Home Categories Science learning Western Pseudoscience Varieties

Chapter 6 Chapter 6 Circling Motion

Alfred William Lawson, "Prince and First Doctorate" of "Lawson University" in Des Moines, Iowa, considered himself the greatest scientific genius alive today.But sadly, he was not awarded a Nobel prize for any project, as a tribute to his strange career and incredible literature.Here are two quotes from Lawson himself as proof. "He (Lawson used to call himself in the third person) has a bright mind and can answer all questions. Even if the so-called smart people find difficult questions, for him, they are as simple and easy as the textbooks in kindergarten." "When I look deeply into the vastness of the universe and see the amazing movements within it...sometimes, I think I was born 10,000 or 20,000 years ago."

The publisher of Lawson's book "Human Life" said of him, "Compared with Lawson's law of penetration and spiral motion, Newton's law of universal gravitation is just an elementary school lesson, and Copernicus and Galileo's Learning is but a drop in the ocean of knowledge." (Note: The publisher of "Human Life" is Lawson himself) The book, which has a foreword by the pseudonym Sai Fance, claims that "a brief introduction to the life and work of Alfred Lawson in a few pages is like compressing the universe. Impossible. . . . How can we mortals understand Lawson today when he was so humble? The depth of Lawson's intellectual activity seems to have no limit . . . In the next few thousand years, Men of infinite ingenuity will be enriched, and endless branches will sprout from the greatest tree of human wisdom."

Before this book takes the liberty of giving an overview of the life of this famous thinker, it is advisable to make a brief comment on the basic principles of Lawsonianism.Although Lawson has written more than fifty books and pamphlets, the most important sources of his views are Lawsonology (3 volumes, 1935-39), Human Life (1923), and Permeability ( 1939).Most of the following quotations are taken from these three books. Lawson modestly called "Lawsonology" "the search for knowledge of life and everything connected with it." If it is not true, if it is not true, if it is not true knowledge, if it is not clever, then it is not Lawsonian."

Underpinning the whole structure of Lawsonianism is a principle of physics.It was so new that Lawson had to invent some new vocabulary to describe it.In fact, Lawson has claimed that "the fundamental principles of physics were unknown until Lawson established them." Many of his books begin with a lengthy glossary of new words that radically change their meaning. meaning. " The original concept of "energy" was completely abandoned.The notion of substitution is Lawson's vision of a universe in which neither can.It is not empty space, but filled with matter of different densities.Under the action of the two basic principles of Lawsonian theory, that is, "suction" and "compression", the denser substance tends to move to the less dense substance.The law governing this movement is known as the law of "osmosis".Lawson writes, "This law is too remote and unattainable for the old and incompetent professors of physics, but a new generation of scholars who are growing up has begun to appreciate its great value.  … …”

The state of equilibrium in size and density is what Lawson calls "equilibrium stability."His other more important principle is "circling motion".Lawson's definition of this movement is: "Any kind of formation moves in multiple directions according to the movement of many gradually increasing formations, and each enlarged formation depends on the movement of larger formations. direction of motion, and also moves according to the different changes caused by the interaction of different proportions of 'suction' and 'pressure'." This is much more complicated than people can imagine, and it seems to be explained as follows: there is no object in the universe that moves in a simple straight line or a curve, because it is affected by many different movements, and finally makes its The way of movement is in the shape of "Zigzag", "Never leave".Lawson vividly depicts this movement: a bacterium passing through the blood cells in a person walking down the aisle of an airplane in flight.The bacterium thought it was moving in a simple straight line.In fact, the blood cells are moving in the blood, the blood is circulating in the human body, the body is walking on the aisle, the plane is flying relative to the ground, the earth is rotating and revolving, and the sun and the entire solar system are galloping in the universe.The course of this bacterial movement is thus in an absolute zigzag, and this zigzag "goes on without direction and without end." To calculate such a complex course, Lawson proposed, would have to invent a "Super Advanced Mathematics".

