i v ca n d w o r l d o f n t J t t e r .b u t a l s o g l i m p s e stagnated Taoists i t s m u t a b i l j t ) .F o r t i r i s t h e C h i n e s e spent the last years o1 their lives studying alchcmy.

-l4-

THEFUGATE OF CARBON ANDOXYGEN


H o w d i d t h e e l e m e n t st h a t f o r m t h e U n i v e r s e arise? There are essentially t r ! o t h e o r i e so f c r e a t i o n considered by analytic cosmolo&ists. One is that mattr is constantly being producd in interstellar space. The second is the Big Bang theory which suggests a g i a n t b a l i o f m a t l e ! t h a t e x p l o d e da t t h e beginning of the universe. This second theory is most widely held. T h e B i g B a n g d o e s n o r e x p l a r nt h e o r i g n o f m a t t e r , n o t d o e s i t t r y . P h y s i c sa n d a s t l o n o m y a r e applicable only wilhin the world that can be msasured \\ rth sen50r) inslrumenls, but to understand creation, we must pierce through the j u d g m e n t o f t h e s e n s e st o a w o r l d o f u l t r a - s e n s e beyond the speed of IiBht. ln this dimension, v i b r a t i o n s a r e m o v i n 8 a t s p e e d s a p p r o a c h i n gt h e i n f i n i t e H o w e v e r u s i n B s c i e n t r f i ci n s t r u n l e n t s ,i t i s impossibie to detect these manifestations of e l e c t r o - m a g n e t i ce n e r S y . T h u s . a l l a t t e m p t s a t understanding the universe have lead only to m e c h a n i c a lm o d e l s , a n d c o s m o S o n yh a s b e e n l e f t a s t h e p u l s u i t o f r e l j S i o no r o c c u l t s c l e n c e s . The problem liesin the fact that modernman has lost hjs inturtive vision of change\|ithin the u n j v e r s eT o a n c l e n tm a n t h i s v l s l o n \ \ a s c o m m o n ; i t \{as neither occult nor scientific,but merel) his ever)'day perceptjon of dualtstic monism c o m p a r a t i v e l y s p e a k i n g ,m o d e r n m a n ' s o u t l o o k i s s l a g n a n l , r i g i d , a n d c o n c e p t u a l l ya b s t r a c t . T h e B i g Bang hypothesisstales that all the elcmentshave e r i s t e d i n t h c j r p r e s e n tl o r m s i n c et h e o r i g i n o f t h e u n l v e r s e . W r t h t h e e x c e p t i o n o f r a d i o a c t i v ed e c a y , a l e m e n l s d o n o t t r r n s m u t e t h e m s e l v e si n t o o t h e r elemenls. Do )ou beliere this ts sol Is thts in accoldance w i t h t h e p r i n c i p l e so f t h e l a w o f c h a n g e l F a r E a s t e r nt h o u g h l \ r o u l d l e a d o n e t o a f a r differenl conclusronB . u d d h a s a j dt h a t " a l l a g g r e g a t e s (of matter) are devoid of essense." The principle t e a c h i n go f B u d d h i s m ,T a o i s m . S h i n t o o r V e d a n t a i s t h a l e v e r ) l h l n gl s c h a n g l n g . l h e r le s n o c o n s t a n c li n t h l s u n i v e r s e .l t s e e m s l o g l c a l t h a t l e m e n t s m u s t t r a n s m u t et h e i ! f o r m f r o m o n e t o a n o t h e r . H o w c a n w e a p p l y l h i s i n t u i t i l e w l s d o mo f t h e u n i l y i n 8 p r i n c i p l et o d e t e c t t h e p a t r e r n i n g within the c r e a t i o no f t h e c h e m i c a le l e m e n t s ? First there are yin and yanSelements This may be confirmed by spectroscoplc a n a l y s i s( s e e " T h e S p i r a l l i cC h a r t o f t h e E l e m e n r s , " V o l u m e I I l , Number 6) These combrne, most obviousl),,in c h e n l i c a lc o m p o u n d s ,a n d t h e s t r e n g t h o f b o n d l n g s h o * s t h e s t r e n g l ho i a 1 l l a c t i o nb e t w e e nt h e y i n a n d y a n ge l e m e n t s in!olvedin the reactlon. Eg, 2 H 2 + C | 2e yong yln 2H2O

To begin this reaction, an elect'ical spark or a flame is necessary to activate thc outside electrons.When they ale xcited, the hydrogen and oxygen mcrgc or bond toSether. The leaction that produces water shows a relatively weak attlaction of yrn and yang. In nature, much slronSerattracllon xists Under tha proper c i J c u m s t a n c ea sc t u a l f u s i o n o f t w o a t o m s m a , o c c u r . This we call transmutattan. Scientists have detected this process in the sun where hydro8en is chanSed into helium Howcver, the gasesfi the sun are uider exttame temperature and pressure. Transmutation has w r t h p a r t i c l ea c c e l e r a t o r s also been accomphshed in , * h i c h h r S h - s p e e dn u c l e a r p a r t i c l e s a r e b o m b a r d stationery target atoms. This is the method by which heavy unstable eiments, such as neptunium or p l u t o n i u m , w e r e m a d e . H o w c v e r ,t r a n s m u t a t i o n also occurs in nature and in living or8anjsmswithout such extreme energy. (See Biologtcal T.ansmutation, w r j l t e n b y L o u i s K e ! v r a n , s u m m a r i z e db y G e o r g e s Ohsa*a, and publjshed by the GeorSe Ohsa\la Ma.robioticFoundation). A t t h e e n d o f t h i s a r t i c l ei s a c h a . i l h a r s h o w s h o w t h e e l e m e n t sh a v e t r a n s m u t e df r o m t h e h t S h e s t , h y d r o 8 e n , t o t h e h e a v i e s tr a d i o a c t r v e e l e m e n t s .T h e c h a r t i s b a s e d u p o n o u r u n d e r s t a n d i n go f t h e -l a t t r a c t i o n o f y i n a n d y a n B e l e m e n r s H y d r o g e n ,t h e c e n t e r o f t h e p r e - a t o m l c s p l r a L ,j s ) a n g l l g a l h e r s p a r t i c l e st o i t s e l [ ,f o r m i n g l h e f i r s t o c t a v eo f c r e a t r o n yo p r o d u c ew a t e r f r o m t h e J u s t a s a s p a r ki s n e c e s s a r t c o n s l i i u e n l e l e m e n t s .s o a l s o a r e c e r l a r n c o n d l t l o n s necessar), t o i n d u c e l r a n s m u t a t r o nw t t h i n t h e f l r s t _ ' eight elements. Y o u m a 1 f i g u r eo u t t h e c o n d i t i o n s i ,f r"t y o u s t u d ) t h e m e l t l n g a n d b o i L n g p o r n r so f t h e f l r s t elsit elements. W l t h i n t h e f i r s t o c t a v e ,t h e S r e a t e sa t ttraction i s b e t w e e nc a r b o n a n d o x y 8 e n , w h i c h r e p r e s e n y t ang a n d y i n r e s p e c t i v e l yI.t i s t h e i n t e r a c t i o n o f t h e s et w o t h a t f o r m t h e o t h e r e l e m e n t s .( \ ' o u w i l l n o t i c e t h a t c a r b o n i s o f t e n r e p l a c e db y b o r o n . l n t e r m s o f y i n a n d y a n g . t h e s ea r e l j k e b r o t h e r si n t h a t t h e y r e a c tl n s i m j l a rw a y s i n f o r m r n gn e w e l e m e n t s). T h e m o v e m e n to f y i n a n d y a n g c o n t i n u e sf o r s e v e no c t a v e s :

I ( C + O l - - - > S r( d t o f t , . \ \ e r g h l 26./ ? (C+Ol ----) Fe (56) 3 ( C + O ) - - - - >^ r ( 8 4 )

place

at room remPerature. to

It

naturally liquid

cak'es a very far

high

temsuch

perature boiling zeTa. r

change these into exis:ing

forrn.

Other elements, above their

as oxygen, nitrogen point,

and hydrogen are already here in gas form.

These gases become

liquidonlyatverycoldtemperatures,fairlyneartoabsolute

although we may not notice it, all scates of maiter are occurring aC once - some elemenis are in a frozen or "ice" state, some are in a semi-frozen scate (like So within our surroundings, mercury), state, some are in liquid in state, is very sone are in gas or plasmic or \tave state Our presome are alrcadf civilization a vibrational

sent material dealing wiih tions.

frozen and liquid

limited in its view, only staces - noE gas, plasrna or vibra-

THE STATES OF }'IATTER \IIBMTIOr'*S, h'AVES, S PI R I T

(NO KNoLl'l UPWARD


T T}.fTT\

SP-I -FO-rr.,*TR I T U A L IZ-I NG PLAS}TA DI SSOLVING POINT GAS BOlLING POItr-T

LIQUID
}IELTING POIIiT SOLID (ICE)

(-21 3o C. ON EARTH)

SI Z E
t h e s m a l 1 es t a t o m ? I l y d r o g e n , s o i n t e r m s of size, hydrogen is very yang, As we go higher in atomic number, the atoms get l arger and Larger, going from yang to yin. IlEIGHT
c-

I{h i ch i s

concerned, the opposite happens; the atoms get heavier and hear,,ier, going from vin to yang. So, both yin and yang faccors are there, balancing each other. of course, this balance is not exact but is different for each element. COLOR Supposewe burn an eremenr, anc put a prism in front of it to see whac colors are most strongty emitted. This is called s p e c E r o sc o p i c e x a m in a t i o n : b v e x a m i n i n g the color spectrum of eacn element, v'e can make a more exact classification of yin and yang elements. (please see the accompanying chart on the nexc page . ) 0f course, Eo make this

As far

as r.,eight is

t q

tr

a
U c c

you can als o inc l ude such as melting point/boiling poinc and so forth, and adjust everyrhing slighcly to make it srill more accurate. But Ehe general idea is here. infonnation This center, chart is arranged

nore exact,

in

a seven_orbit

spiral;

and heavier, and atomic Furthermore, the elements in the lower half of each orbit have generally longer spectroscopic wavelengths (rneasured in Angstrom units) _ more yang colors _ the elenents in rhe upper half have shorter wavelengths _ more vin. number goes higher and higher.

atomic weight

towards the

becomes heavier

I I

I
)

c
.O O O

-:
a
i

=",.\..=

ta

i{ o

6 h

:t\

;,! \

-'t

t a
:

? l : l ; \
':!

