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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
39 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good hagiography of a controversial man,
By
This review is from: Living Water: Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy (Paperback)
This is a good introduction to the theories and life of Viktor Schauberger, an Austrian naturalist and inventor. Born in 1885, Schauberger started life as a forester who tried to understand and copy Nature. From watching mountain streams he developed unorthodox theories based on vortex movement about water and its use. He started out designing highly efficient log flumes that used water in vortex motion and at its densest temperature of 4 degrees Centigrade. He then proposed cleaning up the Rhine River by rebuilding the natural curves which stimulate vortex motion in the water. He said that this vortex motion in the Earth caused spring water to be more alive than plain water. He believed that plants grew better in this living water and developed laboratory sized egg-shaped water energizers to activate water.He also developed theories about the harmfulness of iron and steel tools in agriculture and proposed replacing them with copper ones. He designed an egg-shaped composter that was supposed to develop Noble compost which would be much more beneficial in gardens. Around the Second World War his theories and experiments take a much different direction and he starts talking about Implosion energy as opposed to combustion explosion energy. He starts developing machines that generate more energy than they use and that run on water and air. Out of this research he claims to have developed a domestic power station that generates large outputs of energy from slight streams of running water. Even more fantastic is a flying saucer that used a 1/20 horsepower electric motor as a starter and then ran on the surrounding flow of air. The research on these inventions was destroyed at the end of the war. Schauberger and his son Walter never seem to have been able to find the resources to develop working models again. Today his theories on vortex motion of water are taught at the Anthroposophical Emerson College in England. His copper farming tools are sold from the school his son Walter started, the Pythagoras Kepler Schule in Austria. His water, forestry, and farming theories have been accepted by Biodynamic Farming communities and may be helpful to organic farmers today. There are two appendices at the end of the book by New Age science experts on the underlying theories of vortex energy. I find these actually detract from the book rather than help it. A Bibliography also is less than useful. Most of the sources are to obscure journals or original Austrian publications. These types of resources are less than helpful in such an introductory text.
28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Thought provoking intro to little-known qualities of water,
By
This review is from: Living Water: Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy (Paperback)
Although it occasionally veers into new-age speculation or pseudoscience, this book offers a rare look at truly alternative ideas about water and energy. The description of Schauberger's early work with flumes is enthralling, and the brief exposition of "flow forms" towards the end of the book is valuable. Search "flow forms" in any web search engine to see some of the sites around the world espousing a fascinating technology that unites water pollution control with esthetics.
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book is like a new religion. Read it.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Living Water: Viktor Schauberger and the Secrets of Natural Energy (Paperback)
This book tells the story of Victor Schaubergers turbulent life and discoveries of water and air as a source to energy, told by his friend Olaf Alexandersson.I really like this book and the ideas of Victor Schauberger, but at the same time I got very depressed that the world has this enormous potentital to FREE energy, and we still wants to use oil (which pollutes).
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