Actually, this succinct rebuttal is loud and clear and probably sufficient. ("Empedocles shtick"... ha!)
But, if you're really hard up for posts to read -- here (warning: the pre-socratic-like gibberish I have to quote makes for some excrutiating syntax):
Been reading Baba's
Discourses, again?
(Yawn.) Might as well have a look at plumjam's renewed effort to reconcile almighty Baba with reality:
(Unless this theory is even sillier than it appears, "that-which-is-not-the-
other-magnet" should read "that-which-is-not-the-magnet". I'll make that change in what follows.)
Okay. The claim is that the magnet is in attractive equilibrium with "that-which-is-not-the-magnet": i.e., the rest of the universe. That's the hypothesis to be tested then.
Now the additional claim is made that moving anything that is "that-which-is-not-the-magnet", i.e., anything except the magnet, including the-other-magnet of course, means that-which-is-not-the-magnet is no longer equally present in all directions, so the magnet is no longer in equilibrium with everything else.
We've learned, according to Baba's theory of electromagnetism, that the reason a thing is immobile is it is in equilibrium with that which is not it. Moving anything which is not it throws the immobile thing out of equilibrium, exerts a force on it. Thus, moving the-other-magnet should cause every immobile thing in the universe to lose its equilibrium with that which is not it and to "move".
(Luckily, things don't, indeed couldn't, work like that.)
Contradiction one. More to come.
So moving the-other-magnet meant that-which-is-not-the-magnet was no longer equally present in all directions and caused an attraction in the direction opposite to the-other-magnet's motion, the direction which now has "the largest quantity of 'that-which-is-not-the-magnetness'". Moving the-other-magnet
toward the magnet increases the quantity of 'that-which-is-not-the--magnetness'
behind, not in front of the magnet as one might expect, and attracts it in that direction? Hmm.
Then moving the-other-magnet away from the magnet should cause it to be attracted in that direction. Yet this doesn't happen in experiments. Because all magnets have limited range beyond which their field has no effect.
Another obvious contradiction with experimental fact.
But additionally, moving anything that is not the magnet should cause the same repulsion, because its movement means that-which-is-not-the-magnet is no longer equally present in all directions, and so should cause a similar attraction in the direction of most that-which-not-the-magnetness (Lord Jesus Christ! -- good thing Baba didn't edit science textbooks).
Yet repulsion, which Baba claims is attraction, only occurs between two magnets. Bring a non-magnet close -- a glass, a book, a shoe -- and there is no attraction of the magnet in any direction, let alone in the direction of most that-which-is-not-the-magnet-ness, whatever that is.
Obvious contradiction.
Finally, note that if we were to reverse the polarity of the-other-magnet, moving it toward the magnet now attracts it (towards the other magnet, not away). Yet that-which-is-not-the-magnet-ness has been unbalanced in the same way, with the same movement, as before. So not only does that-which-is-not-the-magnet-ness not explain repulsion, it can't even account for attraction.
Contradiction.
Therefore, four times over, the hypothesis is false: the magnet is not in attractive equilibrium with "that-which-is-not-the-magnet". The motive force on the magnet is not caused by the entirety of other things. It must be caused by the local repulsive forces of the magnets themselves. As is well described in the conventional theory of electromagnetism.
No. It's a matter of one excellent description, based on the scientific theory of magnetism, and one incredibly stupid obviously wrong description, based on the religious theories of Meher Baba.
No. As has just been demonstrated, it would be incredibly stupid and obviously wrong to describe it that way.
No. For reasons of not being incredibly stupid and obviously wrong the former description is the convention. Plus it's good science. Not bad religion.
Wow. Plumjam's been trolling other people's beliefs or lack thereof for months now, making the same bad arguments, over and over, and coming back for more. Bang, bang, bang...
Somebody dares to question HIS beliefs, with sound arguments, and he's "banging on"... "it's getting boring." For how dare people not see and accept this "truth", however incredibly stupid and obviously wrong it may be.
Ignorance, arrogance, or just plain Baba? (Is their golden rule: Do unto others until they do unto you?)
Whatever, Baba's theory of magnetism is still wrong. Very wrong. Proof it would seem that Meher Baba is not infallible. Not god. And not the final word on love.