I
\

>.il i
r7

;'

a
'J1

I
>.o
< - 5

a-

--> 3 =

t0

sone very interesting things from this chart, For example: find oxygen and carbon; oxygen is in a more y1n caLcgorr', carbon is more 1 , a n g , ( . . . 1 s oc o m p a r e r h e i r n e l t r n g and boiling points.) yang carbon and yin oxygen are something like male and female; they have nearly opposite tendencies, and can therefore combine very easily. liydrogen and oxygen are very far frorn each orher in this charr, rhey can .r"""""r,;r;" ;.., easity, as in HrO (water). This is one reason water can naturallv occur in abundance. This chart

You can discover

can s6]yp all chernical mysteries, such as wtry some elements can easily coribine a n c Jo t h e r s c a n , t . S u p p o s e, r d e r r a n t t o conbine t\^/o elements, x and Y, and we see they are both nore vang. Then r,,e could int::ocluce some yin condition, by changing temperarure and making them more expansive, or.by incroducing some other more yin element as a catalyst or using some other technical adjustments. Carbohydrates, for example, are composedlargely of H,C and O. Can you see how this occurs, according to their yin and yang natures ? THE I,IYSTERYOF I4IATER understanding to solve some scientific mysteries has a verv strange property. rf rve take some r^/arer and apply heat, as the water heats up towards boiling, its vo lr-mre expands. However, if we apply cold, at a cerrain point the vo_ lume also expands. The borderline is about ao C. _ l"fo, tf_,i., r{acer expands and above this r^Jater expands. I{hy? These are simply f.acts which science knows, but nobody has any good explana_ tion for why. S o r , J em u s t u s e o u r m a g i c s p e c t a c l e s _ yin and yang . water (llro) Let's use this

11

l o o oc , ( srEAl'1)

S \']ATER l'OLLT'fi E]"PAI'ID

4o c.

coc.
(ICE) lie knou hydrogen js more yang and oxyten is more yin, r.'aler moLecule has two hvdrogen and one oxygen nton, the struccure look likci rhem and decide for scructure. H
I

but what does please study

Here are six possibilities;

voursel f r.rhich one you think

i s the righr

B) H-0-H
H

n\
n

1.r o'" F\
1l

A ) c
I

H This is
.-^^.. ^ D ^r L' \^, . .rr r ur
l/cdr

c)

.''o-H

"\n-"

Ll

such a simple quesuion, a child


L^Ll^ ro f iprtrp o t rhe a_

of
vE!

seven or eight
y gutsNr)

- . . : ^ 1 . 1 . .,

yet

took scientists 60 years to figure out the structure of water I The result of 60 years and I0OO's of scientists work is the version marked in the diagram, (F). This is the structure of water. it
Q ri r nrn u rp L f hraLrJ r Lr ;nn'r L-^'.' a-l tharr n,rn'r o v n l . r. o i rr. \ w " rr .t ,y '

"i-

"--^

chis

is

so.

However, we can see that

hydrogen is more yang so it The two hydrogen atoms

naturally lhis

goes down: yin

oxygen goes up.

can'E come Eoo close,

though, because they repel each ocher, so

sEructure resufts. Ilow if we apply heat, what happens? htrich atoms can attract so fasL,

this

high tenlerature?

Oxygen.

Hvdrogen does not react

I2

as iE is

already

more yang; but

the oxygen atom quickly

absorbs

Ehe heat and becor^tes more yang. I r r l rt a happens to this structure then? The attraction begins to deteriorate as the oxygen aton begins to repel the hydrogen atoms; the molecule becomes larger and the water's yin comesnore vin iorates, l,otal volume expands. so quickly; Again, quickLv. Nov:, if we apply cold, the oxygen does not react but the hydrogen atoms be_ the molecule's attraction deter_

and the water begins to expand. ' 0.. H H

A . .\ ,

v ,o.
iA]H, (v)
H/A'

0.. R\ - , H'

o .t

H mechanismvery easily,

AH

l I r

You can see rhis using yin riddles;

right?

In this

vray, r-c

and yang, we can solve many technical l e L ' s s e e s o m eo t h e r e x a m p l e s .

and scientif

THE DELUSIOTIS OF SCIENCE Does anybody know who discovered Watt. kectle One day he was sitting of \,rater begin co think, to boil; "If in

the sceam engine? noving led

Jarnes a

che kitchen

and was watching

he saw the lid This its

up and down, force, indusErv. to the in_ to

and slarted vention of

we use this

sEeamas an applied thinking contributions

we can generate

t r e m e n d o u s p o \ . r e r ,"

the steam engine and all if

Jarnes tr{att had known yin and yang, he could have made a f ar greater contribution to industry. L . r h i c h i s m o r e y a n l, water or steam? The water in his tea kettle was more yang, par_ ticularly at the bortom of che kettle. He was only using his senses, so he observed the steam's action, and he simplv imitated lhat. If he had used our magic spectacles, to this more yang part. he would have paid attention

However,

13

This water part can trv

steam is

the already r,rore diffused, more inefficient; You has much greater power - that part we should use' ar hone and buy a test tube. Fill it part r/"ay

chis

Go co the drugstore with water and put After gas burner. steam will ciple of

a cork on it

Then heat This

iE \tith

a candle or the

several minuEes, when it

begins to boii,

blol,' the cork of f . steani po\,rer. aud recork

conf irms Janes \^Jatts Prin-

This che tube and apply heat again time, thou6lh, when the \.rater is just at simmering stage, before The more yang turn the tube onto its side. it begins to boil, Noir refill \,rater will bLorv of f the cork.

D
,|

l'l
BOTL

lt*

srEAll (v)

U
SII4{ER

J I LA]'I

POI,IEF.

s C:=-=--i

- - -t t1 '..-..-J
WATER (A)

WATER POITER

t7

thing see,

like

the basic beryllium,

occave of

rhe r':usical scale'

As you can

some are nore yin

and sorne are more yang'

Anong them, heliurn'

f ottnd so much on the earth's surface; buc hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and nitrogen are found in abundance. lJithin these four, hydrogen and carbon form a nore As you yang group; nitrogen and oxygen form a more yin group ' lithiur,r, and boron are not can irnagine, these four can very easily combine chemically'

l ^ I l r e nh y d r o g e n , result? nitrogen,

what is carbon and oxygen combine chemically, \'Jl-ren these three conbine chenicall y with Carbohydrate. what results? By your Procein' Vitamins and enzyres belong to these different Also protein. liow, how did a1l

r,,hich grouP?

c o r n m o ns e n s e , y o u c a n s e e t h a t n a t u r e ' s elements could not have suddenly more than one hundred different one day appeared, one by one - one day oxygen, one day nitrogen, Ilo, they must be linked together by sone continual plaEinur,, etc. elements arise? process. This is like an evolutionary concinuun. differenE; L ' L r e nw e s e e a f i s h but we know that a chain'

and a human being, connection is In

they aPpear very

there,

they are both part

of one evoluEionary

betvteen hydrogen and the sarqeway, one process must be linking That evoand sodiun. iron, between nitrogen and go1d, or silicon luEion of elenencs, science has not yet explained, because they one element cannot change into another vrithin natural

belicve

condiEions. difchanging process is totally - when t\to ferent from chernical combination - as in carbohydrates its own nature as or more atoms mix together but each retains In scienEific Eerms, this hydrogen, carbon, etc. - or from transformation In this clec+rons into element. of state, such as t\,lo solid to liquid to gas, eEc p t t r r . p r . \ tn *s wprlan. mcrop their
v v L r ! u 1 , , ' r , v ! t L

evolrttionary

process, called

a single This is

set of Or-

bits

and becone a totally

different

IB

lIansnr!!C!fg!, only occur in artificially te1ls us this

According conditions in

!o modern physics, of very high

transmutation

can

temperaEure, very

high^

pressure and intensive

energy, such as the conditions created a cyclotron or atornic reactor. But coninonsense

must havc been going on naturally when this earth or this solar systen were being created. Let's look at these frrst basic eLements, and trace their evolution. Hydrogen is one electron. energetic "clouds" the nunber one basic element; one proton plus This is the original form energy takes when it state reality towards more condensed (r,'hich in are simply very compact Hydrogen's atomic nurnber

evolves from a more vibrational "particles" or spirals

of energy. ) (number of elcctrons or peripheral "particres") is r; itrs atomic wei.ght (generally corresponding to the number of ,'particles', in lhe nucleus or central region, including protons and neutrons) is also 1i one Droton. Then hydrogenl combines with

which contains

"heavy" hydrogen, an isotope two neutrons as well as one proton. o, Hl . to I I J J c r e a t e h e l i u m ;. H . r* H ' "1= H e 4 i. Then how does lichium
t 1 ?

arise?

