Agricultural Radionics By
Bruce Copen
Edition 2004 Published by: Bruce Copen Laboratories Ltd, Unit 4, Lindfield Enterprise Park, Lindfield, West Sussex. RH16 2LX, UK. Tel; ++44 (0)1444 487900 Fax; ++44 (0)1444 483555 E-Mail;
[email protected] All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Bruce Copen Laboratories Ltd.
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Agricultural Radionics By
Bruce Copen
Edition 2004 Published by: Bruce Copen Laboratories Ltd, Unit 4, Lindfield Enterprise Park, Lindfield, West Sussex. RH1 6 2LX, UK. Tel; ++44 (0)1444 4 87900 Fax; ++44 (0)1444 4 83 5 5 5 E-I\1ail; salesbrucecopen �ao 1. co1n All rights reserved. No part of this document may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Bruce Copen Laboratories Ltd.
AGRICULTURAL RADIONICS By Bruce Copen
FORWARD:
Those who have read my earl ier works dealing with Rad ion ics i n its many aspects will know that the scope of the science is very wide and varied . T h u s , it wi l l come as no su rprise to my readers that Radion ics can effectively be used in Ag riculture in its variety of stages. It may be d efined as the analysis and treatment of plant l ife and i n d o i ng so to widen ones knowledge of nature itself. The science of Rad ion ics as we know today is almost a century old . We have h ad p ioneers fro m the o bscure to the well known with the advent of new techno log ical advances and e lectro nics over the years . The early pred ictions about such a science have been proven q u ite accu rate i n their assu mptions and over the last two d ecades are now accepted throu g h-out the world as a form of analysis fo r many d ifferent and varied systems and mai n ly i n the treatment of d i seases. S pecu lations and clai ms have now been made fo r the use of rad ion ics in ag riculture and advances have res u lted in fu rther experi m entation to put the whole thing on a more scientific footi ng. Rad ion ics has g rown up to be attracted more to the treatment and analysis of h u man ills rather than any other facet of its very ful l lifetime. Having stud ied actively i n t h i s particu lar field fo r th· e past th i rty-five years I have seen systems and variations come and go without ord e r of any kind whilst for some time the med ical application of rad ionics has g rown o ut of all proportion and is still going very fast today. Rad ion ics throu gh s pecialised eq u i pment may be used for medical d iag nosis of the whole h u man itself includ ing the physical and spiritual planes of existence and with the knowledge gained from these analyses we can then apply any kind of natural treatment by wh ich the patient will overco me his i l l ness, be it slight or severe . It has been attracted toward s medicine mai n ly because of the very large n umber of yo ung people in the world who need med ical treatment of a natural kind rather than the more orthodox; so , it i s not s u rprising that the trend has been toward s this field . It is o n ly with in the last twenty years that Rad ion ics has been applied to veteri nary and ag ricultural systems with varying degrees of organisation and success. To my knowledge there i s no other applicatio n , which assists the ag riculturists i n u s i ng the e q u i p m ent t o t h e fu l l , but no doubt in time to come there will be. To the beg i nner in Rad io nics, especially Agricultural Rad ionics, the claims that can be made i n this field may seem a trifle specu lative, but in fact I know of many s u ccessfu l applications in rad ion ics appl ied to the analysis and treatment of an i mals and plants- which are of cou rse all living things.
