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The Energy Evolution: Harnessing Free Energy from Nature (Schauberger's Eco-technology)

The Energy Evolution: Harnessing Free Energy from Nature (Schauberger's Eco-technology)
By Viktor Schauberger

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Product Description

Nature produces energy by slow, cool, implosive means - by a centripetal inward motion, while our present culture uses explosive centrifugal (outwards) movement, which is wasteful and many times less powerful and effective. It also uses up the Earth's resources and pollutes her ecosystems. This volume describes different kinds of energy machines which depend on the principle of implosion: - a spring water-producing machine - a tornado home energy generator - a Klimator which produces mountain-quality air - the biotechnical submarine - a technique for producing power from ocean deeps - a flying saucer prototype which rose at fantastic speed to high altitudes - a perpetual motion suction-based implosion machine Other books by Viktor Schauberger The Fertile Earth Nature as Teacher The Water Wizard.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #80900 in Books
  • Published on: 2000-12-01
  • Original language: German
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Viktor Schauberger (1885-1958) came from a long line of forest custodians. His extraordinary understanding of the workings of Nature derived from his keen powers of observation in the virgin forest. Callum Coats, author of 'Living Energies', the standard work on Schauberger's ideas, researched the Schauberger archives in Austria and studied with Viktor's son Walter.


Customer Reviews

Technical essence of Sauberger's inventions5
This book is full of sketches, drawings and graphs related to Sauberger's inventions. A very patient reader will be able to reconstruct working principles of Sauberger's machines. Only problem is Sauberger himself, because he mixed his phylosophy with his engineering, so it is extremelly difficult to follow text to an practical conclusion. His understanding of nature was intuitive and included some forces we actually do not have a knowledge off. Although I believe that his machines work, those forces he mentions might be only his interpretation, but not something that actually exists. Anyway, book is a brilliant example of engineering romanticism.