One helium plus

one heavy

hydrogen; Hei + Hi = Li;. Then lithium combines with one semi_ heavy hydrogen (having one neuEron) to make beryllium: ril + ul =
^ L o"9. rnen lurther processes go: Hei + Lij = Bi'', or boron,

o r a l t e r n a t i v e l.y + H j = B ? ' ' . T h e nc a r b o n , ' s ? . * u 6 , n e, i - -} l = c ' 16 2, __l . j .j r.itI


I a Ehen n i t r o s " n i c i z + H i = N i 4 . O x y g e nN , ia + Hj = oi., or

cir+Hei=oia
As you can see, as Che elements get heavier and more complex t h e r e a r e s e v e r a l p o s s i b l e r o o t s o r o r i g i n a t i n g p r o c e s s es p o s s i b l e ; each of these different ways creates a slighrly differenc quali ry of oxygen, or boron, etc. Then this type of evolution cont inue s

l4

You can see that energv. It requires off

the steam engine is much nore heating

absolutely

a waste of

and grves less power than our method. If you design a rnethod of applying the power of the morc vang part of water, you can create a much more efficient, stronger machine, The person who knows yin and yang can always invent more efficient technolopies. Nearlv all of modern science,s theories and inventions

Lime, rnore fuel,

are

because they ar:e creaLed out of mecha_ nical thinking and do not understand yin and vang. Sometimes, these inventions can be disastrous. For example, Newton was sitting under a tree, according to the famous storv. (The srory doesn't say with whomhe was sitting, perhaos his girlfriend. L h e n h e . sa \ , I a n a p p l e f a l l , ) he thought, aha, maybe the earth ginning of is pulling on that app1e. This was the be_ the theory of gravity. idea ran directly counter to rcligion,

tremendously inefficient,

which be_ God created the earth. I f N e w t o n h a d s t o o d f a r a w a 1 r ,h e might have thought, no, maybe the heavens are pushing the apple dor"'n. Heaven's force is actr-rally .pushing apples and other objects to the earths's surface, and is also pushing the earth itself, as lieved well ,,God around the sun in spirals. created the earth" means: frorn the periphery, or from infinity, heaven's f o r c e c r e a t e d a l l m a t e r i a l p h e n o m e n ab y p u s h i n g i n . as aII o.her planets, But Newton didn't has a center, like chink that way. He thought cencer is thar

But this

everyrhing

everything else towards it. This idea corresponds to naterialism, the idea of pulling many material objects into one s o\rn orbit and accumuIating them. Newron's rheory of gravity provided scienrific support for vidualisrn, various as well forms of behavior, as materialism; such as egoism and indisuch sociaL ideas and further

the earth,

and this

pulling

15

This srrperstitious vielt ' as independent nacional sovereignty awareness of God' or intuitive also separated people from their energy and matter; so aS our unrr,ersal Source of life, infinity, speaking ' Newton's Ideologically church and science split aparc' aople became crime as he observed rhat falling way of thinking or you nay say lgnorance number one - selfishness, or alrogance, of infinitY If or God examine a1l

o u r m o d e r n s c i e n t i f i c " l a r . ' s ," one by one , You find forth' discoveries, technologies, and so of them - n o E a l l , b u t m o s t M o s t ' i n t e r e s t i n g v e r y scmething baseless assumPtions, and are \,Jrong. I'lost are superstitious ' or one ten, fiftY, will aI1 naturally be changed or discarded' you carefully hundred Years ' from nor^r

Forexample,medicine.Suppose.inlgBO,perhapsoneortwo ln five years' already 951/. thousand nev' medicrnes are invented be found dangerous or ineffecEive be gone - they will of lhem will Then in thro\'m out' be replaced by new medicines and and will This will be chrovm out' several years, chose replacements roo o f e n e r g y ' ? o \ \ ' e r' m o n e y ' t i m e all vJastes such cremendous amounts But by using humanicy at all and ideas; and it is not helping of yin and our understanding of the spiral our magic spectacles, of commonsense' revolufion yang, \^tecan creace a scientific on in medicine; no!" let us This as you knorv, is already going of elements study the transmutation further

OF THE ELEMENTS EVOLUTIOIi , ,1 ..1

H"i
'

Lti

'

B"9

r,t

'u,,,nlo oiu
'---------=:-----J CoitloN 1'10RE
basic elements , some-

A
colslofl
ihese first

i \ A ' A A
u LESS CblsloN
eight

I \ V

elements are nature's

o o o
,, at '!1
..1
i

o
at

ti

z
O O N) N) -1 rt O + i H

:.1>
. j

, ' ;

\o
\J Oi

l:
t:
ll

l a o' o o

Ito

!-e

; z

;='i
-.f

l r-r ol I

l -o ct lrn o
:
at t
- , - !

' 3
; r

m t

c)
-l

+
il t.

:. ;

. ^ :',
: l

cl

' u o o'
ts. I

o -Tl
:
TN

.
r i o l : , C

m aTT r =
' r

c) O ( )

c-

J,):'
a ! N

:*

m (t

H . i - l ^

):,

a '.
j _

1 5 1

? a

o\

T0 ro

a j ; . :

r : r .,

!9

- . ;
!

i -

: >

:)

-,

: x

l9

after

lhese initial at very

eighc,

in

"higher

oclaves" lead,

so !o speak, until and so forth'

we arrive

h e a r , r ye l e m e n t s l i k e

gold

Ileanwhile spiral, place: on,

as vre go tovrards the more central part of this we can imagine thaL the reverse should also be taking So as we reach yang always changes back into yin, right? heavy elements with atomic weights like 200, 230 and so

the very

such as radium and uranium, whaL kind of character arises? heavj-er elemenrs changing back into lighter Radioactivity: fixeC So although present day physics has a very rigid, elements. view, without saying very elements cannot change into other circumstances, we can see that violent that changing back and forth, and different along the spiral not only in states elements all elements different

are constantly different

chemical conbinations positions

of matcer, buc also in evolution'


4-'
\----7

of atonic

O.O

----A+V-------..{

VIBRATIONS '--PARTICLES-.. PRE-ATOI'11C


.T T A!T'TDD

.4.
'/.

a\

ELE},IENTS

\ ronrqartolt

RADIO-ACTIVlTY

HEAVIER

(IIAN )

U N I V E R S A LP R O C I S SO I ATO}1IC IVOLUTI OI]

2A

Now, under what circurirstances does this transr':utation naturally occur? First we know that the two elernents shoulcl be complementary; one more yin and one mor yang, right? Furthernorc, in order to do fusion, this cenfral state, nucleus part shoultl becone more fragile, in In this state they are r.tore flexiblv adap_ ' v i n table; then if one is and the other is yang, f'sion can occur. You can picture t w o b i g g a l a x i e s s w e r v i n g L o r , ; a r c i se a c h o t h e r ; o n e is spiralling clockr"'ise, the ocher is and closer like They cone closer Sane thing and closer, spirarling counter-c1ockr,rise. and chen Baaaaaa, fusion! a morc plasnic

sex, one person's

rvise and one spirallinl

energv sptralling clock_ counterclockwise; then they becone closer

and heat up nore intensely to sornething like a very encrEeric pLasnic s1-ate and - Baaaaaa, a;iain, fusionl So trans_ mutaaion of elements is the same process which is creating ne'r hunan life, nevr Dllh, out of tuo existinr ones.

TI;E DISCOVERY OF TM}iS}ruTATION


About 17 vears lecturing ago, when I was sfill i n r - e r vy o r k , T was

every week, and l1r. Ohsawa was coming nearly every year to Anerica to lecture for one week or ten days. One sunmer, after his lecrure \re \.,7ere ealing in a nacrobiotic restaurant tn I ' l c r vY o r k , a n d s o m e A m e r i c a n f r i e n d s b r o u g h t a n e \ ^ r s o a p e r c l i p p i n g . the idea thaE sodium and potassium were changing into each other under certain natural conditions ; this meanl , of course, Erans,-nr.ttation. l{e thought, of course, thar is natural; but an},rray, for mod_ rt said that Dr. Louis Kervran in France had presented

ern science to recognize this is a verv big event. That neans science has discovered that the material worrd is noE absoluce. but epherneral. In our macrobiotic cosmology, our nunber one principle is that everyching is so rigid, constantly changing. is For modern a reallv science which is to have discovered this

I
I I

21

great evellt, Soon af terrvard, I'1r, Ohsawa was lectr'rring in Paris , talking about health and so fortl-r, and he began to talk about ?rofessor
Knr\/r-.1n'c d i cenv o- r' l . ! L
J l i t l

^-r

"L^

^i--iri^--^e
l . l ! ! ! r u o " !

jf

hag

in

Lerms

OI

OUr

cosmology of yin to say hello; else, Kervran . "

and yang.

Af cer the lecture

n a n y p e o p l e t l a T r er ' r p "T ar,lDr.

finally,

an o1d gentlenan,

scanding behind evervone

car:reto shake hands roiti-r i{r.

O h s a r u ' a ,a n d s a i d ,

l1r. Ohsawa \tas so happy ! t r , J oo r


.nr

Then they nadc an aPDointmcnt, Prof.

and

three

days later
.-n* r.i.
" r J

net

to exchange ideas.
oLhcr '.-rite

Kervran did
so:1r. lle v.'as

not have any books .1t Ehar time and he was facin;
d r r L

much criticis-:

^n-^.i-inr
u r l f , u J r L

cor'lna^r.os rnd
L v ! ! ! r ' l r

scientists; a book?"