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It is an u nfortunate fact that i n almost every cou ntry around the world the farmer is at the bottom of a pile of statistics , he is at the bottom of the ladder of i m provements as long as we loo k u pon food as essential - but we don't wonder where it co mes fro m . When you go into your local shop or su per-market and see the rows of vegetables and other food s , how many of us wonder or think of the orig i n of all this foo d . A vast majo rity co mes d i rectly from the work of the farmer or ag riculturist in general- altho ugh he is not going to get the cred it fo r it. We tend to look u pon the ag riculturi st as someone that prod uces food from the sky, b ut in fact ag riculture is the basis of h u man existence , and of recent years the use of pesticides and harmfu l sprays has been d i mi n is h i ng i n favo ur of nat ural methods such as rad ionics. It is with this i n m ind that we approach the subject of an ag ricu ltu ral system of rad i o nics, beari ng i n mind that the food you see in the super-market, which is p rocessed a n d packaged t o look attractive is t he res ult of hard work and is t he beg i n n i n g of its food cycle , and unless t his is understood and appreciated the farmer will still be at the bottom of h uman req uirements. To m ost people l iving in cities, the farm worker rising in the early hours of the morning to b ri ng our m i l k on its journey is as far d istant as the planets in the s ky- the food that we d ai ly eat, where the city dweller is concerned could be harvested from the clouds with no work i nvo lved . With al l the tech nolog ical lectures and i nfo rmation g iven today o ne wou ld t h i n k or i mag ine that the future of human ity depe nd ed on the s i l i co n ch i p , or some m i racu lous method of red ucing the wo rki ng week so that no one does m Oie than h e has to , and wastes no more time than he has to . At the same time 90% of h u man existence al ive relies on h u man labo ur and most of all on the farmer and ag riculturi st in genera l . One t h i n g I a m mostly concerned with is that t h e subject is rather two-fold in a way and we have to apply the information of med ical rad ion ics to the analysis and treatment of ani mals and the fai rly u n known aspects of the treatment of p lants and the correction of plant d iseases. Before one goes i nto the realm of specu lation we must appreciate that we are hand ling a d i mensional su bject of rad ionics by wh ich time and space factor is not present, and the reliance of a good operator and good eq u i p ment is essential for the best resu lts to be attained in this particular field . Many of the early p ioneers provided natural assu mptions on the worki ngs of nature , of the b i rd s i n the sky, the animals i n the fields and the mag netic nature of life , and since h i s d ay g reat advancements have been made i n i mproving the observance of nature whether by orthodox or unorthodox means, and in rad ionics . There are a n u m ber of pieces of eq u i pment used i n this field, the main one that we wi ll o utli n e is the Mark 5 Radionic Com p uter, but the previo us model s , the Mark 1 and Mark 2 can also be u sed in this field . The Mark 5 is particularly usefu l fo r those who need to d o , and wis h to do research i nto all ag ricultural prod ucts .
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It is hoped i n futu re years that we may be able to publish more works based o n actual experi ences from farmers aro u nd t he wo rld, but I am not going t o delve into case histo ries, because what helps one person may not help another, and cond itions and cou ntries with d ifferent cl i mates vary such a g reat d eal that particu lar aspects of the science can not be applied successful ly. B ut the basics of the whole sphere of the wo rk is essentially the same, as already mentioned the two essentials to attain the best results is the good o perator and good eq uipment-taking the equipment first; it is as g ood as its man ufactu re and its back-u p facilities for further i m provement of research . The Authors labo ratories having been i n this field for many years have p rod u ced the most advanced e q u i p ment of its ki nd , at the same time I would not like it to be felt that because the e q u i p ment is advanced it is beyond the usage of everyone witho ut techn i cal knowledg e . U nfortu nately this is what usually happens when techno logy takes a hand -that the i n stru ment will shortly become so co mplicated that the operator has to have special tra i n i n g . I n Rad ion ics t h i s i s n o t so. T h e eq u ip ment always comes with complete i n structions d etailed with all n ecessary rates etc that make the i n strument work. So the p u rchase of any such e q u ipment is an i nvestment, an i nterest, and a practical l ifesaver, if yo u wi ll, but a time saver in the field to which it may be put. The benefits of such equ ip me nt wh ich may be used i n the co mfort of ones home, without the use of special accessories is enormous and can be appreciated by read ing some of my earlier books on the subject. We then come to the operato r who must be i nterested in the subject to be s uccessfu l - th i s does not n ecessari ly m ean that he has to be experienced i n rad i o n ics, because some of the best operators I know have been beg in ners who although maki ng thei r own m i stakes have recognised them and put them in the right o rder. I n ag ricultural rad ionics we are looking fo r the eq u ipment to be used by farmers and landowners from remote parts of the wo rld , some of which may not be i n an entirely civilised area - to some o f t h e co u ntries where ag riculture is very basic and d evoid of any scientific i m p rove ment. So we have to adj ust such info rmation from those farme rs and landowners who wish to use a scientific system that will revo l ution ise thei r methods of prod ucing the food we eat over the future years and in tu rn wiii g ive the amo unt of wo rk i nvo lved i n doing so S ho u ld we want to take another look at Radion ics in years to co me we may look upon a t i me and now as the birthplace of true rad ion ics in the ag ricultural wo rld and we will then recog nise how usefu l it has been in the med ical wo rld . Rad ion ics has a d isti n ct advantag e of being amenable to all kinds of natural k i n d s of treatment. I n the med ical field for exam ple, it is used in conj u nction with natu ral heal i n g , homoeo pathy, bioche m i stry etc. and these same things may be used e ntirely in ord e r to get the best out of the work.
