Truth vs Falsehood (16 page)

Read Truth vs Falsehood Online

Authors: David Hawkins

Tags: #book, #ebook

BOOK: Truth vs Falsehood
5.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

From observation, the low 200s signify dependable, integrous performance, e.g., the bus station, automobiles, and taxis, and reliables such as the post office and the airport. These venues often have the appearance of stripped-down functionality in which the color gray is predominant, along with ‘no nonsense’ gray metal furniture. With the addition of some human intention and personality, calibrations rise with the folksy innovations of historic “Old Route 66” and its Burma Shave signs. As human participation, creativity, and intention increase, the calibrated numbers rise to those of the high 200s, as represented by the police station and Times Square.

With the addition of human expertise and intention, the calibrated numbers rise into the 300s, which are exemplified by the airplane, ambulance, operating room, cruise ship, park, playground, circus, family farm, psychiatric hospital, and even the Olympics. The German autobahn includes stricter as well as more advanced engineering and construction, and despite its lack of a speed limit (traffic routinely moves at 110 miles per hour), the accident rate is lower than that on U. S. federal highways. The difference is also explicable by the fact that German drivers tend to be more skilled, have to be older to get a driver’s license, and are better trained. The autobahns have no intersections, low inclines, and deeper roadbeds. They are also better policed, with poor drivers quickly pulled off the road.

The 400s represent the introduction of creativity, aesthetics, and active intellectual pursuit, e.g., the library, the Paris café, Yosemite National Park, the community church, San Simeon (California), and even the Empire State Building, whose construction from start to finish took only one year and was facilitated by the courage and skill of Native American workers (primarily the Mohawks) who had no fear of heights and could successfully walk a steel beam 6 inches high, 6 inches wide, and 75 stories above the streets of New York City.

The 500s reflect devotion to beauty and reverence for the great artistic creations of mankind. (Rembrandt calibrates at an amazing 700.) For centuries, millions of admirers have waited in line with awe for even a glimpse of such fabled greatness. The calibration levels are beyond those of the Newtonian paradigm with its gray steel desks and predictability, rising to the subjectivity of love, devotion, reverence, and intuiting the source of perfection.

A visit to the Louvre in Paris is treasured by almost everyone. Visitors are surprised that they are allowed to freely take photographs of all the greatest of the world’s art treasures. In contrast, in the middle of the former courtyard stands a modernistic structure (cal. 180) that results in an unanticipated aesthetic shock. The design of the anomalous but very functional entrance structure represents the architecture (by E. M. Pei) of modernism. It became the subject of worldwide aesthetic debate, as would be expected from the disparity of a stark structure that calibrates at 180 being located in the courtyard of one of the world’s most historic buildings, which calibrates at 500+.

Daily Life

 

Abortion Pill (RU 486)
 
200
Alta Vista
 
208
Animal Body
 
200

Arm & Hammer Baking Soda (product)

 
320
Aunt Jemima’s Flour (product)
 
350
Barbie Doll
 
205
Biofeedback
 
202
Body Piercing
 
180
Campbell’s Soup (product)
 
325
Cloning (Animal)
 
200
Cloning (Human)
 
180
Coca-Cola (beverage)
 
305
Contraception
 
205
Cookies made for Family
 
520
Cryonics
 
200
Donald Duck (cartoon)
 
205
Earth (planet)
 
200
Emergency Medical Technicians
 
290
Environmentalism
 
260
Euthanasia
 
200
Feminism
 
320
Food
 
200
Food, Blessed Homemade
 
215

Food, Blessed Machine-made

 
207
Food, Commercial Cat
 
192-202
Food Commercial
 
207
Food, Commercial Machine-made
 
188-200
Food, Homemade
 
209+
Fortune Cookie Messages
 
345
Google.com
 
209
Hatha Yoga
 
260
High Fashion
 
295
Hope Diamond, The
 
205
Human Body
 
205
Internet System (not content)
 
205
Little Red Hen (story)
 
295
Mad Cow Disease
 
50
Medical Marijuana
 
235
Mickey Mouse
 
205
Money
 
205

Mother Making Christmas fudge and cookies

 
520
Multilateralism
 
200
Murphy’s Law
 
280
Paparazzi
 
180
Pepsi (beverage)
 
305
Peter Principle, The
 
260
Political Cartoonists
 
190
Polygamy
 
145
Position of Children in the U.S.
 
405
Position of Men in U.S.
 
425
Position of Women in the U.S.
 
405
Quaker Oats
 
305
Quilting
 
345
Roadside Farm Stands
 
355
Rodeo
 
255
Santa Claus
 
390
Sex
 
250
Sidewalk Vendors
 
205
Street Beggar
 
160
Street Performer Group
 
480
Thanksgiving Day
 
515
Tea, Green
 
300
Uncle Ben’s Rice (product)
 
315
Vegetarianism
 
205
Vick’s (product)
 
345
Willow Trees
 
245
Window Washers (high)
 
290
Worldwide Web Content
 
50-445
Yahoo.com
 
206
Yard Work
 
250
Yogi Bear
 
205
Zero-temperature Weather
 
205

Notable is that the Internet system calibrates at a reliable 205-208, including its major search engines. In contrast, the content of the material that appears on the Internet reflects the whole range of human consciousness, calibrating from 50 to 445. It is therefore currently the greatest source of disinformation. Thus, the naïve belief that there ‘must be some truth for it to appear on the Internet’ is apparently quite fallacious and often damaging in its consequences. Calibration reveals that approximately 50 percent of the information provided on the Internet is at less than 200, which, interestingly, is almost exactly the same figure represented by the consciousness calibration of the current American population (49 percent below 200 and 51 percent above 200).