^ r-^-r.vll5awd

^ lrl ^ e c^ u. u ,r r . -d^E s u

r 1 r i l-. l Ll.r

"'.'L,

r^-

very encoura;ed and trrocc his or Biological In this Transnutat ions .

firsr

b o o l l, T r a n s . r u c a t i c r s

BioIof iclue,

book, he described the circur,rstances of his dis..\/orw l{o r'r.! s worlling as a doctor f or the French Uovernnent in fn order 1-ocontrol a const-ruction project in che Sahara desert. the worker's
iLL ^., rrcy tL lr rr i- n c. r 1 6
crLE

health,

hc was cvery day checl:ini and aualyzinl


r c .n r rr,o u lr io L Lh ar Ln uJ qono olenents Thpn f ho hn di qr^nr-'ored sonofor .rrn1r.-rc diqcha--ed

r';hat

-i^

a-J
J L r

r.rl-,ar r Lh r ta Er/ r <J-rrir.,o.

r! r ! o ! Jr v

WaS

not

cqual

Lo what l^;as consuncd.


p ' l F r n p n fc fnr qr r r d v !i rn o t6 L uui

Some elenents
lhis disnrcnarcv

rdcre discharged he picked out


sodirtr and

morc

chan consuned, and somo less.


t-r^r^ mri^r
o

Then very wiselv,

pocassrun. In chc macrobiotic tassium ratio


h,,n.]rat
J!o-r

vier^', among aII


nL^^'.^'.

mincrals,

thc sodiun/po-

is
ot,\,

a kcy issr.re.
h \ '/ JJ . ^^--^ \Jq(JrEE

This vras discovere<1 abouE one


ro,16.f6,7 Dr Tshizrrka Spc'or

Fp

n-cqcnlpd

rhese

lwo

ninerals force

as in

a the

critical bodv

cofi'Dlementary and rain.pi.pd

and that

d.rrLd6!/rr!r

^--^^^-i-Fi^

f,,h^F n L r iv r .! ri .n hc

22

if

Na and K a r e u i L h i n a c e r t a i n
T

general raLio, off, as about I:5.

the body is he

hpel rhw

E h i s r a L i o b e c o m c st o o f a r the ideal Na/K ratio

+
explain

sickness arises;

Dr. Ishizuka

already used the terminology way of thinking for

of yin

and yang to aL thar Mr. time

L h i s m e c h a n is m , b e c a u s e y i n

and yang was stil1 Oriencal

a corTmon tradicional

peopie.

Ohsawa then developed this further, and proved it extensively. Since then, f have modified and extended this concept, as you can read in the Book of l,lacrobiotics. The reason is , we need a m o r e a d a p i a b l e r n e t h o d r n r ec a n a p p l y t o t h e w h o l e w o r l d . For example, if you go to a very cold region like Alaska or lceland, this should be more like one versus five; if you go to a very hot, lropical climate, then it should be nore like one versus nine or ten. So this ratio is generally one versus five to one versus ren; average is about one versus seven. -This also correlaEes with our cosmological understanding: heaven's force is presenEly abouc se_ ven times greater than earth's force. At the same time, not only sodium and potassium but various other yin elements and yang are also making balance in our bodies. So I have made it a litcle more clear; the yin group of elements as a whole, as represented by potassium, and the yang group of elements as a who1e, as represented by sodium, are making balance generally according to Ehis flexible ratio, averaging about one versus seven, (This idea is presented in nore detail in the Teachings of Michio Kushi, Volume III, in the supplement, ) Any'lvay. Dr. certain Kervran discovered After that the workers were tak.ing but eliminating all his less

I I

voltmres of sodiun and potassiurn,

sodium and more potassiujr. to a conclusion; the body,

lg6fiscking

sodium must be changing into Somehow,with very 1ow temperatures, transmutation

data, he came potassium within 1 o r , ,p r e s s u r e p1ace. How? and

low energy supply,

must be taking

23

Please check the atomic number and weight of Na and K in the - nrll = 0 9-1 6. ' n h e r r c . r ^ r h e rc l c m n n r ' i q n c e d e d f n * f h i s D ' r o c e s s ? X rl ? -) 'r
^ vr,--n Vxygcll
t

n oB u tm : l iI n rL e n

frnm

the

ri

r^re hra.arhe

n vnL' trr'u hr i' ir r 'c s rr b'

r'it-h

sndirrm

ffom

In (K)' othcr words, taking yanf (lia) yeL creaLing or discharging yin saLt and certain foods, musr be Lransnuting into potassium. H o r . .w ' as this 1) 2) possiblc? so energy level was hign.

Everyday they were working hard, liith


h i oh a i-na J f " L c

hard work, body mecabolism and breathing


tL L a r jr/ I c rh -F .r o o r c onHi rrr ir n cF E r o n r L y L r f haw r"rcre t.rkinr-

were also
salt lablets-

3) 4)

(sodiur), In order
rpr.ncy'rrrre

to accelerate
-

transmutation,
l'a - r _d -

vte also need higher


u der - n " the hol Sa-

1,.lo-k nc rhr.,.' 1.7c-61 " io

hara sun. llany macrobiotic plency doesn't happen.


f n r - r h ' i! oc n p -run u .Lp oq J q

friends

are chinking, eat while


L1" --r

we11, I can eac lying on Ehe couch. It and mencaIly,

and transmute r"hatever I


r Lc vl . 6u

You need to be active,


(Jrr

physically
o

^-

s'r'(JrJr"r)

--^^'

dtru

-ctivelv.

L T l e e r ed o y o u t h i n k
ir
'I

this

transmutation
brainsalI
^.rC ,

occurs
nwe-

- in
fhe

che blood,
hodv? I

rho

la r ur ' tn t ro J c
i ht i, t J q

'

Iirror

int-Fsl-ines
r v/ r. ' i v s

o:rre

o rresf i on Y s L J ! r v r .

r,.1i! 1-.,rf i crl].e

Then both rpqiinq


e g J L l

Mr.
6 -

Ohsawa and Prof.


J _ . . E -

Kervran

wanEed to

begin

to

DTovp this
r

nrocpss hv exoerimenlaLion.

But neither

of for
, ,-wa15

them were mechanical


i ,v,l j--l I1 .L lB .in
Itl

cechnicians; Ehem.
L -^,ur|.J\!lr i ! .i-^

so Mr. Ohsawa began to look He recalled


^^ -nd

a c h e m i s t \ ^ t h oc o u l d h e l p
Id!!5,

back to lvhen he
(and
\t-'ru

Drri

EdLrllB

w e6q vs en ef u - ra Lh r l es

l' .- ' a r d

,.-^ L-.i ^r.. r LyPc

^ . l,r

1--^^.r\ : d on rru

s?rrdvinc Ar
r euuj/

fhe

Sorbonne.

AL thac

Cine

he had a good friend emploved bv Dupont.

who later

became a brilliant Henoff.

chemist

and was

His name \tas Dr.

24

Dr. Henoff was born in Breton,

of Celric

descent.

Breton

as annexedto France many years ago, but nany Celtic descendants in Breton sti11 wanted to have independance. IrrhI ie Dr. Henoff was w o r k i n g a s a c h e n i s r , h e a l s o b e c a m ev e r y i n v o l v e d i n t h i s i n d e pendance movenent, even becoming an important One day, before in Paris of a very big festive l{or1d l{ar II, of leader. celebration It was

there was a big

the anniversary

the annexation of Breton.

celebration

with music and costumes, and manv Then suddenlv the

speeches, and so forth. central piarform exploded - Baaaagh! Dr. chief of Henoff and his Ehe invention friends

f a r n o u sp e o p l e g i v i n g

had put a bomb there! friends, help,

He r.ra s soon afterward he escaped

department where he worked.

he r';ascaught and j ailed; but r,rith his from jail and fled to Geretany. Several years later, called World War II

began.

As the Nazis'

so

}larch Arrny narched on France, Dr. Henoff and his friends o r g a n i z e d t h e i r o r n ' ni n d e p e n d a n t t r o o p s t o m a r c h o n p a r i s , to fight for the liberation of Breton. Later, when r*aziism was destroved, Henoff escaped to Ireland where he changed his name. to find and moved to the remote countrvside

L r l r e nI 1 r . O h s a w a t r i e d but he finally locaced him.

hirn it

took about one year;

They flew together ro chis country and stayed in my home in New york. For six months, Dr. Henoff worked everyday on translating the manuscripE of Dr. Kervran's
k^^1.. ^-l ^,,^-..

cvc!)

J-., u d_y, we talked

with

him

about

how to

make our

transmutatron

experjments.

T h e n D r , H e n o f f a n d I 1 r . O h s a w a \ ^e i nt b a c k c o J a p a n , a n d continued trying to figure out how to design the technology; but he still couldn't do it. I{eanwhile a young, macrobiotic,

25

Japanese girl Then he told

was helping

him; and soon, not element's

fusion

but hurlan fusion

carne about !

(Henoff was about 50 years old.) cannot disthis girl and head and I'd like to narrv

I1r. Ohsawa, "OK, time has passed, I experinent,

cover how lo do this

Ceorge Ohsar^rs ac r a t c h o d h i s take her back to liurope." ' O K , firc,' anJ thev Icfr. said,

T h e n G e o r g e O h s a w a \ . ! 7 r o t et o n e a n d s a i d , " l i o w f r o n t o d a y I o n n n n r r n h o r q t r \ / e nd i e t u n t i l I don't I discover solution." know if he really wenl- on nunber seven or not - but I sent back
: lp--1.savi-o " F : _ ; r v O!

