ALLOYS IN DEVELOPMENT SCIENCE

by Dr. Lawrence Wilson

© December 2022, L.D. Wilson Consultants, Inc.

 

All information in this article is solely the opinion of the author and is for educational purposes only.  It is not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.

I. INTRODUCTION

DEFINITION

The development science concept of alloys is that each person's body contains a mixture of minerals. They combine with each other, just as occurs with metal alloys such as brass, bronze or stainless steel.

This mixture influences every aspect of a person's life. It causes health or disease and influences appearance, emotions, ego qualities, social life, work life, thinking and personality.

ALLOYS IN INDUSTRY

To understand alloys in the body, think about alloys that are used in industry and metallurgy. An alloy in the metallurgy field is a combination of two or more metals that, when melted together, take on new properties that are not present in the component parts.

Steel. A common example of a metallic alloy is steel. It is a combination of iron mixed with some chromium, nickel and perhaps molybdenum, manganese or other metals. It is tougher and stronger than just iron and has other unusual qualities. There are many kinds of steel available depending upon the exact composition of the steel alloy.

Other common alloys include stainless steel, brass and others. In each case, the alloy has properties that are not present in any of the components of the alloy, but only appear when the metals are mixed together.

One can say that an alloy is a situation in which the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

II. USES FOR ALLOYS IN THE BODY

Our bodies commonly uses alloys for similar reasons as they are used in industry.  One important reason is to add strength to a weak body structure.

For example, bodies actually use a steel type of alloy (a mixture of iron and often chromium and molybdenum) to add strength to a weak body structure.  Another one that is used is a ‘brassy’ alloy, which is an a mixture of copper and a few other minerals.  Both these add a flexible strength to the body.

Some people are “brassy”, or “galvanized”, while others have a personality that is like “steel” - very tough and strong but not flexible.

Slow oxidation. The familiar pattern called a slow oxidation rate may be viewed as an alloy. It consists of greater amounts of calcium and magnesium in the soft tissue or hair, mixed with lesser amounts of sodium and potassium.

This confers special properties to the body and personality of a person. They include a tendency for fatigue, apathy, and reduced adrenal and thyroid glandular activity. The qualities also include a tendency for depression, a tendency for a chronic low blood sugar level, a tendency for constipation, reduced ability to sweat, dry skin, introversion, and more.

III. ALLOYS AND HEALING

To heal the body, the development program alters a person's mixture of minerals to produce healthier alloys. This is an excellent way to understand the development program.

For example, well-developed people have eliminated their iron alloys almost completely and the body contains many more gold alloys. As a result, one is no longer “rusty” or “oxidized”.

One also gets rid of most copper alloys. As a result, the body is no longer “moldy” or “'yeasty” because a good copper imbalance prevents this. Health becomes superior and the body lasts much longer.

IV. RELATED TOPICS

THE CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR EXAMPLE

Alloys are also of interest in hair mineral testing to identify personality patterns that lead to criminal behavior.  For example, cadmium, copper, chromium, manganese, mercury, nickel and lead are often involved in violence, and each gives the criminal specific qualities.  Here are some of the most common ones:

Cadmium: confers an extreme hardness and often a daring quality on the personality, perhaps with total disregard for the life and property of the victim.

Chromium: Toxic forms of chromium in the brain can cause extreme violence that is quite psychopathic, meaning difficult to explain logically.

Copper: confers a more unstable and emotional nature.  Such people may be totally normal until they are pushed too hard or become very stressed for some reason.  This is seen in some domestic violence situations in which the person is fine most of the time.

Lead: Called the horror mineral, lead seems to cause some criminals to be attracted to horrible crimes such as mutilating their victims or torturing them.

Manganese: has some qualities similar to copper, but without the emotion.  Criminals with manganese are schizophrenic or schizoid and totally unemotional about their criminal activity.

Many school shootings involved welders exposed to toxic manganese.  Some manganese compounds cause “manganese madness”, a medical way to describe behavior of some manganese-toxic people.

Mercury: Though not as often associated with violence, when combined with some of the other toxic metals listed here, mercury confers a certain “crazy” or “whacky” quality to the personality.

Nickel: Nickel confers a hardness to the personality, just as nickel plating is commonly used on faucets and other objects. It is also associated with anger, depression and sometimes suicidal thoughts. One thinks of criminals who kill their own family or others, and then kill themselves in despair.



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