Monday, June 26, 2006

Electrical Fields

Harold Saxon Burr, Professor at Yale School of Medicine in 1929, initiated a study of the role of electricity in development and disease. Burr's work on energy fields from 1932 to 1956 was way out of step with the mainstream medicine and biology of the time. This was a period of explosive growth in pharmaceutical medicine and in the use of X-rays for diagnosis. Antibiotics were winning the war against disease and the thrust of medical research and public policy was towards a pill for every problem.

See James Oschman,Energy Medicine

While Burr discovered the theory of the influence of electricity on optimal performance, inventors like the Russian George Lakhovsky, the American Royal Rife or the Italian Antoine Priore and Gianni Dotto developed the corresponding technical devices. Lakhovsky (1869-1942) postulated the theory that a state of health or disease of a cell was dependant on whether the oscillations from healthy cells were maintained or were overtaken by the oscillations of the disease-causing cells. In the 1930ís, he developed an electro-therapeutic system called the Multi-Wave Oscillator (MWO). The MWO produced a broad-spectrum electromagnetic field specifically aimed at restoring cellular function to its normal state. (see George Lakhovsky, The Secret of Life)

Harold Saxon Burr, the Yale physiologist who was one of the first great pioneers in the scientific (or third-person) study of energy fields, often used diagrams of ever expanding energy fields around the body, much like an aura, which represent experimentally detected energy fields.

Such diagrams include a " P-field," or any gross physical energies associated with this body; as well as an " L-field" (or "life-field") and a " T-field" (or "thought-field"). Note that none of these energy fields are merely local, or confined simply to a physical and localized space. The local aspects of these energy fields are simply the areas of highest density of the fields (or, alternatively, the areas of greatest probability of finding the signature energy). But many of these local aspects can indeed be physically detected with various instruments (e.g., Burr, Motoyama, Tiller). Also, well-known and highly respected psychics (e.g., Michal Levin) often perceive these energy shells in essentially the way Burr depicted them—fields within fields within fields.

The visionary scientist, Harold Saxon Burr, commented in the 1930s on the electromagnetic determinants of life. He recognized the need to introduce a coordinating factor for the rapidly changing biochemical reactions constituting metabolism. Burr's research laid a solid experimental foundation behind the idea that every living system possesses an electric field that can be measured accurately. Life was an electro-dynamic event. This field has the properties, he said, to "control the movement and position of all charged particles within the living system...needed for control of growth and development". Burr and his colleagues left an enormous legacy in their papers and publications. His contributions to the developing science of bioeletronics was extremely important

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