Then two weeks lacer, " U F . G I I Il;"T the story : It said, "I

T tot a special deliverv lctrci markeC Iiere is have discovered a way to do it !"

he rvas as Ieep at night , he sar.:a Ct:ean. neqs of heaven a biq hand screEched out; everv tine lrtrile

Frorn the darkit stretched

\hile o':L, thunder a:rd lightning shot ouL f ro:1 ir's fjnrers q harnening on Che surface of the earth, various elements thiq r,'a began Eo arise, creating rhe beginnings of life. friends, colla-

The nex: morning he calIed someJapanese scienlist who were professors boration This at a universicy, and asked for their to make somc vcry simplc equiprncnt for

an experir-)ent.

is \,rhat theY made:


Y er L lr ej e l vo u r r . e ! o u / d v lea-red infjrit-v---vir a-rl va-o---vi\rafjons---

n-F-efori c nrrri cl es (l ike n-c.tons end elecLrons)---cIe-nenLs--plants---animals dunlicate


rPsd^tr'|r,
q L r u

and man.
i l-nv

In order
rrse,l

co nake elements, we Tlust process.


p .r,acc-,r.-

che fjrsL
rvr

several- steps oF this


vAccrtlt,.1

So pracricellv
l-tthe Yin

^..-^1,.:'.^

.^*

.i..ai-.. Fv r,r!LJ
rrL!

"rd

v pnc' r.'prp rwo J q , ' f .

el pntri

oe l

nnl ps

nl us

Lermina-

and

a minus

rerminal.

Vibralions:

electric,r I currenr .

Then jns ide chev put

26

sodiun, and acEachcd a valve Lin'e.


vi=nd 'ron^ n1a^trn.lnc nnrl

to icr
nrrr.

in air

(oxygen) at

the righr for rhe

They set up Lhis equipment, using coDler and iron


cno.rrOSCOne nrisand

scfeen

in

front

to monitor thc exlerimen:. thc ncxt


1 - 1 - 6 fp q q o -

They finislted about midnight,

and planned to rcturn


Tl-rr -ic-' t\-

day to see hou iL woulJ wo:-k.


whoso I ah6121-6-1, ihtrv lrqpd hecame

cn a,,-jn". and be:an.


.r--i

h6 ^^"'l j
-'.

not wait
vny1,

until
h.rr

the next dav.


rnrl ovp3ndpd

So. he l?ent in 20 or 30
J ,

He applied elccrriciry
t \ocrrn

to rhe soCiun for

F in r .- l r _ , a . a

p a

Cleat.

band of orange appeared on the screen. Then he relased the valve and let the oxyfen enrcr - Lhe scrccn wenE black, and thcn rhe next monenl a banL of pure hlue appeared - potassiun! lle was shocked ! r , r ed i c i i r j tjsrs again, peared. Irurediately he called l ' l r . O h s a r v a- " I t seens

So rhc nexr norninE, 1.1r.Ohsawaard rhc oLher scienwent ro thc Iaboralory and repeared the exneriment - and the orante band disappeared for To make sure, a nonenE, then blue apon this ne\,t

thev ren conplete analysis element, and [ounJ iL r,'as in f act potassilrrl.

o)iYGEll

-->

Na--->l(

<-

=\i3 udl..?u
A+V
TRANS}{UTATION OF SODIII}I TO POTASSILNI

27

THE SOCIAL APPLICATIOII OF TRATiS}iUTATION i'iorv, the part, theore t i cal part rtas proven; but the technological

apply this process on a fhaE rneans the way to practically VIeneeded to s not there yet. l a r g e s c a l e f o r s o c i e t Y , this l"'a figure out how to Produce on a massive scale. At that tine' Polassiurn is bcing used as what? Fertilizer' Today it lray cost one pound of potassiun cost about $23'00' SoI t i s q u i t e e x p e n s i v e , i n o t h e r r v o r d s' a b o u c $ 7 O . O Oo r s o . from the ocean and the air' dium and oxygett are freely available in vi::tually unliniced supply. I calculated at lhat tine' it the would cost us abouc 3q per pound Eo produce potassium' after I ' J ec o u l d s e l l i r f o r cost of serting up thc equipment' initial current 2Oq a pound - more than one hundred times less than the price try - and sEill rnake a big profit) collaPse. Then, the potassium induswould quicklY

and Then we needed to decide, should we trY Eo industlialize solle do this ourselves, or offer i! to some governnent ' or Eo That question George Ohsaria gave ne as honeindustry. existing work. (I had moved to the Boston Then when he next came to visit main purarea by this tirne), r':e reached the conclusion that our ' psychological pose vras to change the world of human spiritual If we got involved with this ProjecE iE an<l physical health. time work for nany vears' might take us full So, we decided of royalty. dollars ya1ty. Michio, to offer ic to some industry ' for some kind "Yes, we can ask for one million

Mr. Ohsawasaid,

roadvance Palrnent, and then some annual percentage as Suppose' That wilI make our macrobiocic movement strong in advance, what would you do with if we got one million

28

s e e . . . m a y b e I w i l l s et u p a s c h o o l , o r maybe a foundation. " Ile said, "That , s good, l.lrt: I et 's buv a ne\{spaper coj.npan.v , l ike th-- ..iev-yorl< Time s . That ' s v e r y g o o d , O K ; b u t t o r v h o n s h a 1 1 r v e o f f c r t h c p r o - jc c t ? " \,,as nv horcr.rorl<, so I krot_e to a1l the biq che-i_ c a l c o r n p a n i e s a n d t , t a d ca p p o i n t n e n t s , o n e b y o n e t o s c c t h e n . llosL of then, lil<e ilonsanto ancl Union Carbide, could not believe rt. l.ieanwhile, I also \!'rote a lctter t o t h e l , l l - rti c H o u s c . T h e y \ . ' io rte back, in secr:ring thc r.ights to this , r^rhv g o don'c 1'ou ahead and gei patcnL?', " \ u ' ea r e n o t i n t e r e s t e d Again, tba:

it?"

So I

said, "Let's

Then sone company, r.;hich r;c r+i11 call F, becanc very inter_ ested, and negotiations begar. T h e c l a y b c f o r e l r e r . . , e r et o n e e r with then, I'lr. Ohsawasaid to nc, "This fornula is so sinnle, how will rre present it to then? I,,henr.le explain it, they t",ill So, let's tell then everything, brt then tell, t h e r , rt h e y n e e d a l l t h i s - o l r r s a l p h a ' . ' I s a i r i , , ' l . I h a t i s a l p h a ? ' , And he said, "You knor.,'! yin and yang, but wc should call it a special agent co make it as indusrrial as r'ossible. " 1 r,'a s franl<1y not convinced, bur s:id OK. day, we went to thc conference and met with abouc ten direcrors, doctors, and the Vice presiclent of f, l{r:. Ohsawa a s k e c t h e n , " D o y o u k n o \ ^ r\ , 7 h ta i s t h e m o s t i n p o r . t a n t b o o k i n c h i n a ? ' , They were a 1ittle confused - most irnportant book in china?! Then he told thein, "I Ching," and began explaining ever),rhing about tle experiment, and r exolained when they coul.dn't understand hir'. ,'Ilowever, I added aIl details, and then he said, we also need plus alpha as an agent, as catalysE." They all noclrle d so1ernn11. Eo each other; I thoLrgh I woulcl pass out, trying to .lieepfrom laughing . Then l1r. Ohsar";a returncd The next know everything.

t o J a p a n , a r . r dT b c g a n t o r . / o r k o u t

29

- laboratory facilities ' funds ' staff' a1l arrangemenls \,"ith them and so forth' fabEory eEc, George Ohsawaor I would supervise ' But he started George that we were ready to begin And I notified not yet. then to wonder, should we disclose this or not? Maybe not yet So he wrote, "Urgent, |lichio, 1et's wait; the time has proceed' come." They were very disappointed, but we did not Ileanwhile,!,'ithProf,Kervran,westartedtothink"'Let's We can not be lirnited to rhis one experiment, let's do others'" or j-entation, how can we change indusnow change all agricultural Iron ' the base of art i s t h e k e y e l e m e n t ? I'IL orientation? try's Now let's make steel by steel, which is the base of industry atomic transnutation.

Pleasechecktheatonicnrrrrberandatonicwei.ghtofiron: elenents are the basis of \{e already know, our firsc'eighc o"?: Among them' ali others; aII others can be made by these eight' how practically carbon and oxygen are mosc complemencary; this is of course, other light e1eall the heavj-er elements come out. ments are also combining, but carbon and oxygen is the most basic combination Suopose we conbine one carbon and one oxygen' t is \'Jha the

1 / A A chis bond is so resulL? c!, + ol. = Sr;;, silicon. Because srrong, silicon is a very hard, stronF "1"1:"tl ^;n"l lEoPo'""T' = t;Z c o m b i n et w o c a r b o n a n d t u o o x v g e n , c i z * c i z - o l u + o i u

Atomic nunrber, Llhat is this X.i Atomic weight 56 is iron, right? i.e., che nwrber of eLectrons, is 28,rlntt is nickei ' right? So, generallYr, 2 C + Cobalt is in beEween: reii' co"n' Ni;;' group' From X![' cwo 2 O is creating this iron-cobalt-nickel electrons musE f 1.y out, then making iron,
Then we s e t u p a n o t h e r e x p e r i m e n t , u s i n g o n l y c a r b o n a n d o x y used a c a r b o n r o d a s o n e e l e c t r o d e , gen; \..Je

with carbon powder,

30

standin[ on a netal tricity

table as the other elecrroCe conrhinc, and nickel c a n e o r . 1!t all

rhen ]er elec-

l a s s t h r o r . r - ha n d a i r iron,

llc found that m o r c , n a n 1 , ro t h c r nations

cobalt also

cane out,

furtheralso ni_ combi-

eler:cnts

Irom the air,

Erogen was conbinin3,

h.,'drogen vras conbining,

anC different

of oxl'gcn r+ere cornbininr'. , etc.

