Orthodox Cosmos Q 87
seven times around a smaller torus, and so forth.There are six or-
ders of progressively smaller helices, each one winding seven times
around a circle at right angles to the circular turns of adjacent
orders.This matches one of the models of the hidden "compacti-
fied," six-dimensional space of superstrings considered by physi-
cists, namely the six-dimensional torus. Each order of helix is
simply the winding of a string about the six differently sized, cir-
cular dimensions of a six-dimensional torus.
To counter possible objections from string theorists, Phdlips shows
that a superstring is not one string (as theorists currently assume) but is
a bundle of ten separate, nontouching strings identical to so-called
bosonic strings, which some physicists believe are more fundamental
than superstrings and for which quantum mechanics predicts all of
twenty-six dimensions. According to Phillips, the UPA is the subquark
state of a superstring, each of its ten whorls being a closed twenty-six-
dimensional bosonic string, the lowest six tornoidally compactified di-
mensions ofwhich manifested to Leadbeater as the six higher orders of
helices, making up each of the 1,680 turns of a whorl.
All of which leads Phillips to a cogent conclusion. "The excuses for
disbelieving the claims of psychics," asserts Phillips, "are irrelevant in
the context of their highly evidential descriptions of subatomic par-
ticles published in 1908, two years before Rutherford's experiments
confirmed the nuclear model of the atom, five years before Bohr pre-
sented his theory of the hydrogen atom, 24 years before Chadwick dis-
covered the neutron and Heisenberg proposed that it is a constituent
of the atomic nuclei, 56 years before Gell-Mann and Zweig theorised
about quarks.Their observations are still being confirmed by discover-
ies of science many years later."
Once more the theosophists, using descriptions of matter more
comprehensible than the abstruse mathematical symbols of the aca-
denzics, let alone their Ahce-in-Wonderland verbiage, appear to have
stolen a march on the physicists.