Persons of interest

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Konstantin Meyl (1952-) has developed a single theoretical framework which from which can be derived the theories of both Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity, along with a description of the Periodic Table and the basic elements of particle physics. Meyl has verified Tesla’s claims with respect to loss-free transmission of information and energy via scalar waves.

Keith Baverstock is a physicist working in the field of theoretical biology. His insight that gene-expression is a chaotic attractor pattern working independently of DNA, has led to a radical new way of thinking about genetics, inheritance, cancer and evolution.

Hans Geesink

Hans Geesink , Dirk Meijer are co-authors of a series of outstanding papers on how life and consciousness are built around a Pythagorean series of harmonic frequencies.

Dirk Meijer

Harold Hillman (1930-2016) produced simple and convincing arguments that the images produced by electron microscopes were largely unrelated to reality and it is therefore inappropriate to base scientific dogma on these images.

V P Kaznacheev (1924-?) showed that ‘disease’ could be transmitted from organism to organism via very weak electromagnetic radiation of specific frequencies, even through a sheet of quartz.

The ‘Cytopathic Mirror Effect’.

Merab Beraia of Tblisi State Medical University realised that the heart is only in part a pressure pump and that in addition it provides rotational, vibrational and electromagnetic energy to the blood.

This makes him the first person in history to provide a credible description of the way blood is transported around the circulatory system.

Fritz Albert Popp (1938-2018) discovered that all living cells emit very small quantities of visible light.
This light is produced by the cellular DNA and is used to regulate chemical reactions within the cell.
Disruption of this system results in cellular dysfunction and cancerous growth.

Alexander Gurwitsch (1874–1954) was the first to demonstrate what he called mitogenic radiation when he placed two onion roots close together but separated by a sheet of quartz. One onion root seemed to promote growth in the other but the effect vanished when the quartz was replaced by glass, thereby suggesting ultra-violet light as a signalling mechanism.

Mae Wan Ho (1941-2016) was a scientist, philosopher and prolific author whose books describe the varied properties of water and the importance of both quantum effects and electric fields within biological systems.
She describes living organisms as ‘quantum coherent liquid crystals’.

Stefan Lanka (1963-) even as a young man tried searching the academic literature for proof of the existence of pathogenic viruses but instead found lots of very shoddy scientific techniques and deceptive language.
He has also cast doubt on the veracity of the whole idea of genetic determination and the function of DNA itself.

Morley Robbins has spent over a decade reading more than 7000 articles on the interaction between food, sunlight, minerals, vitamins and hormones both natural and artificial and came to the conclusion that vitamin D supplements are not healthy and can prove fatal.

Robert O Becker (1923-2008) did extensive research into the role of electricity in health, healing and sickness.
He found that biological systems are extremely sensitive to weak, almost immeasurable electric currents and magnetic fields and are affected by small changes in the earth’s magnetic field
He managed to warn of the dangers of cell-phone radiation before his funding was cut.

Simon Shnoll 
Russian physicist Simon Shnoll found that the duration of basic molecular reactions both biological and chemical showed cyclic anomalies which appeared to correlate with planetary cycles.

David Bohm (1917-1992) was an American physicist who was personal friends with both Albert Einstein and the Dalai Lama. He was intensely interested not only in what theoretical physics could tell us about the world but what it is not telling us and why not.

This page is a short summary of Bohm’s book “Wholeness and the Implicate Order”.

Arthur Firstenberg is a mathematician, activist and author of the book “The Invisible Rainbow” which charts the rise of worldwide ‘electro smog’ and links it to almost all ‘diseases of modernity’, including cancer, heart attacks and strokes, diabetes, autism, ADHD and other behavioural and neurological disorders.

Tszyan Kanchgen experimented with exposing developing embryos to electromagnetic fields of very specific frequency signatures and found that, for example, the frequency signature recorded from a duck, when targeted at chicken embryos, resulted in adult chickens but with duck-like features.

Royal Rife (1888-1971) claimed to have invented a microscope that could be used to observe live organisms at an exceptionally high magnification and also claimed that electromagnetic waves of particular frequencies could destroy ‘pathogens’ and cure certain diseases.

Luc Montagnier (1932-2022) has shown that DNA is able to leave an ‘imprint’ in water which can be retained in the water ‘memory’ for some time.

He has also successfully repeated the water memory experiments of Jacques Benveniste.

Antoine Béchamp (1816-1908) was the main ‘rival’ of Louis Pasteur and his ‘germ theory’ and maintained that there were no such things as viral or bacterial infections.

He also described ‘microzymas’ as being the smallest, indivisible unit of biological life.

Dawn Lester and David Parker experienced the loss of several mutual friends to cancer and decided to do some research. Ten years later they published the book “What Really Makes You Ill”, showing that almost all disease is misrepresented by mainstream medicine and that global health policies will likely make matters worse.

Jacques Benveniste (1935-2004) showed that some substances can apparently be detected in water at dilutions so weak that there cannot be any actual substance left. He deduced that what is being measured is some sort of ‘memory’ retained in the water that somehow has the same effect as the original sample.

Michael Levin has performed many experiments showing the effect of electric fields on developing organisms, and by using specific chemicals has gained fine control over the local field and in turn, over the final shape of the animal.

By means of computer software he has designed a completely new organism with frog DNA.

Emilio Del Giudice (1940-2014) was a physicist working in the field of condensed matter and the quantum and electrical properties of the highly structured water within biological systems which make it a suitable basis of life.

Herbert Fröhlich (1905-1991) was a German-British physicist who speculated that under certain conditions commonly found in biological systems, collections of atoms or molecules could merge together to form a new ‘substance’, a Fröhlich Condensate, that would have new and complex properties that were fundamental to life processes and not explainable by classical physics.

Giorgio Piccardi (1895-1982) repeatedly did the same experiments involving various chemical reactions of the sort commonly found in biological organisms and found that reaction times varied with time of day, lunar cycle, season and solar activity, with eclipses being especially odd.

Michal Cifra is a Czech scientist studying bio-electrodynamics, biophotons and the phenomenon of ultra weak photon emissions in living systems. He has made a comprehensive review of such phenomena in his paper “Electromagnetic cellular interactions”

Irena Cosic

According to the resonant recognition model of Irena Cosic, molecular interaction is via photon signalling, using a single unique frequency to achieve a single unique biological function.

Branko Furst is professor of anaesthesiology at Albany Medical College. and author of the book “The Heart and Circulation: An Integrative Model ” which describes in detail the inadequacies of the currently accepted ‘pressure propulsion’ model of the heart.

Professor Jayesh Bellare examined the procedure for obtaining homeopathic solutions and found invariably and indeed inevitably that the techniques of titration and succussion actually ensured the persistence of the original substance in the final preparation. 

Gaston Naessens (1924-2018) developed his own microscope which had higher magnification than an optical microscope yet allowed the study of living tissue unlike an electron microscope.
He described small sub-cellular particles which he named ‘somatids’ (cf. Béchamp’s microzymas).

Georges Lakhovsky (1869-1942) was a Russian born scientist who believed that life is the dynamic equilibrium of all cells and the harmony of multiple vibrations, and that disease is the oscillatory disequilibrium of the cell, originating from external causes. He wrote The Secret of Life and invented the Multi Wave Oscillator.

Rene Quinton (1866-1925) Performed some gruesome experiments on dogs, draining them of blood and replacing it with saline or even sea water. In one experiment all the blood from a dog was replaced with water with the dog suffering only mild ill effects before recovering completely.