In 1904 metaphysicist Annie Besant reported that, "During human antenatal life a single thread weaves a network, a shimmering web of inconceivable fineness and delicate beauty, with minute meshes. Within the meshes of this web the coarser particles of the bodies are built together." The Chinese acupuncture map of meridians in the physical-etheric body also resembles a web of energy. According to Brennan, the physical-etheric body is "like a sparkling web of light beams". To a clairvoyant, "the etheric body consists of a definite structure of lines of force and sparks of bluish white light move along these lines" she says. This web has been discussed in more detail in the author's article Acupuncture Meridians and the Cosmic Spider Web.

 

According to Brennan 'aura' appears to have weight. Monroe believes that the 'Second Body' has weight and is subject to the gravitational force. (Weight is, of course, an effect of the gravitational force.) It appears that what was discovered by Science in 2006 was observed by Leadbeater almost a century ago and also by many other experimental metaphysicists asap market.

 


How do galaxies, like our own large, majestic, star-splattered Milky Way form, and how do they evolve through time? When we gaze in wonder up at the night sky above our planet, we see that it is dazzling with the distant fires of a host of brilliant stars. However, most of the Universe is dark, made up of exotic, transparent material, the identity of which constitutes one of the most profound and bewitching of all mysteries. In August 2015, a team of astronomers led by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in Pasadena, California, announced the discovery of a gigantic, whirling disk composed of gas that is a very remote 10 billion light-years away. This enchanting, bewildering, bewitching ancient structure is thought to be a galaxy-in-the-making--and it is actively being fed a nutritious formula of cool pristine, primordial gas that can be traced all the way back to the very beginning--the Big Bang birth of the Universe almost 14 billion years ago, and its discovery sheds new light on this great and profound mystery.

 

 

Using Palomar Observatory's Cosmic Web Imager (CWI), that was designed and built by Caltech, the astronomers were able to image the distant protogalaxy and found that it is bound to a filament of the intergalactic medium--the great Cosmic Web that is constructed of diffuse gas that weaves its way between galaxies and extends throughout the entire Universe.

 

 

The enormous Cosmic Web is a large-scale, web-like structure that is embellished with the starry luminous fires of the galaxies, and it is thought to have played a major role in the evolution of galaxies that occurred long ago and far away in the ancient Universe--only a few billion years after the Big Bang.