Call Me Stormy

Finding righteous currents in turbulent times

Archive for the tag “P.D. Ouspensky”

All On Board, Psychic Airships

Hang on to your hats! The Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt revisits an obscure 19th century scientist, John W. Keely, who staged a demonstration  of levitation in Philadelphia back in the 1870s. Keely harnessed the sound waves from musical instruments — pianos and violins — to levitate miniature discs. This same scientist developed many other devices — for instance, a perpetual motion machine using the flow of water to provide energy. Had he unraveled the secret to free energy?

The Dark Journalist wonders: Why have Keely’s inventions been largely forgotten?  Were these hoaxes or did titans of industry — the Syndicate — sabotage devices that threatened their own alternatives? Likewise, did Keely pass along some of his knowledge to Nicola Tesla?

Liszt delves into these questions, while also exploring Keely’s connections with the mystery schools, and specifically, Madame Helena Blavatsky and Rudolf Steiner. The discussion also covers the lost continent of Atlantis, as well as the famed psychic Edgar Cayce. What did he warn about the nightside forces?

Humans Ruled By Dead People?

The Dark Journalist Daniel Liszt explores the theories of the late P.D. Ouspensky and asks “Is humanity ruled by dead people?” This is an eight-minute highlight from our recent X-Series episode on Ouspensky and his intriguing view that dead people are ruling the world through what’s called “Eternal Recurrence.”

Gurdjieff’s Mystery Warning

The Dark Journalist ventures into the spiritual realm with a program that explores the works of the great mystics of the early 20th century.

The key focus here is on George Gurdjieff, the philosopher and spiritual teacher, who called his brand of ancient wisdom “the Fourth Way.” This involved blending together the traditional pathways of the fakir, the monk and the yogi.

Much of what Gurdjieff taught came to be documented and spread by the Russian philosopher P.D. Ouspensky and the so-called Mystery Schools. It’s a timely subject as Gurdjieff did much of his research in Afghanistan, although he disseminated this knowledge primarily in Russia and later, in Paris.

 

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