Re: mitogenetic rays (was : Re: PYRAMID DEVICE-An Answer?)

Jerry Wayne Decker ( jwdatwork@yahoo.com )
Fri, 2 Oct 1998 10:05:18 -0700 (PDT)

Hi Jean et al!

I'd almost swear I have a paper that says he was able to induce cancer
by use of a quartz window. I know Lakhovsky claimed to be quite
successful with curing tumors and such in plants using his mult-wave
oscillator so I tend to classify all these things that link to cancer
and 'homing conductance' together, that's why I remembered having a
paper on Gurwitsch and the cancer...I could be wrong, surely won't be
the first time or the last...<g>...

The experiments done by Cleve Backster with a 'primary perception' in
plants and living tissues in general also correlate to this. Herbert
Veale calls it 'homing conductance'. The idea is that any cell that
comes from the body remains in resonant contact over any distance and
because of that, whatever comes in contact with this outside tissue
will be communicated to the host organism, especially if the outside
tissue remains alive.

Cleve took oral leuckocytes (white blood cells) from the mouth of his
subjects because they live about 8 hours as opposed to the few minutes
of blood borne white cells. It is amazing to see how a sample of this
live tissue connected to an EEG will have the same electrical patterns
as the host body though separated by distance, sometimes MILES....

Have to look to see if the Chinese scientist written about in Nexus
who used his hybridizing technique might have more details. Who would
have thought you could do crude mutations by a plasma tube replete
with UV acting as the carrier for the new DNA.

---Jean-Pierre Lentin wrote:
>
> Hi Jerry, Don & all
>
> Bit of a mix-up with Gurwitsch and mitogenetic rays. Russian scientist
> Alexander Gurwitsch's famous experiments in the 1920's and 1930's,
where
> onions emitted "mitogenetic rays", had nothing to do with cancer.
The rays
> actually stimulated embryonic growth of onion sprouts, and were
thought to
> be in the ultra-violet range because they were blocked by glass and
not by
> quartz. Gurwitsch then went on to masterful theoretical research on
> "biological fields".
>
> I think the "cancer-spreading" experiments, also involving mysterious
> UV-like rays with the same difference between glass and quartz
partitions,
> was done in the 1980's by notorious visionary Russian researcher
Khaznacheev.
>
> BTW, there is an excellent recent paper on Gurwitsch, written by his
pupil
> Michael Lipkind, I have it in the French "Fusion" magazine, and I
was told
> it was published about 3 months ago in the US LaRouche new science
magazine,
> called "21st Century" if I recall right.
>
> Hope this helps.
>
>
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> Jean-Pierre Lentin
>
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