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This stud y will not make yo u a m i l l io naire overnight, neither will it transform yo u r farm to a haven of pu re health- l i ke all th i ngs it takes time, but the d ramatic resu lts that have been ach ieved by the analysis of p lants , ani mals etc. and thei r s ubseq uent treatment has proven t h e point that i t is a well worth s ubj ect to pursue, and with this i n m i n d we pass on to the more i nteresting facets of the science as a who l e , and will envisage a picture of nat ure's harmony and its bou nty of wealth created thro u g h nat u re itself and a more d eeper u nderstand i ng of nature will take place thro ug h the i ntermed iary of Ag ricultural Rad ion ics.
AGRICULTURAL RADIONICS INTRODUCTION:
I n o u r expanding world the most p ro lific thing we n eed i s a new ag ricultural pol i cy for the future. This statement may have been made half a century ago and over the years n ew meas u res have co nstantly been sought to i ncrease the p ro d u ction of food and to keep crops free from d isease . Howeve r, the pol icy ado pted worldwide has been a s u ppression of d isease and the killing of b i rd s and moles, which i n thei r own way help the s u rvival of man . The amou nt of poisons that have been sprayed o nto crops wh ich in turn we use for food often produce s side effects causing i l l n ess has to some extent been recognised in the last ten or fifteen years and I believe the tide i s turn i ng when futu re ag riculturists will look to a more natu ral ro::: cr t-'' nrod uV\. rtl"\YII. /it\1J 1"n VIV rrnn me +1"rnc. UYVI �\/nid i"n !:il·n nro::: I n � th \,IIe •• s c. tr. -:. m e urlv - O b ""L'-'II �1'-':- 0�t l.\JI t-' s 0� n rl a+ t h e saIll J of harsh and harmfu l che micals. 1
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The systems of ag riculture to g ive hope of improving the health of the soi l , plant, ani mal a n d man became pu blic i n a few years with the method o f dynamic ag riculture and the theo ry and practise of homoeopathy in fi nd i ng the solution of a i l m e nts in plants. The recent investigation of both European and American scientists clearly point to the fact that plant g rowth , crops and animal prod uctivity d epend on cosmolog ical i nfl ue nces a n d vary i n wel l-d efi ned cycles. The i nfl uence of t he su nspot period of eleven years on the weather and the growth of trees , plant etc. has been s hown and an increasingly large n u m ber of modern i nvestigato rs have verified the co n nectio n of the s u n spot with temperatu re, rainfal ls, atmospheric pressure, mag netic streams etc. And again others have demonstrated how these effects harvests , o utput and p rices. Already various Americans and Russian econo mists are beg i n n ing t o calcu late the economic cycles that result fro m astronom ical and meteorolog ical cycl ic i nfl uences. It appears as though economy will become part of a new kind of cosmolog ical science. Whether the moon i nfl uences plant growth may sti l l be a matter of co ntroversy. B ut is it not a recog nised fact that the moon influences the tides and that ce rtain ailments such as epileptic fits, sleepwal king and so m namb u lism occur more often at a certai n phase of the moon? Why should such influe nces not be of a universal character? Is not al l plant life more o r less rhythmic or p e riodical? And if so will not our negl igence of these co n nections have a detrimental effect? On going back i nto histo ry we fi nd that a g reat deal has been shown on the effects of the s u n , moon and plants on our enviro n ment.