The concepts of "suction" and "compression" recur throughout Lawson's teachings. "Flow" (such as rain, heat, blood, etc.) is formed by these two forces.Light is a "substance that enters the eye due to the effect of 'suction'".Sound is also another substance that enters the ear.As for gravity, that's just "the pull of the Earth as it 'sucks'".In fact, Lawson candidly admits, "When people study ... the Lawson School, they find that ... all the problems that theoretically involve physics don't exist ..." It can be expected that the human body moves by means of thousands of small suction systems and pressure pumps.Air is drawn into the lungs, food is drawn into the stomach, and blood flows through the body.Every cell has tiny pumps.Of course, waste is excluded by the action of "pressing". "As long as the 'suction' and 'pressing' ends remain normal, this internal rotation continues," and when the pulling and pushing cease, the person dies.The earth is a huge organism pushed by mountains "suck" and "press".Although the earth is floating in an ocean of an extremely thin-density substance "ether", there is also a substance with an even thinner density inside the earth, which Lawson calls "sub-ether".This sub-ether acts as a "sucker", sucking various substances supplied by the sun and various gases from meteors into the earth through the opening of the North Pole.Some of these substances are also sucked into the earth through the "pores" on the earth's surface.From the South Pole to the North Pole through the center of the earth there is a central pipeline, from which arteries and veins branch out. The former transports the substances on which life depends to the various parts of the earth, and the latter removes waste.Antarctica is the anus of the earth. "Exhaust gas" is expelled from this by "pressing", and waste is sometimes eliminated from these pores in the crater.The aurora at the north and south poles is formed by the inhalation and discharge of these gases.On page 32 of the book "Permeability" there is a color illustration showing the violent activity at the ends of the globe.

It can be expected that sex is nothing more than "sucking" and "pressing". "'Suction' is feminine movement. 'Pressing' is masculine,...feminine movement is introduced from outside to inside, while masculine movement is pressed from inside to outside,...the attraction of the two sexes is nothing but 'suction' to 'press' attraction." The magnetism that still baffles "professors" is a lowly sexual activity.If a magnet "contains more negative particles than positive particles, it has the force of 'attraction'... If it contains more positive particles than negative particles, it has the force of 'compression', thereby pushing matter away".

According to Lawson, there are two tiny creatures in the human brain, which he calls "intelligence formers" and "intelligence destroyers."Sapient forms are "microscopic thinking organisms," which create and manipulate the tools of thought within the cells of the mental system.They enable all good and creative things.Once the arm is raised, it also requires 1 billion intelligent formations to go all out under the command of a small intelligent formation.” Unfortunately, the work of intelligent formers is hampered by intelligent saboteurs, "tiny vermin which affect the cells of the mental system and destroy the mental instruments which intelligent formers make and manipulate." As As Lawson shows, "intelligent formers sacrifice themselves for the benefit of the body, but intelligent destroyers sacrifice the human body for their own benefit."

Of course, much more could be written about the extraordinary principles of Lawsonianism, but these are enough to form a picture of the grand depth and breadth of Lawsonianism.Let us now look back at the life and experience of the discoverer of Lawsonianism and some of the institutions he founded. According to Sai Fance, "the birth of Lawson is the most important event since the birth of mankind".He was born in London on March 24, 1869.Lawson's parents (a combination of Scottish and Scandinavian descent) left England shortly after his birth, first to Canada and then to Detroit.He himself said that he first began to study the laws of nature "at the age of 3, while working on a small farm near Detroit. There he caught potato beetles on potato vines, and thus acquired knowledge of insect life" .

When Lawson Jr. was 4 years old, "he noticed that when he used the pressure of his lungs to blow the dust in the bedroom, the dust flew away from him, and when he used the suction of his lungs, the dust flew towards him." Fly." This was Lawson's first great discovery in physics. Lawson's father was a carpet weaver.Lawson started selling newspapers on the streets of Detroit, then ran a baler for his father, then worked as a shoe shiner before moving away from home.He worked as a train driver for several years and traveled all over the country.Almost half of his books are vivid descriptions of his own life.Almost all his books contain an illustration of him standing on the wrecker of a speeding locomotive, the locomotive being heavily dragged by the wind.The caption reads: Alfred Lawson was studying the drag of the atmosphere on a body in motion.

