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The detached electrons subatomic particles with a negative elementary electric charge that compose the various "rays" and strange energies currently occupying the attention of modern science are "negative," or female. The negative electron travels through space, either being cast off by its male ruler the positive nucleus or particle or else leaving on its own to fly through the void. It repels—and is repelled by—other female particles or electrons, and this act of repulsion creates certain disturbances or activities within the field of force. When it enters the immediate vicinity of a male, or "positive," electron, an attractive force is revealed; they are drawn to one another and leave their orbits to meet. Scientists maintain that these attractions and repulsions—these unions and separations, these "marriages and divorces" among the electrons—are the cause of the greater manifestations of energy or force and the creation of matter itself. When the female electron comes under the influence of the male, it begins to vibrate and circle around him along with its "sister" particles. This movement and vibration is believed to be the source of all forms of matter and all varieties of force or energy on the material plane. Light, heat, magnetism, electricity, chemical attraction original: "chemical affinity", cohesion the sticking together of particles of the same substance, and other forms of energy arise from the vibrations caused by the interaction of the male and female principles within the electrons.
The polarity observed in the phenomena of magnetism and electricity is clearly a manifestation of sex, as we mentioned previously. The attraction and repulsion shown by the different poles of a battery or magnet are seen to be closely related to sex phenomena on other levels of activity. A leading dictionary defines "Polarity" as follows:
"The tendency in a body to exhibit opposite or contrasting properties or powers in opposite or contrasting directions; the existence of two points, called poles, possessing opposing tendencies: for example, the attraction or repulsion at the opposite ends of a magnet; opposite tendencies in polarized light, etc."