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Another vast field of knowledge has been o pened u p through recent i n vestigations i nto the true nature of the soil. Having read literature on this subject, I a m astonished to fi nd q u ite a varied agreement a mong the many scientists on one essential poi nt , n amely that the soil is by no means a mere aggregate of chem ical s ubstances as it was con s idered to be only a few years ago; it is a l iving organ ism. The so i l i s not a dead system but is tea m i n g with life says S .A . Wa keman i n his a uthoritative book on H u m u s ( 1 938) "Org a n ic matter thus supplied the life of the soil i n the strictest sense" or "It may be said that there is no soil without org a n ic matter". The problem of n utrition of pure food and of a n imal d iseases a nd the health of h um a n beings are i nseparably con nected with agriculture. Another scient ific e poch i n agricu lture has a lready beg u n . It is to be hoped that n ew ventures n ecessitated by the war will be the prelude to large-scale scientific use a nd production of the so i l . To show we h ave a new force i n the correction of a i l ments o f pla nts a n d pests t h at prey on pla nts , which is of course a cycle of life , we have over the last fifty years or so proven that in Rad i o n ics there is great va lue i n treating the sick and correcti ng the i m perfections i n the h u man structure, and this work is co ntinuing and will no doubt continue for a very long time. The eq u ipment is i m provi ng and tech n iq ues are ever g rowi ng It is o n ly some ten years ago that I started on the possibility of using Rad ionics i n Agriculture , of using the same eq u i pment or s i m ilar eq u ipment for the correction of a i l ments i n pla nts, detection of trace elements a n d of other deficiencies i n the so il. We c a n now go a head and s how some results of the possi bilities of using rad ion ics i n a g riculture . This no d oubt will not be the only book published on this s ubject i n the future , a nd as far as agricu lture is co ncerned Rad ion ics has a brig ht future . To the more serious researcher this may seem a joke, but in practise there is no joke about it. So m a ny people have used the system over the years that something good will always come out of it, and later when we get to know even more about the use of Rad io n ics i n Agricu lture , i nto protecting our environ ment the natural way, then we so lve many of the worlds food problems . This will not happen overnig ht, it will not happen over the n ext ten or twenty years , but time, we hope, is on our side. In looking at Rad i o n ics as a method of overcom i ng our pro blems with plants a nd you will n otice that I specifically mention plants, although of course agricu lture includ es ani m a ls as we! ! . Therefore we must look at the structure and the use of rad ion ics as appl ied i n the many facets of life already. L ater on we hope to prod uce some research into the veteri nary as pect, which is also of growing interest, as a n i mals respond to treatment by rad ion ics and analysis much in the same way as a h u man bei n g , except that we do not have the psycholog ical p ro blems so m uch in a n i mals as in the human bein g .
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Everyt h i ng in nature h a s its d isti nctive rate and mode of motion . The con d uction of energ y fro m vegetables and anim al l ife is a subject on which one can spend a whole l ifeti m e a n d then only beg i n . . The fact that energy can be take n fro m a l l living matter, whethe r it is vegetable or animal a nd that energy by suita ble means can be con d u cted to other living matter beca use no two forms of l ife are the same a n d nothing i n nature is exactly d u p l icated . The History of Agriculture:
I n the past severa l decades more e m phasis has been g iven to research in the va riou s med ical a s pects of Rad ion ics than i n any other, and it is with i n this field we see g reatest p rogress, this in turn has lead us i nto other resea rch aspects of the science. D u ri ng more rece nt yea rs and as new research offers new a nd more accurate equipment, t re nd h a s been toward s oth er fields of research which at first g l a n ce mig ht well seem rather unorthodox to say the least; the thing is - that the s ystem does work. The field i n which Rad io n ics has come to the fo re is in Agricu lture. The strength in bri ng in g Radionics i nto this field l ies in the fact that it seeks to find the wea k links in nature and by o u r knowledge and fine equipment m a kes the links stro nger. Its effectiveness has been known to operate over long and d ifficult a reas of the world . It m u st be rem e mbered that without Ag riculture there would be no h u ma n beings on the earth - it is the fa rmers of t he world who give us what we need t o exist. Nmvadays every farmer and g ard ener shouid once again learn something about cosmic i nfluences. If we go back i n history we find that there was a rea l knowledge about the rel ationship between cosmos a n d the eart h . I n t h i s study we want to deal p ri m arily with a g riculture so must limit o u rselves to mentioning o n ly a few of these i nteresting facts . We need go no fu rther back tha n the time of Pliny (23 A . D . ) I n h i s History of Nature w e read o f the vast and u n usual influence of the moo n's effect o n the growth of plants. M a ny instructions are given a bout the sowing of pla nts a n d a bo ut pru n i ng and cuttin g trees accord ing to t h e phases of the Moo n . I f it was d es i ra ble that the pla nts s ho u ld co ntin ue to g row then p ru n i ng a nd cutting should be ca rried o ut d u ri ng the ful l moo n . If on the contra ry it was not desi ra ble that the pla nts s h o u ld go on g rowi ng then operations should be ca rried out d u ring the new moo n . P l i n y a lso tells us that t h e effect o f t h e moon on an i mals is precise and he relates cases of ants, oysters a nd many more creatures responding to the moon's i nfl uence . ! f yo u want to sell fruits, then i t was better to gather them d uri ng ful l moon because they would be ful l of j uice and good to look at. If you want to preserve the fru its fo r some time, it was better to harvest them d u ring the new moon beca use they wo u l d not rot and would d ry more easi ly. Harvesting of all kinds of vegeta bles had therefore to be done d u ri ng the new moon along with the co llection of fa llen leaves. Ma n u re h ad to be sti rred d u ring t he wan i ng moon and it was best t o manure the fie lds at new moon o r half moon to avo id the growth of weeds . During fu ll moon it vvas good to cover the roots of the trees . In damp places it was better to sow d u ring new moon and the fo llowing fou r days. From new moon to half moo n , the moon was s up posed to enco u rage fruitfu l ness; in the second period , half moon , the moon was s u p posed to g ive warmth .