CRUCIII-I1

n";

CARBONPOI.]IDER BAT:iJIR

}ITTAL ILATE

A C ?A )A )-l 2 ciz - 2 oio = x;; - rc;;, c.iq, Iri;e

to nrake gooC stce 1 , \re nus: nake verv exac tt conditions, jusE so much volca;,c or anrpere, anC sc forth, all technical- consideratiol"rs. But these are minor pr:oblcrns; any of you can expcriment a lirlIc, and rvork out solutions. Then all cornplicated nirring Again, Also, and refining operations

So in

order

would be_

cone unnecessary. you knolr big the water, stcel

s t e e L r . r o u L d b e c o r . r ev e r v present day steel in the rust the harbor,

of the Dresent cost. scrapecl and repainted,

cheap, rreybe li! nlsts l,,erv easily; r,1.st be constantLy is contaninatrnq

ships sitting

m e a n w l - L i l e ,a l l

3l

But very additional

strangely,

if

rse make iron is very

this it

way, bonding two does not take any

caibon and two oxygen, this oxygen, so it

strong;

doesn't rusE. in Inclia and also in Bonn, iron poles

They have discovered standing ll meters out of

the ground and 25 meters into the Local legends say they were These poles never rust. ground. So we a long time ago; and nobody knows their purpose built the know that alreadf in ancient times people vere practicing transrnutation of steel. probLems for Now, we need only work out technical hor" to rnake massive applicarion.

and the way to change agriculture Then we have established Ehe way to change industry -- now what is the next area? Econornics: H o w c a n 1 e em a k e g o l d ? the sold standard. A g a i n \ ^ / eb e g a n e x p e r i m e n t i n g . sodium/potassium object. "This other experiment-, there We sent it Already, for when we had done the glittering and they said' gold." In

came out a small anaLysis, This is How?

to the laboratory

is platinr:m, no, no, we were wrong. inade gold words, we had accidencally Please calculate che total

of atomic weighls

frorn all

the

tn v o l v e d : o x y g e n , pieces of equipmeni ".lo;6 "idrttol


electrodes),

sodium and porassium: o;6, Cu;;, In other A"fSl' atomic weight 197 - this is very close to gold; words, some Binute part of che electrodes must have been melted into plasma, and combined together with oxygen, sodium and potassium, Eo make go1d, because all of these elements have such nature s . is very expensive,
So we

{f"'.. iB" K39 = F"i6;"N'zl'

sLrong complementary/antagonistic However, if of no use.


d wdJ
^1.^ !, a^e Lv -

we can make gold but it


r - ln a t

it

is

To totally
6v!u
^^1.1

change economic conditions,


anyone can use, any'where

we must find
need to

32

c a l c u l a L e L h c c o s L s o f r n a s sp r o d u c t i o n n e t h o d s , a n d p o s s i b l y
awrrorimont rri rh <orrorr'l ,1i f f oronr rrrrrc

In the Orient caIIed Sen Ljn;


hoel rh I nnonrri

there are stories in

of ancient macrobiotic

men

l h e v w e r - el i v j n S
t-rr rnrl nhvci^c1

fhe nountajns and developing of their


froonnm rnd cnirit,rrl

t-heir cosmological consciousness and the realization


martr'l

Perl'p-s

vorr'r'e seen ni cl rrrtrs ot -

wi sr^, ol d nnn Lr:rh 1:--o Strikes Back?

hcardS Some-

.and st-ronq eves

h a r r e v o r r s e e i_:i:___:iti:_i_: The Fmnire

thing

like
Thece

Y o d a - r ^ir s e o l d r n e n w j t h u n u s u a l l o n c r s .
I ccpndq ,rl sn c.aw thrf thpep nren n-r,le cnl d Thoi r

school of instruction
1 \ q - l

had four sta;es:

2)
3)

aster!; Longevity - not only 78 years, but 1OO, 200, 300 -,,. y e a r s I o n g e v it y a n d h e a l f h ;
Fd'rcatinn r : r ' lk i n r to neon'le snreading idcas and

r - i.

\^rritings, etc,; 4) AI chemy . the way to mak,egold, ^ u"^ -^ ,,U " , 'i r vc r .r 5 ' r" L J they \,rere then graduates, l ^ r hn e they discovercd

Of corrrse ihcr^ "-^ learning


L^-1. inc. --r

or actual school for was their school; so eacing buckwheat, Lree


d"\r l.,rduudj.ry r lrrer

these things. in
-h .r .r : r r u --^^^^q.
5!

The mountain itself


medi rrrinr e11 l.haco F L ^x !p !lr t ra r i' ,. j :;

they lived
.\rrt- rnd

the mountains for rnany years,


,

m:<rorino

Iorrol c

Annnrd

i no

t-n

'l

pc'pnd

ihpw

nredo

on'l d

f rnn

mpr..lrr.\r

M .o - r-n- u r y

is

the nexc elemerlt afcer gold, \^rith atomic weight 200. Hou could rhcy know chis - that a silver semi-soliC/seni-liquid and a sof' vel Iow mctn' were so close on the ncriodin all the r,rethods lve had tried so far, rahlc?

Unlike

this

ancient

method musL have been noE addjng, elcments toBether,

blrt subtract-

33

n1 o. - b o,n ,p jr.' .

h w h dr nc n, , , .p Lasr!. r . ,w ru !u r ie E

fr.m

mp.,..11rv

u 82 0o 0 . .rrrr

" h1 3

9 = A u I19 7.

The last said.

time Mr.

Ohsawa visited

America, this

when he was 78, he He died

"I1ichio. we must discover

deduction method."

soon afEer EhaE. Since then, fina this nethod. gold came out. I have studied these rhree charts and t::ied to Now the only

f I

Then, whcn I rnade the next experimentation, these charts. is


ofar

A1l the secrets are in

remaininn nrohlp;
L-'a
q

how to make mass nroducrior. I would like


t-hp lipht
1 .p r r ^

For vour hon'eto have you thinl(


This is

work, as studenrs of macrobiotics,


+^ ^I'^ ^^r r L'Ld.Nc
6uru

nler

inr)m 'roq.
in

pr
,,j-

e ' le n e ' n fs .
d|u

l]uve

onnd

n h r ' l I! sa ou a r rn {)
slu!

r hinl<ino

.F.r

.,.--Yd"2-

OF SOCIITY TRANS}IUTATIOIi The Sen liin, when Lhcy masLered such problems, did not attach they didn't
jn

to these solucions; but let. such things


.w, s ^ r- s ^
J

telI

anyone eIse,
rraJ-e-iar

or vrrite iE dor^'n,
r^rorld aS

be forgoEten aEain.
tlndprsf and.i np of

For them, such chinss


rhe

. l. . ^ -

+ * -d. i -.i-r L r r r L

self-development.
Dt.r ' .w . , DUL n n^o

w e r r . a y noad and

crrnh

rhinoc

aq

hor,r

l-.1 m.akp

( ' - - -d,

q.r]

l-- o

ge-

thpr ri or

wi'h rn

nnrassirrn

stppl rhp co-nl

1-o creete pfc

a new maEer-ial oF nttr wholP

revolun'rerial

r-onrri hrrt-e ro

chancp

civilization.
war is

If

so, we must do this


on rhp nrpsen* qlv J r pold qipr"c

within
stAndard and

the next Een years nrPsPnr If steel a1l

then, we may be able to prevent a destrucEive I'orld War, because


denendinp
Prsrcrr(.

inthat

uusLr- )/,

r..^ts-..

dul

^^-jr .L ,1 1flrral uaLu!d!

So forth.

ground collapses, collapse.


^_r ^ -.^--

our enrire
(rr r

industrial

and economic system would no more comto he.,in. ThiS - , o r r ' ld have

Then rhere would be no more capitalism,


LyIrs

_ - '. - . .. ! : _ ^ F . : ^ _

will

be a verv qreat re-orientalion.


Thpn srrnnose in thp frrirrr.c eq wp di q.'nwpr wAvq to nake sfep]

34

from the air, is what?

from the ocean or the soil, or ocean or soil.

then we can further element's and

go,

wiEhout using air vraves, without

The lighter

origin

Energy and vibraEion; using

so, using only vibraEions

hydrogen or carbon or \.rhatever, we can make

these materials. Then, thac world civilization. would become what we can call

a spiritual

AE that time, we can say, mankind vrill reaLly begin to develop - phvsically, - bemencally and spiricually cause we would at terial world, that freellr tiTne have the capacicy to control Ehe ma_ playing r,rith it by our image or spirit a1one. these developments take - ten, know, but definitely, twenry, and yang,

How rnany years v:i1l thirty years? l{e don't

the peoDle who can

achieve this wilL be the people who can understand yin just as the ancienc r,:acrobiotic Sen Nin did. Definirely,

whether by all our efforts Logecher or by only onc or cwo people's huge efforLs, we will brcak rhrough the rigid barriers of modern scienEific thinking and technology, and change this spiritual vasr civilization, and redirect it towards a trulv humanity.

Meanwhile, your homework is, minus factors, nake gold yin or platinun.

by playing

around vrith plus is okay; but

and

and yang thinking, For now, just do it.