When Lawson was 19 years old.Became a pitcher for the Goshen City baseball team in Indiana.For the next 19 years (until 1907), he worked on professional baseball teams, both as a player and as a manager.Many of his books feature photographs of him in various baseball club attire. During his baseball career, Lawson was put off by his friends.He did everything possible to make money.To make matters worse, he started smoking, drinking, and overeating, and his body gradually broke down, and his teeth broke down.At the age of 28, he abandoned these vices with superhuman perseverance.He is 83 years old, hale and hearty, very healthy.His first book, a novel called Rebirth (1904), is about this experience.It was undoubtedly a very bad novel, but Lawson said, "Many people think it is the greatest novel ever written." , Switzerland, Italy and Japan. Collectors of early sci-fi will be intrigued to know that "Rebirth" is about the fantasies of none, anticipating radio (emitted by "suck" and "press") and poison gas and modern times. Some other inventions of the world.The protagonist of the book, John Comfort, tries to persuade the world to live according to the principles of "nature rules" that he learned from his adventures with a Sleeping Beauty named Alita.He kisses Alita, and when she wakes up, she introduces him to the "Nation of the Sages," a utopia destroyed by Noah's flood.Comfort later fell in love with Alita's reincarnation, Alita Wright, a wealthy society woman in Chicago.The plot is very tortuous, and there is also a woman named Alita Fogg who is very similar to Alita, and a man named Comfort who is very similar to Comfort.The villainous Comfort murdered Alita Fogg, and the good Comfort was arrested for the crime.A minute after he was electrocuted, Alita Wright arrived, bringing the wicked Comfort's confession.However, several followers of John Comfort remained loyal to him, so Alita Wright dedicated her life and fortune to continue this great cause.On his deathbed John Comfort wished for another physical body to do his work.If God could grant him his wish, he would give his soul in exchange and "bear for ever the sorrow, pain, and calamity which is now inflicting upon all mankind." Soon after publishing this novel, Lawson embarked on an astonishing career in aviation. In 1908 he founded and edited the first popular aviation magazine "Flight" in Philadelphia.He edited another magazine, Aircraft, from 1910 to 1914 in New York City.The term was coined by him in 1908.He codified the word into Webster's Dictionary when he was editor of the aviation section of the Revised Edition. In 1917 and 1918 he designed and built combat training aircraft for the Army.He claimed to have first conceived the idea of ​​a flat-topped aircraft carrier, a fact he issued a series of weekly bulletins in 1917, drawing the attention of Congress and the Department of the Navy. In 1919, he invented, designed and manufactured the world's first passenger aircraft.The plane can carry 18 passengers. Although it is doubtful whether the plane can fly, Lawson actually flew it back and forth from Milwaukee to Washington.Lawson Aviation is established in Green Bay, Wisconsin. In 1920, he built a 26-passenger plane, which was very profitable flying around the United States.It was the first aircraft with sleeping berths.A year later, one such plane crashed, and the company soon collapsed. Lawson turned his attention from aviation to the social sciences, and he founded the Donors' Foundation for Philanthropy in Detroit.The society published his second book, "Human Life".But the public paid little attention to his views until the Great Depression hit.During the Great Depression he shot to fame as the leader of a group of economic reformers called the Detroit Credit Union. The basic principles of "Lawson's Monetary System" are described in his "Popular Direct Credit" (1931) and "Business Notes" (1937).The gold standard must be abolished.A "valueless currency" should be issued which cannot be exchanged for any coins.All debt interest shall be abolished.Only by taking these drastic measures will it be possible to rid the world of the chief source of evil, "those swine madmen of the so-called financiers."According to Lawson's tax code, these financiers squeeze a disproportionate amount of profit from everyone.They control the American press, schools, churches, and "every organization of influence in the United States except the 'Direct Credit Union'." The association publishes a four-page tabloid in 10 languages ​​called The Donor, which at one point claimed a circulation of 7 million copies.The banner slogan on the masthead: Treat everyone fairly and do no harm to anyone.During the Great Depression, each issue featured one-word lurid headlines such as "ism," "think," "jump," and "which," with a speech or essay by Lawson featured below. Direct Credit Union does attract tens of thousands of enthusiastic followers, which is disturbing.Even more surprising than the photographs in Lawson's Fifty Lectures (1941).There are hundreds of photographs of large crowds at rallies, lecture halls, office facades, bands, and groups of Direct Credit Union workers in a special uniform and cap with A red sash hung diagonally.So many people believe that a worthless economic theory can succeed in times of economic stress in the United States. Massive rallies were held in dozens of Midwestern cities, but the largest was held in Detroit on October 1, 1933.The floats carrying the plump women in strange costumes are of strange shapes.They carried flags that read: "All nations shall give direct credit to the old, the weak, and the young." After the pompous rally, Lawson addressed a two-hour crowd of 16,000 gathered in the Olympia Auditorium.He stepped onto the podium amid the music of "Salute to the Leader" and was cheered for 15 minutes. Songs were written especially for these rallies, and Lawson included fifteen of the lyrics in his book Short Speeches (1942).These songs include "Listen to Lawson" by Ella Heft and "God's Gift" by Mary Prax.The latter song ends each verse with "Lawson is God's great immortal gift to man." There is also a six-verse hymn called "Mighty Formation of Intelligence," in which verse 2 The lyrics are as follows. Intelligent forms are wonderful creators, He is the creator of matter, great and small. They fill the whole life, They create