The Genius of Einstein: 
                Where did it Originate?



VENTURI-TUBE DIAGRAM
Einstein's perspective from his spiritual home on the inner planes offers a clearer view of the cosmos and the laws of the Infinite.
"One thing I have learned in a long life:  that all our science, measured against reality, is primitive and childlike--and yet it is the most precious thing we have."
    - Albert Einstein 

 


 

In April 1955, Einstein changed worlds or left the physical plane in so-called death and ascended to one of the higher celestial dimensions.  He now resides on the spiritual plane of Eros, a nonatomic planet devoted to the expression of science.  After his transition to his spiritual home, Einstein began the process of tearing down or unlearning some of the concepts and precepts of his material life on Earth, replacing them with more of the higher and infinite concepts, which are clearer when one arrives in these inner and higher dimensions, formerly known as Shamballa.

Einstein thought of himself as much as a philosopher as a scientist. Here we are able to identify a strong scientific continuity from his previous life as Archimedes and a strong influence from his previous life as Jacobi, a German philosopher.  Einstein's life reflects an advanced scientific, investigative genius as well as a philosopher's deep concern for the progress of humankind, though his study of humanity's flaws and the possibility of world peace.  

As a scientist, Albert Einstein made great contributions in physics that have enriched our view of the universe.  Many of his theories and postulates were received through his clairvoyance and thus advanced our scientific world to the threshold of a fourth-dimensional or an interdimensional physics. The concept of mass being nonexistent and an illusion, and that, in reality, an expression of pure energy; and the concept that the velocity of light was not a static, constant expression of energy but was relative to the plane of expression upon which the viewer exists are two examples that will be understood as precursors in our twenty-first century science. 

As a philosopher and humanist, Einstein was a freethinker. In his approach to solving problems, he tried to assume nothing and questioned everything.  He caste aside the dogmas of religion as easily as he brushed aside the dogmas of Newtonian physics, which had dominated the minds of scientists for two centuries. Later he warned the quantum physicists against creating new dogmas.  Einstein was a humble person, and in spite of his intellect and achievements he was known to be a compassionate and kind man. 

In the Unarius library there are several transmissions from Einstein himself, from the inner spiritual worlds where he now resides, in which he speaks as a Brother of the Light from a higher perspective--a cosmic consciousness in-tune with the Infinite.  He clarifies and corrects some of the scientific theories that were confounding him and other fellow scientists, while in his previous finite existence; he states that he is a student of the Infinite Concept of Cosmic Creation, a mere child of the Infinite. 

Where did all this intense creative genius and inspiration come from?  It was learned and properly integrated on the inner spiritual plane of Eros--one of the seven celestial teaching centers where Einstein, Archimedes, and other advanced intellects resided before they incarnated to the earth plane.

 



1879 - 1955 A.D.

 

 


 1743–1819 A.D.






287-212 B.C.




 


 



"Two things inspire me to awe--the starry heavens above and the moral universe within."


"The ideals that have lighted my way, and time after time have given me new courage to face life cheerfully, have been Kindness, Beauty, and Truth."

  

"The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
spacer spacer spacer

Albert Einstein - Scientist, Philosopher, Humanist

German-born American theoretical physicist, born in Ulm and educated at the University of Zurich. In 1905, Einstein published three papers that revolutionized man's image of the physical universe and helped lay the foundation for the nuclear age. His initial presentation of the special theory of relativity was among these. In 1915, Einstein published his paper General Theory of Relativity, developing a revolutionary concept of gravitation. The later years of his life were devoted to the development of the unified field theory, a hypothesis combining the concepts of electromagnetic and gravitational fields of force.  In 1921, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in physics for his work on the photoelectric effect. 

It was only during the last few years of Einstein's life that this foremost scientist came to the general conclusion that there was no such thing as mass and that we could, in a more abstract way, resolve all things into pure energy.  Einstein was laboring very diligently at the time of his passing with the concept of the 4th dimension. 

Albert Einstein died at the age of 76.

 


 

spacer spacer spacer

Fredrich Heinrich Jacobi - German Philosopher

German philosopher; born at Dusseldorf on Jan. 25, 1743. He was educated at Geneva. He soon demonstrated his abilities in financial affairs and social reform.  Jacobi's philosophy is an attempt to define the spheres of reason and of faith. He believed that God is found by finding ourselves in Him, and freedom as self-activity can be apprehended only by intuition. This appreciation of the richness of experience made Jacobi one of the chief champions of the Gefuhlsphilosophie movement.

In 1804, Jacobi went to Munich to help reorganize the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. He became its president from from its opening in 1807 until 1812. 

Mistrusting reason and objective science, he argued that truth is arrived at through pure spiritual awareness. 

Jacobi died at the age of 76.
 


 

 
"Archimedes possessed so high a spirit, so profound a soul, and such treasures of scientific knowledge, that ... these inventions had now obtained him the renown of more than human sagacity ... "
  -Plutarch
(Greek philosopher, biographer)
spacer spacer spacer

Archimedes of Syracuse, Sicily - Scientist, Mathematician, Inventor

A
rchimedes was a Greek mathematician, physicist, and inventor who l
ived between 287 - 212 B.C. He was a brilliant mathematician who helped develop the science of geometry and founded the fields of statics, hydrostatics, mathematical physics.  Archimedes is considered by most historians of mathematics as one of the greatest mathematicians of all time. He perfected a method of integration that allowed him to find areas, volumes, and surface areas of many bodies.  His methods anticipated the integral calculus 2,000 years before Newton and Leibniz.

His theories of hydraulics and hydrostatics are in use in the different interpretations of science, in shipbuilding, and in various other fields in the world today. 

The first scientist to recognize and use the power of the lever was Archimedes. The Archimedes Screw is still used as a method of irrigation in developing countries.

Legend has it that Archimedes discovered his famous theory of buoyancy or specific gravity while taking a bath. He was so excited that he ran naked through the streets of Syracuse shouting, "Eureka, eureka (I have found it)!"

Archimedes died at the age of 75 from the hands of a Roman soldier.


David Reynolds
Science editor for the Academy

For further reading:
The Voice of Eros, Ernest L. Norman, Unarius publications,1958
The Voice of Orion, Ernest L. Norman, Unarius publications,1961