Ery to figure the theory

out hov/ Eo

soon, we may decide to actually

35

SUPPLE}iINT NOTES ON TRANS}IUTATION (The foIlowing passages are excerpted from I1r. Kushirs
--^^--i.r,P P.- d L ,r.'-i.Io-l in

articles

origina i 1y appearing ir

the Order of

have been compiled and reprinted for the topic of this issue of rial ONE VI,RSUS SEVEN

They the Universe magazine ' here as supplemental study matethe Study Guide')

In the bodv are a number of minerals


^ ^ l F ^

which

conbine to form

YANG MINERALS +
Nt-

Y iIi ELEI.{]jiJTS +

CO}IBINE TO FOR].1 Chloride s Carbonates Sulfates


Pl-,^cn}1tfpc

C1

co2
S
Mo

Fe These are never fact in m o s t c o n r m o no f cooking. ments (yin) found alone, these salts is off. is but only as ionized as free compounds elements that chloride ln The we use e1e-

they may be poisonous Lrhenthis are driven

to our systen roasced, ics

Ehe unrefined

sea salt

undesirable

there are varying degrees of Yin and Among the Yang minerals, yang. Na and Mg are Yang, while K, Ca, and Fe are more Yin. maY These minerals represent approximat ely 3 .5"/. of the bodY and be divided this way:

p - l % ; S - 0 ' 2 5 " 1 ; C l - O . l 5 " L ; M g - 0 '0 5 % ; F e - 0 0 0 4 % ; Ca-2"1;

36

others-0.0046::. I r r h i1 e t h e r a t i o at about I:7,

of Na and K in

the brood should be maintained

thc body as a whole contains 0.15% sodium and 0.35% potassium, the toral beine 0.50%. Other minerals = 3.5 Na + K 0.5
'l

Besides the minerals the body is comprised of fats (13."{), proteins (16%), or roughll' 3Oi! in'toral. The percentage of carbo_ hydrates is so low because they are quickly and easily burned to produce energy for
1 , 1 .

our activity.

Once again we see the ratio

of

Carbohvdrates.

Fat

Protein = 29.6I
/ 4 ,

Minera I s It after total ing is is more difficult

i
of the solid matBodies analyzed

to ascerEain the ratio found in the body.

Eer to the liquid,

or water,

death are dehydraced; chus present day scientists are not in agreement abour the figure. Somesay as little as 55% is others maintain this; the cells the cells that it is as hish as 9B%. Our think_ someEhing like

water while

Water within Water outside Blood plasma

60"/"
1 10/

87. 857"
the remaining is It Ehat much of moist. 15%. How do we ocean con_

Solid arrive

matter

should constitute figure? land, it is

at this

Although the earth clear at least

three-fourths is the same in

and one-fourth covered with

the land surface is

water,

or is

37

sidering lains three like

a living

body.

If

or more liters water; Liters.

of digesrive Thcrefore,

we eat r:egular meals, we produce eighr juices. The food that we eat also conmight amounc to another two or trac! concains something and ce1ls

incLuding tea this

thc digestive

ten to twelve liters,

from which our body fluids

are created. AnoEher way to caLculate the body's vracer content might be of brovrt based upon the simpLest diet consisting almost entirely Of rice. One hundred grams of rice contains 15 grams of water' che remaining 85 grams, 73 grams is tion of and mecabolism is into rrater: + L'ater + Energy this carbohydrate. I f one's digesgood, he can change almost 60 to 65 grams

SimpIe sugar + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide (CIucose) The acEual total of water, of water 15 plus available 60).

from brourn rice cooks in is :

then is

about

75 grams (which is

The rice

L\ or 2 volumes

so the f ii-ral ratio

of r'rater to solid

1 I 2 - 1 5 O G r a m sW a t e r

25 GramsOther
The same 7:L ratio Ir
r-ho

Nearly

7:I

is

true

of our gaseous food,


t ^ ^!'l. '^F:"i r o e L r w ! L l "

che air' for


^411 Fr'6Fl'

is
n, r ( ur l

difficult
f n i r

to measure the volume of oxygen necessary


^\ 't tr - il - c s -^^^r); hd d e u u ! u r l r B

hnrlrr

n rF u

r h nr d v uL uy

i. rqD

aL c

s. , nd p r rt I tr ,

^-i-'" !t"d!i
Pr-

!rv1116

Ii"in-

^ s reafiOn,

and

eaCh One

needs plenty

of oxygen; generally The blood

speaking we require

about 250

cc per minute. out brealhinS. dav:

stream which carried

oxygenated blood

h a s a c a p a c i c y o f a b o u t 1 0 O Oc c ;

thus we can go four minutes withIn a normal, relaxed condition we require, per

38

2 5 0 c c x 6 0 } i i n . x 2 4 H o u r s= 3 5 8 , 0 0 0- 4 4 0 , 0 0 0 c c (This may be reduced ro 440 licres.) 60 kilograms, or 60 liters.


0xyg en Body l{eighr Thus for the person The average body weight is

360 - 440 liters

6 0r 7-ll3

^ { : v !

- , , ^ - ^ - ^ d v c r a 6 s

^ ^ F . i . . i r . . d L L r . v r L ) ,

the ratio

works out

to be

seven co one: Food of Food of This is shown schemarically the Nose the Mouth in rhe figure

7:L

below.

W a c e r( H r O )
Carbohydrates,
Pt^rd1r k.lc

(c, H, 0, N)
Other Minerals

'):l r),i
between heaven and

Tho

nri.ir6!rr

^F
v!

"one versus sevenrr is


f i orrto nn rha

the force

earth.

(See

next

P a S e. )

39

2 - . .

,
/ l

L.\tir L1

R S F O

CE:1

/','--<-

V r l

i I

\ ' l1 \r . ', / Y
i \ / "
/ \

i>1--------i-. , ' t , t ' . 1

,,{ \,
/ \

I
r

t f '
H E A V E NS "' FoBCE: 7

---r--

l',

IN DIET TRANSMUTATION Using fire into our bIood. is necessary in is aiding the transmutation first, ionization of by food

This process involves,

which the speed of electrons

increased and molecules are sepa-

raEed, and second, transmucation or Ehe fusion of atoms. Within the body this Lransmutation is represented by Lhe change of
^ F . t a r nvn hrrl /.,j
\,rr Lv,

inrn

h m r vru-r i n . rp Lr ',n v fc l n

'.'\'' nh

are

rcsnpafivelv.

the

eSsences

of

rhe vegetable

and animal world. red

Chlorophyll (yang).

is

green

(yin)

and hemogLobin, as you know, is ChlorophyIl


u.r,ytsEr1

is

c o m p o s e do f m a n y a t o m s :
end a sinqle Ar^r

carbon, hydrogen, and


nf raoresirra. the

rl-.a n.,rcide

center. as yet.

This rnolecule has a spirallic Everything in this


i nfo

molion,

but it this

moves so strucEure

s1o\,ily that
oven-rral lv

science has noE been able to detect


iransrrlr-;1rod rapnpsi1rr.

molecuLe moves toward the center and is


A mOleCule of hemOglobin,

40

on Ehe other hand, has almost exactly the same structure of the peripheral atoms, but at the center is iron. In essence, "anima_ Iization" is the change from magnesiumto iron. enough, the cenrer of compared to the relatively more yin iron rophyll as a whole is yin. Sinilarly, actualLy more yang than man's. tured the sameway; the pulp is very yin, yang. In these exanples, yin, there is and supporced by great strong yang there is cenEer is InterestingLy chlorophyll, yin, fruit Mg, is

yang, chlo,

(Fe) ; nevertheless, citrus is

a r,roman is

but her struc-

but the seeds are srrong great yang within, supporting r,rherever there is

and lne can say that also strong yin.

The change f rom i'Ig to l'e requires CHLOROPHYLL Atomic Nunber L 2 A E o n i c I , J ie ghc To make this
^ 1 " - - e ^ ^ ^ - i

oxygen, rvhich is HE}lOGLOBIN

yin:

, O } l g c h a n g e si n r o ( F e , C o , N i ) b y a d d i n g 2 O I U
into iron,

we must use an element srronEry anLagonl-srrc ro oxygen; while magnesium is yang relative to iron, it is insufficiently yang to attract oxygen strongly. There_
^ ! . ' ^ - ^

transmutation

the body magnesium is first b r o k e n d o r ^ , ni n t o t w , a /^v \ carbon aroms (Ci2), which are excremely yang and immediately attract Ewo atoms of oxygen, causing fusion:
^^-L^^r^-^

fore,

within

-l

2rc1)+2(oi6)
Iron, the final 26. product of number of

28
(Fe, Co, Ni)

56
has an atomic The atomic number indicates the number of protons in the nucleus or the nu.rrber of electrons circulating at the periphery of the atom. The number of electrons is more imDortant in determining the chemicaL reactivity of any substance. For exEhis transnutation,

4I

ample, pure sodiun is takes on the ionic edible nickel, process outlined

a poison, but

if

it

loses one electron which is not

lt

form of

conmon tabLe salt, our life. product

only

but also necessary for

During the transmutation formed is actually

above, the first

which has the atomic number of 28; nickel rapidly changes inco cobalt (27) and finally into iron (26). This change is very rapid, occurring in a fraction of a second. During rhis change, are discharged either as electrons or protons. A single proton is the sarne thing as a hydrogen ion. (Hydrogen rs the simplest of all elements, being composedof only one proton and one eLectron. l " r h e nt h e e l e c t r o n i s l o s t , t h e r e s u l t i n g p r o c o n is the hydrogen ion with a charge of +l . in Scientists use the con_ To centration salt of H* ions in a solution acidicy is as salt as a measure of acidity.) atomic particres

I I I I

balance the resulring in our dict, much salt

the body, we should have a bit of alkaloid producing. If we take too of creating potassium (K) and

(yang), we run the risk t h e r e s u l L i n g y i n c o n d ir i o n :

. . tt L\4..
L )

R IO

1 o J9

This reaction of yin iron, especially result

can actually if

interfere

with salt

the transmutacion to excess. this, As a and various we mistakenly for particu_ food habits. and simula person's

we continue eating rn trying to It

we feeL cold or tired

due to poor circulation, counteract is overeat,

s 1 ' r n p t o m sd e v e l o p .

eat more vegetables or generally physical food greatly increases. salt larly intake to accidentally grains, among those who have jusr

as our desire and greater, plenty of salt

very easy for

b e c o r n eg r e a t e r seasoned with

begun to change their

By eaEing primarily tamari,

the body begins to contract, taneously becomesmore yin. In addition to the right accelerates

but one's mentality

amount of

sa1t, \,rater is

also ne_ It

cessary because it

the decomposition fo food.

