Free Energy: When to believe the Unbelievable

Pradeep B. Deshpande
6 min readAug 4, 2024

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Written with Sanjeev A. Aroskar, Ganesh Computers, Ltd., Pune.

“Therefore, massless Ether has got to be once again established. Then, there will be a meaningful understanding physics, meaningful understanding of metaphysics and meaningful understanding of spiritual processes.”
The late Paramahansa Tewari (was Executive Director, Nuclear Power Corporation, India

ABSTRACT

Saamkhya hypothesis posits that all creation is comprised of five principal elements [Prithvi (matter on Earth), Jal (water), Agni (fire, heat), Vayu (air, Oxygen), and Akash]. The fifth element, Akash, is, in turn, comprised of consciousness and energy. The energy component of Akash as also referred to as massless Ether. Consciousness is omnipresent and omniscient, and the cosmos is full of energy, and that to attract it, requires a process. This article explains how you can view this energy, attract it, and experience it. The article explains the concept of massless Ether and sheds light on modern physics and spirituality.

Inventor, the late Paramahansa Tewari developed a machine that produced more energy than what was supplied to it. This may seem impossible, but in the light of the fact that energy is abundant in the universe, Tewari’s claim needs to be studied thoroughly.

In 2014, after a decade-long search into the meaning nothing and the nature of ultimate reality, science writer Amanda Gefter released her findings in her path-breaking book, “Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn”, in which she concluded that the universe came out of nothing, a void. For her book, Gefter interacted with some of the best brains in physics, including Stephen Hawking and John Archibald Wheeler, a colleague of Albert Einstein at Princeton. This short short video clip illustrates the gist of her findings. Ancient seers had known how creation happened eons ago.

Incidentally, John Wheeler had admiringly responded to Tewari in 1975 and 1985.

Billions of years ago, the nothingness of the void produced the energy phase of the big bang event, incredibly small, about the size of Plank’s length (10–33 cm in diameter), unbelievably hot, and immensely dense, which then created the universe. According to NASA, today, the universe comprises of 70% energy, 25% dark matter, like black holes, and 5% matter, like galaxies, stars and planets.

My associate, Jim Kowall, MD, PhD, concluded that the nothingness of the void cannot be anything else but undifferentiated consciousness.

The universe may end one day but consciousness will remain for consciousness is eternal.

H. H. the Dalai Lama (1989 Nobel Prize for Peace)

Whatever is present in the universe today was already present in the energy phase of the big bang event, although not in manifest form.

If cosmic energy is so abundant, it should be possible to see it. My guru, H. H. Guru Mahan taught us how to see the energy in 2011:

1. On a sunny day, look at the sky at an infinite distance not focusing on anything. Let the Sun be on the opposite side so your line of sight is free from glare. Select a spot to view that is free of obstruction from trees, buildings, etc.

2. Stare as far as your eyes can see without focusing on anything for few minutes without blinking your eyes. Of course, blink if you must. The whole experiment should not last more than five or so minutes.

3. Do you see something the sky is full of?

Many readers will see it, but some will not on the first try. Be open-minded with a willingness to think outside the box and you will see it.

A few years ago, I asked our software consultant, Arvind Bhavasar, in Pune to do an experiment. Go out on the balcony of my apartment in Pune and try to see the energy and report back on what if anything he saw in the sky. He came back into the apartment and reported seeing the sky full of energy. Then, I asked him to produce a video clip depicting what he saw. That video clip is shown in Figure 1.

Figure 1. Seeing Cosmic Energy in the Sky

This depiction is substantially similar to what we, and our friends and families have seen. Thus, this measurement stands corroborated.

Let us do another experiment. Please learn how to do Bhramari Pranayama. With your eyes closed, as you inhale, you may notice the presence of light. You will also notice that during inhalation, the intensity of that light increases. This is indicative of the fact that you are not only inhaling Oxygen, but also cosmic energy.

Paramahansa Tewari designed a piece of equipment to capture this energy demonstrating that the machine created more energy than the energy supplied to it. The confidence in Tewari’s work arises from the fact that a major industrial enterprise, KIRLOSKAR ELECTRIC in India designed and successfully operated the machine in their premises upon seeing a demonstration of it in Tewari’s premises. See this YouTube video clip.

We site another example of how this cosmic energy may be attracted for supporting life.

Energy in Support of Life. Given the four principal elements, it is not possible to create life. The missing element is Akash: energy & consciousness. The latter come into us when we come out of our mother’s womb and take our first breath and leave us when exhale for the last time. The time between the first inhalation and the last exhalation is lifespan.

In the form of a life-force, this energy has also been called pranic energy or simply prana since ancient times. The pranic energy remains within a band for much of our life and drops precipitously to a low value at the end of life. Thus, it is advisable to keep our pranic energy up as late in life as possible.

To explain this further, we all have trillions of cells. If we breakdown the cells into even smaller parts, we will find that they are made up of atoms. Atoms are not solid objects; they have protons and neutrons in their nuclei and electrons that orbit them. Thus, we all are vibrating all the time.

Vibration is light, not necessarily visible light, but light along the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from infrared to ultraviolet. Our light characteristics are our fundamental nature. They tell us everything about us.

The vibrational signals are too weak for human perception with the five senses. For measurement purposes, they must be stimulated and amplified.

In one approach, a harmless electrical current is applied to the fingers of our two hands, one at a time, and the finger’s response to this electrical stimulus is a burst of photons which are captured and analyzed to estimate our energy. See this video clip showing how the measurement is made.

Meditation is a process that can be used to capture the energy from the cosmos and enhance it in our body. Figure 2 depicts energy before-and-after meditation. The form of meditation used is Beej Mantratmak Sadhana (meditation based on seed mantra). Notice that the energy level has gone up after every meditation session.

Figure 2. Pranic Energy Before and After Meditation

Relatedly, the Sanskrit name Pranayama literally means control of pranic energy, or simply “prana” (life-force). The breathing exercises are aptly called pranayama and not shwasayama (control of breath). Prana includes two things: Oxygen and cosmic energy. Pranayam is an integral part of the Ashthanga (Eight-step) yoga.

This article is suggesting that Tewari work is deserving of closer scrutiny. We need not limit ourselves to renewables, like solar, wind, and geothermal; there is another source of abundant energy that is free if we only knew how to tap into it. The implications of his work are profound. Further research on a global scale is warranted. That may also be supportive of a more peaceful world.

Further Reading

1. Deshpande, Pradeep B., PhD and Kowall, James P., MD (Neurology, Internal Medicine), PhD (Theoretical Physics), The Nature of Ultimate Reality and How It Can Transform Our World: Evidence from Modern Physics; Wisdom of YODA, Six Sigma and Advanced Controls, Inc., 2015 (Amazon).

3. Deshpande, Pradeep B., Six Sigma for Karma Capitalism, Six Sigma and Advanced Controls, Inc., 2nd Ed., 2015 (amazon).

4. Gefter, Amanda, Trespassing on Einstein’s Lawn, Bantam Books, 2014.

5. Hartzell, James, A Neuroscientist Explores the “Sanskrit Effect”, Scientific American, January 2, 2018.

6. Jaisundar, Rama, Scientific Investigation of Gayatri Mantra, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1ZVnEc5sKc).

7. Kowall, James P., The Physicist’s Dilemma: Ultimate Reality Non-physical nature of consciousness, Journal of Consciousness Exploration and Research, 5, 4, 2014.

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Pradeep B. Deshpande
Pradeep B. Deshpande

Written by Pradeep B. Deshpande

Prof. Pradeep Deshpande has developed a scientific framework for external and internal excellence toward a better and more peaceful world.

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