top of page

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

BioResonance and Quantum BioRadonics

 

A brief history and description of quantum mechanics, bioenergetics, and cybernetics:

​

Not really knowing where to start, I do want to mention such characters as Pythagoras, Isaac Newton, and René Descarte.  And Descarte comes up with an interesting concept of Universal Reality:

 

"I think, therefore I am."  

​

The ancient philosophers/scientists, proved useful for a while; but then came along others such as Albert Einstein and many more. Einstein, prompted by the advent of the railroads (true story), postulated that Newtonian physics was only valid in a Relative sense - where systems were not moving in relationship to each other.  And since Einstein's improved equations were Newtonian-based, and corroborate Newtonian Physics very well, Einstein's equations in short-order became well received.  And so we call these formulas of Einstein's, "The Theory of Relativity".

​

 Eventually, however, Einstein did come up with the idea of an interconnected universe, quantum entanglement, or 'spooky action at a distance', as he called it.  But quantum mechanics was so 'spooky', so unconventional, so counterintuitive,  that even Einstein was not able to fathom it.  And this is due partly because, for quantum theory to be valid, it requires particles to be able to move faster than the Speed of Light.  And Einstein believed that nothing could travel faster than the Speed of Light.  And you will see what we mean by 'spooky' when we get into a further description. 

 

So actually, Einstein dedicated much of his life trying to disprove his own theory of quantum physics. Fortunately, others were more willing than Einstein in pursuing quantum theory as a real possibility.  In particular, one scientist by the name of Max Born (1882-1970), a contemporary and collaborator with Einstein, successfully managed to refute Einstein's arguments against quantum mechanics. 

​

In 1925, a further contributor, Georges Lakhovsky, a Russian-born scientist, applied the concepts of quantum theory, frequencies, and radonics to the biological sciences.  He published a book called 'The Secret of Life', in which he defines Life as "the dynamic equilibrium of all cells, the harmony of multiple radiations which react upon one another"; and in which he defines Disease as "the oscillatory disequilibrium of cells, originating from external causes".  He was instrumental in identifying that living entities emit radiation (or electro-magnetic signals), down to the cellular level.

​

You can download his publication and much more information at:

http://users.skynet.be/Lakhovsky/Getting%20Started.htm

​

And more information on his work here:

 http://www.multiplewaveoscillator.com/

​

In 1945 there was also Professor Harold Saxton Burr from the Medical department of Yale University, who, after conducting 7 years of research, confirmed that all living organisms possess complex electromagnetic fields.  He allowed that those 'Fields of Life' could be used to predict illness by noting variations in them.

​

The links for Professor Burr are also numerous:

http://www.wrf.org/men-women-medicine/dr-harold-s-burr.php

http://www.energymed.org/hbank/handouts/harold_burr_biofields.htm

​

It is also important to note the work, in the 1970's, by Dr. Franz Morell, in Germany, who is said to have triggered a new era of medicine called Bio-Resonance. He used the energies from his patients' own oscillations in order to carry out individual therapies as a precursor to the bioresonance devices of today.  

​

But, my favorite treatise on quantum physics is available on a YouTube video based on the ideas of Erwin Schrödinger/Schröedinger.  The name of the video is Schrödinger's Cat. The scenario presents a cat that may be simultaneously both alive and dead in a state known as 'quantum superposition'.

​

You may want to watch this video now:

​

​

 

One might wonder why people do not pay more attention to so much research in BioResonance.   Well, I have this saying:  

"It takes as much Faith to believe in Science as it does in Religion."  

 

I mean, people have had just as much Faith at one time that the Earth was flat, tomatoes were poison, that you should put mercurochrome on an open wound, or take a daily aspirin.    When in fact, there is so much information available today on the significance of frequency, resonance, light/sound modalities, and quantum rates, that you may begin to wonder why this is not mainstream information. For example, this is a TED Talk (2016) entitled:

​

"Why Raising Your Vibration Increases Serendipity"

schr%C3%B6dingers_cat_edited.jpg

As it turns out, our world is already vastly dependent on practitioners of quantum theory. And this idea of quantum entanglement?  Well, how about Bell Labs development of Quantum Computers?  This is not just a fancy name. Since the 1980's Quantum computer chips have employed entanglement to simultaneously alter the states of multiple arrays of computer bits for incomparable computing speeds.  


NOVA likewise produced a video called 'Quantum Entanglement' that dramatizes an experiment that was employed to disprove/verify the instantaneous change of state of a single particle across the farthest points accessible in the universe.  Light that took billions of years to reach the earth was shown to change state at the same instant across the universe as a result of a condition known as 'simultaneous entanglement'.  This is sort of way faster than the speed of light.   You can check the video here:

Quantum Entanglement - NOVA
https://video.scetv.org/video/einsteins-quantum-riddle-ykvwhm/

​

Or, if you were looking for perhaps more mainstream-sounding reference sources, here's a related NY Times article from May 2014 on 'Bioelectronics'. 

​

https://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/25/magazine/can-the-nervous-system-be-hacked.html 

 

And HERE is a link to a well-presented 50 year history of 'radionics', starting in the 1860's, which describes frequency-based bioresonant equipment. This information was made available in the Journal of Borderland Research at borderlandsciences.org         

​

A Google search on 'History of Quantum Mechanics' will also yield more interesting additional information.

​

As you can see, compiling a comprehensive list of such references, would be quite a daunting endeavor.  But, I suggest you also investigate a Facebook page called 'BioScan On Demand', that I use to add updates;  so 

​

stay tuned...

bottom of page