42

of change because it serves as a good medir.rm chemicaL combinat.ions. marriage of sodium and chlorj-ne

dissolves

many ionrc

For example, in NaCl, saIc,

the Ioose

ions breaks up as the elemenEs

arrange themselves at the poles of a \tater molecule: _H* <-- -_--.--.-.--__',., ..r-

."

-"-

<-------"-

----''--Na+

WATER In order
irnn rha

NaCl transmutation
artracE fire vanp. we use

to assure successful
i -.!-r

of magnesiuminto
oxygen. when we To cook

m:onecir

tu ,L ^

, .o ^.,ir

L,LUub.. to

m:l,e

ihe

oriqinal

chlnronhvll

nore

green leafy vegeLabJ'es. lf or inhibit


ulusL c L l r p t. ^ Q r,)

the process of
-^ s u -l ^ ,re ,,.-^ )dLlB

you eaL rah' vegerabLes, you slow down If we eat raw food, we transmutation.
LU o hel rnnp. food m:v hp sal fed

f ^LLUr ld

Animals who eat raw or we can gec more sunshine and exercise' night. vegetables play around in che sunshine from morning tiII With verl this man is f e r ^ e x c c p r . io n s , L h c y d o n o L s l e e p d u r i n t that facilitates their transmutation. a state Lhe day; it- is But modern of affairs anemia for activity

lazv and when he ears raw or olher\^ise improperly prepared as well as blood diseases like

food, he may be unable to create new blood, which leads to malnutrition or leukemia. man. MAGNETISIlAND JUDCE}IENT On this
t irra .hc.\l rrro

Thus. cooking is very imporLant. especially

earth,

iron

is

one of
hecomp

the few elements that


(aq ) ',.r:reraf The mapner'i r

is
llf.e

sensifeaCheS

J - . \ m - " ( ' r - 1 c irc m


4 u r v ' " e ' , f

rrndnr

norm r r: r lq !

fe ve qt t t r c s ! a t im r r !D e r

pl emont q

i nr'i si h le

world is a magnetic field

which consLantly changes the infinicesiBetwecn these po1es, Lhe

maJIy smaII iron molecule on rhe earLh.

43

which takes the forn of electricity' The core of the earEh is composed or acid/alkaloid' vibration, three most magand some cobalt, which are che nickel, of,iron, having been They are in Ehe same family ' al1 netic elenents. atoms ' of two carbon and two oxygen formed from the transmutation which forms magnetic field' These elements are che cause of the around t-he periphery oI the earrh' large and small is a current

As it

and l ike. a Iarge gyroscope; the core an e l e c L r i c c h a r g e . U I t i the magnetic ocean around it exchange universe ' m a g n eL i s l h e l n f i n i t e t h e o f o c e a n t h e s P e a k i n g , mately rotates the earLh is Within our body is a small quantiLy of ionized iron , which is found mosLIY

renains

lron . ready to receive magnetic influence This our red blood celIs. in the center of hemoglobin, within ' magnetic ocean charge each other iron in hemoglobin and Infinity's Ironistransmutedfromcv]ooxygenandtwocarbonatoms the rniddle of this process is nirrogen:
?R

In

2 rc?z)
I
l

r-;_l Nia
-

. Z (' OrY o)

( F e, C o , N i ) 56 MAGNETICELE}IENTS

Nitrogen

comlrrscs

- l1ot ^s e!,^ oi3Dout /u/o uL LIIE ort

The yin

and yang

elements

of lar

iron

are wcll

balanced in

since its

weights.

Infinity

both carbon and oxygen have simi-entiret-y is also balanced by the iron.

infinitesimally

A charge Passes between This judgement works boch ways. che tl,,o, which we call judgemenc. I r o n i n o u r b o d y j s I i k e l h e n e e d l e p o i n r o f a c o m p a s st h a r i s small volurne of north. In the same way the infinitesimal to the infinitesimal. is attracted \{leen this to the infinite and the infinice

pointing

condition act-raction is in perfect line, we call the resulting At this time our judgemenc is the judgenent supreme judgenent. the judgement of God. This is the real meaning of of infinity, self-realization. because lhe iron-the iron is No longer is often ionized there yin or yang, because the infinicy the of two are well-balanced. the needle does not detect The environment influence

too much.

other elements in

the blood-easily

the quality

oftheiron.Ifironisnotcapableofhavingamagneticreaction, At that we may only detect sone 1ight, incermediate vibration Now you can see the mechatime, we say we have Iost our memory Ehis is Ehe vray that judgenent nism of our body and infinity; "paradise lost" means loss of the body's magnetic capacity. works. T h i s I n f i n i E e u n i v e r s e , t h e o t h e r p o l e , h a s n o t c h a n g e d' r a t h e r iciswevlhohavebecomeinsensitive.lftheenvironmentbecomes is cold, more yl-n, our food becomes more yang and the iron magnet on the other hand, warmth makes us more subject more sensitive. to electrifying influences. Electrifying in a cold complementary elements, comes more sharP. THE SPIRALLIC UNIVERSE One question scudy this. chart. occurs Why is to many Ehinking people when they first so that and magnetism are two climate judgement be-

the most peripheraL (yin) ( l 1 l ea r e r e f e r r i n g reading furcher? ficarion of elements in

hydrogen, which is very yang, found in Can you answer this before position? to the spiral" spectroscopic char! on pg classi9 )

a logarychnic

45

Hvrlrocn'r is

vcrv
I J

small
v t i r u 4

rhiq

mpAns fhF'

thc

centrincfal

forcg

the n r e s s r r r p f r o n s ame the


rhino in rho

t hr. orr'^i I^
c n l . r'
.

i^
J t

" v .s-r" J
P lL r r r t n

6 ! r d L .
|

--^^'
i lc

L'c can observe


)

the
ih

c -\ / c Jr o m J

t iJ -"

. d- . r l

r l , ^ -6 - '

i ' |- h ^l

! ' ' \

L -

T oce

Yen o

Force

IEA VIER AT;U


r.-.^ h r r .) , u r ( J b E r r
tho hrroe

F, dE---l l^r y f u .l r . rl -rr \ r-! L ,


ro1. ^f "n^i-hor

)/

JL|a!!

1r
n rr

because

i:

is

at

the

cen-

enir:1

enir.al

i^ p - r^e^ae L^ O- n . I C

^ ^I r - L I l d'L r 'On. If U

Whal are the protons anJ electrons?


, L . i - F . ,

RecentIy. scienLisLs disThis completely upseC


- - ,L ^O h ll.I i s a lr d

! covered elecLrons in the nucleus of aLoms


LnrrEy

^ , , , 1 . , , ' . i - 1 . ; - ^ y e a r S O f. l S lnK-nE, L U L I - \ , /^ -^\^! ^j -uAOu r li -I ^l a r rL^ O ^ O, U I rLl n 'r':^^11" r--' J pnd:Ftcr hillionq nf vcprs r v r | ' s u r P ! ! a t r r L d a r J

fhe

elpctrons

changes into _-^,,_,-1 d,uLLrururdLr(r"

The nucleus is the condensation, a proton. , r - . , . ^ _ . .. .--^ conclusion. -_*r ^-tJf ] ydrrB Pdr J Lhe universe:

and

N o w y o u c a n s e e t h e s l ' m p h o n yo f first
nroconr-

a prelude, The

scven movementsof a main composiCion, and a grand finale. octave or eighE elements (H, He, Li,
t ho nrol rrrlo Thon rmnno rhoca pi ohtol amonl-c rho

Be, B, C, O, N) re-

g r e a c e s L a n E a g o n i s n .i s produce silicon.

befween carbon and oxygen which cogether

This combinaEion produces seven movements in (C + 0) = Si, 2(C + 0) = Fe, and so on, che world of matter. 7(C + 0) = Pt. until: Plarinun
a dissolr'.inn

is

the last in

of

the netallic
melodies

elements.
L '^i--.i-uc})!LLrr
})

The finale
^'tr and

is

rhe

dininisl'inn

":'L

mercurv and culminatins

the radioactive

elemen!s.

46

"13u-o"13,-"'!30
The pre-atomic conclusion of this atomic world. Iife, world is also arranged spiral'lically; of the che world becomes the periphery of elements is spiral which begins with the next, The spiral cells, also at the periphery virus and bacterial of man.

of a huge biological grows into This is

and proceeds toward the creation che universe, spirals uithin of alI

Lhe order of

spirals, worlds is yang and

manifolds of spirals. Lherefore Ehe same: yrn.


-r-^ l.:^r^^i^^r rlq ur\Jr\,BrLdr

The governing principle ccntripeLaliry

and centrifugality,

rP!r

s.irel

rs

itself

on rhe nerioher\

of

another,

a huge social
rL:LnlS ^^^,-^ ellU!,lruJ5 Lr ^l ^^.. DLO-LOgy,

and hiscorical
PLl ^U r1^ .l rP Ie, rr ] a n, O . ^^L-^1 Lectltlol

spiral.

If
cuu].u I

presenl science discovered


Lus . ..i.^r. uLrr __j-L vtr *.L"''_ -^.'choloqv P-Ji srrv-vbj, '^ Of

^V . .e ^ I-y, L ,1l .I ,l i e IlB OB-v dle

-e ^ I ll g ir O - n i rf

sePd!'1

Lq,

Laws and theories in each discipline. hrino rhem foeelhcr and nake then. into sLanding uhe laws of change.

The uni fying principle

can

one, enbracing, and under-

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