The privacy and anonymity of the Internet provide a means of expression for those people rejected by society as being imbalanced and having special personal problems, e.g., political extremism and socially rejected sexual proclivities, as well as irrationality and elaborate paranoid delusional systems. The Internet is the great playground for the ‘me’ generation, as reflected by website names themselves, e.g., ‘Bill’s Turn’, ‘My Place’, etc. These often reflect the dictum that an opinion is a routine idea inflated by the ego in order to sound profound and important. Sixty-seven percent of ‘blogger’ websites calibrate below 200 and primarily represent outlets for expression of negative emotions, resentments, and frustrated personality problems The supposed satire of political cartoonists is actually a sly form of vilification as indicated by its calibration level of 190. Some even seem deliberately malicious, with obvious intention to hurt or damage a hated target.

Money calibrates as neutral, and sex is at 250. Both apparently are intrinsically neutral but the intentions to which they are put make the difference. It is interesting that animal cloning is at 200, whereas human cloning is at 180.

A rather significant finding is the calibrated difference between blessed and unblessed food. Machine-made bread from a local supermarket calibrates at 188, but when blessed, it goes up over 200. Bread from the same supermarket but from the bakery department calibrates initially at 203, and again shows a rise if it is blessed. If food is homemade, it arises from its original 200 to 209, and if blessed, it rises up to 215. This is a unique demonstration analogous to the Heisenberg principle in that the introduction of human spiritual consciousness and intention alter the field. It also gives evidence that prayer itself is more than just wishful thinking.

Some brand names reflect affection (e.g., Jell-O, Route 66, Campbell’s Soup) and become imbued with cultural American mystique. They represent trust in the intention of a whole industry, which is expressed as brand loyalty.

Of interest are the calibrations of the fortunes enclosed in fortune cookies that, at 345, are frankly above the principles upon which large sections of the populace base their lives. For example, “One kindly word can change your whole life” contains really profound wisdom. (A fortune-cookie life is a good life.)

The positions of women and children in the United States, at level 405, are in stark contrast to their positions in repressive countries (such as Islamic and others), where they calibrate at 140, indicating a rather severe cultural lag in which the populace and their governmental leaders also calibrate quite low. Although the gap is closing from what it was in the 1930s, there is still a 20-point disparity in the United States between the level of men and that of women and children. Social change takes time, and apparently the ‘glass ceiling’ is now quickly disappearing as revealed by the fact that corporations led by female CEOs in 2003 exceeded the earnings of corporations led by male CEOs (
Fortune
, January 2004).

Historically, in a primitive or agrarian culture, the physical strength of men is necessary as is testosterone-led aggressiveness, and thus males tend to dominate. As civilization progresses, however, and valued skills become less physical and more mental or creative, the social ranks of the sexes approach equality. The word ‘primitive’ implies predominance of persistent animal patterns of behavior where ‘biology is fate’. In the modern world, the evolution of consciousness plus education and the intellect are the decisive factors.

Energy of Music — Modern

Music (not personality) of:

 

Anderson, Marian
 
510
Armstrong, Louis
 
590
Beatles, The
 
460
Beach Boys, The
 
400
Bee Gees
 
510
Berlin, Irving
 
415
Bocelli, Andrea
 
550
Caruso, Enrico
 
560
Cash, Johnny
 
504
Charles, Ray
 
485
Cole, Nat King
 
470
Country Western
 
255
Crosby, Bing
 
485
Disco
 
235
Dorsey, Tommy
 
450
Dylan, Bob
 
500
Ellington, Duke
 
450
Elliott, Cass
 
505
Fitzgerald, Ella
 
465

Gangsta Rap, Gothic, Heavy Metal, Punk Rock, Violent Antisocial Groups

 
35-95
Garland, Judy
 
405
Gass, Robert (“Kyrie”)
 
705
Harrison, George
 
540
Hip Hop
 
270
Iglesias, Julio
 
400
Jones, Spike
 
350
Joplin, Janis
 
495
Lane, Cristy
 
500
Liberace
 
365
Mamas and the Papas, The
 
495
Manilow, Barry
 
505
Pop Rock
 
205
Presley, Elvis
 
420
Riverdance
 
500
Rolling Stones
 
340
Santana
 
515
Welk, Lawrence
 
475

Other books

The 1st Victim by Tami Hoag
Romancing Robin Hood by Jenny Kane
Checking Out Love by R. Cooper
Bad Monkeys by Matt Ruff
A Time to Live by Loch, Kathryn
The Winter Vault by Anne Michaels
Dark Intelligence by Neal Asher
WAR by Ira Tabankin