a myriad of shapes. Intelligent saboteurs are constantly destroying, The intelligent form is diligently creating. In 1942, Lawson bought Des Moines University.The institution covers 14 acres and has 6 buildings and dormitories that can accommodate 400 students.Des Moines University has been closed since 1929, and now "Des Moines Lawson University". Lawson has an even more dismal view of American education.He once said: "As soon as a person goes to middle school, his mind starts to be empty; as soon as he finishes college, his mind becomes completely empty."His own views on education can be summarized as follows: Education is the science of knowing the truth. Miseducation is the art of absorbing falsehood. Truth is yes, not no. The fallacy is right and wrong rather than yes. Lawsonian universities naturally teach truth.Only Lawson's own works are used as textbooks, and only those who have read them are eligible to study.A book on the rules of basketball was banned because it was not written by Lawson.Lawson University believes that qualified teachers are called "doctorates", and the most advanced "doctorate" is "all-rounder".Lawson is the Supreme Leader and First Doctorate. Students enroll without paying tuition fees.Room and board are provided free of charge, but students work part-time in the machine shop, and there are programs for labor in agriculture, engineering, and other fields.The university, like the rest of Lawson's organization, was said to be run on a not-for-profit basis, without a share capital, and run by a handful of directors whose "meager living expenses" were met by the sale of Lawson's books.Lawson insisted that he made a vow to God in 1931 that he would never amass personal wealth again.He likes to boast that he has "neither money nor property."To prove it, he used to turn his pockets inside out at rallies.However, Lawson's eating and living quarters are a secret, and no one knows it. In March 1952, the Senate Small Business Committee sent Lawson to Washington to inquire about the situation that the school he ran purchased 62 wartime surplus machine tools "for teaching purposes" and later resold 45 of them for huge profits.Lawson claimed to have no knowledge of the specific circumstances.He said: "I don't know, I never ask questions about numbers." He tried to explain Lawsonian science to the committee and explain why machinery was needed, but he was still confused. At first, Lawson University was co-educational, but after a father sued to allow his daughter to drop out, Lawson decided to admit only boys.The schooling period is ten years, and there are about 20 students.These students can occasionally be seen through the high fence that surrounds the campus.Faculty were rarely seen, according to a reporter from De Hayne: Lawson was the only faculty member. Smoking and drinking are strictly prohibited in the university.Because these drugs suppress the intelligence-forming body, and enable the intelligence-destroying body to run rampant.Lawson was right once when he said: "One cannot find another animal in all the world that swaggers with a lighted pipe or cigarette in its mouth, puffs out its mouth, and sometimes uses its nostrils for chimneys... . . . "Lawson invented the "Lawson Smoke Eliminator" in 1946 (removing factory soot by "suction" and "pressure"), explaining his aversion to smoke.This patent is assigned to Lawson University. Lawson attached great importance to physical strength, and he proposed to his pupils an elaborate health code.He advocated not eating meat for three meals a day, and taking fruits and raw vegetables as the main food, and eating them "with the belt and core".He wrote, "A little fresh-cut grass should go well in a salad." He is against kissing. "Can you imagine anything more unhygienic than a man and a woman going cheek to cheek and mouth to mouth spreading germs to each other?" Lawson himself never married in his life. He believes that this university can cultivate the backbone of society.As the principles of Lawsonianism are passed on from generation to generation, a new race of humans will eventually be created, a superior race capable of communicating telepathically (by "sucking" and "sucking") and able to Longevity (Lawson, A New Race, 1944). Lawson was already a haggard, lonely, silver-haired old man with blue-gray eyes under thick white eyebrows.According to Lawson University Treasurer Oliver Rauch, Lawson's eyes had a "kaleidoscope effect, changing as he thought and talked".He felt surrounded by treacherous enemies waiting for his death to seize the estates of his organizations.In recent years, his reverence as a prophet of God has increased, which is a very ominous sign.Cities in the Midwest plan to build 1,000 "Lawson Churches." A Lawson church in Detroit has held Sunday services since 1949, and a similar church has been built in Des Moines.His latest book, Lawsonism (1949), expounds his religious views.These views are nothing more than an inexplicable hodgepodge of reincarnation, Lawsonianism, and Christianity without Christ. The main ideas in Lawson's Ten Commandments are love and selflessness.Lawson wrote, "Never in his life did Alfred Lawson hate or harm a man, woman or child. In the past, when the writer was attacked maliciously, he simply caught the offender, Throw him to the ground to show his strength and dexterity, then get up with a friendly smile to show he doesn't hold any hatred...   While the future of the world looks dark as intelligent saboteurs gain the upper hand in people's minds, Lawson is convinced that intelligent formers will win.Lawson predicted that by the year 2000, all races of the world would accept his principles.However, in order to realize "Lawson's Way of Heaven", there must be millions of faithful believers.Lawson writes, "Therefore, Lawsonian professors of Lawson Theological Seminary, teachers of Lawson parish schools, church messengers, secretaries, pulpit-men, foreign missionaries, and various prelates." I thought it best to end this chapter with the last stanza of a poem by Lawson himself: Come on folks, the past is over, The future is bright, Where there is a will, there is a way, The Almighty will give us strength.
Press "Left Key ←" to return to the previous chapter; Press "Right Key →" to enter the next chapter; Press "Space Bar" to scroll down.
Chapters
Chapters
Setting
Setting
Add
Return
Book