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I n the 1 8th book of h i s H i story of Nature, Pliny says, that in bygone times people lived crudely and without any science . But we wi l l see that their sense to o bserve such t h i ng s was not less keen than our p resent ca lcu lations. They were afraid of t h ree periods of the year where their fru its were con cerned and therefore they created three holidays and festiva ls: the rust-feast, the feast of the blossom s and the wine fea st. N um a created the rust-feast about 703 B . C. Now we have it on the th day of the Kalends of May- 2 5 t h April - because it is a bout that time that rust may attack p l a nts. This is the time when the sun stands i n the 1 oth degree of Taurus. B ut the rea l reason is th at twenty-on e d ays after the S pring Eq u i nox, t h e Dog Star, a violent star, descends - and before th i s, the small Dog Star had to d esce n d . T h e feast o f t h e b lossoms h a s been fixed fo r t h e fou rth o f Kalends of t h e same m onth (237 B . C . ) accord ing to the prophecies of the S ibyl , so that everything may blossom s u ccessfully. O n this day the sun is in the 1 4t h d eg ree of Taurus. If there h appens to be a ful l moo n d uri ng these days all the fruits and everyth i ng that blossoms will be d a maged . The feast of the wine d uring which it was customary to make offeri ngs of the n ew wine to J u p iter, was fixed for the 23rd Apri l ; testing the new wine has noth i ng to do with the fru its and not h i ng to do with the wine plants and oil trees because the fru itification of those beg i n when the Pleiades are risi n g , that is the 1 oth May, wh ich is another d ate covering a bo ut fou r d ays, d uring which period they do not l i ke t o g et d ew because they a re afraid of the d escending cold constel lation of Arcturus and i n no way should there be the i nterference of the moon . These are the times when steri lity m ay be caused through the heavens. Pliny a lso states that d uri ng the Summer the new moons are harmless a nd d u ri ng the W inter the fu l l moons with the exception of two d ays; further than that one has only to be afra id of the very short summer n i g hts, but not of the days. So we fi nd that d u ri n g this time there was qu ite a detailed science of the effects of certa i n constellations a n d the i nfl u ence o f the d ifferent phases o f t h e moo n o n plant g rowth . But not o n ly plant g rowth was i nfl uenced by the moo n , Pliny speaks a bout i nfluence of the moon u pon a n i mals. He tells us that ants rest d u ring the new moon a n d are very bu sy d u ring full moon even at nig ht. Oysters and other similar creatures g row d u ri n g fu ll moon and their g rowth slackens d u ring new moo n . If it is desirable to castrate b u lls or other a nimals it should be done d u ring the waning moo n . Eve n t h e h u man b e i n g i s subject to certai n phenomena that are co nnected with the moo n . F emale menstruation has alvvays been related to the moo n . We even fi nd some conce ption a n d birth si milarly related . We count the period of preg nancy by l u n a r period s . It was tho ught that the waxing moon facil itated the process of b i rth whereas the wa n i ng moon made it more d ifficult. We a lso read of the infl uence of the moon on weather co nd itio ns. If it rises very brig ht a n d clea r it means good weather, if it rises with a red glow it means a storm , if it rises d a rkened it mea ns rai n .
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Or let u s read Virg i l ; in h i s poem a bout Agriculture we get a marvellous d escription of the cultivation of the land , of fru it trees, the ra is ing of cattle and each s i ng le wo rk is closely con nected with occu rrences i n the heavens. Sun and Moo n , S aturn , J u p iter, M ars , Venus a nd Mercury have to b e observed b y the husba ndman a s well as all the con stellatio n s . Certa i n seeds have t o be sown when t h e glitte ring Tau rus opens the year with h i s golden h orn s . If the farmer wa nts to g row wheat then he m ust wait u ntil the Pleiades hide themselves in the morn i n g , i . e . between the 2 0 th October and 7th Nove m ber. If he wa nts to grow lentils or beans he m u st wait u ntil the descent of Bootes , etc . Then cam e the e poch when mod e rn nature science d eveloped , and nobody believed any longer that the sta rs , fa r away fro m the earth could have any infl uence u po n e arthly affa irs. It is interesting to read in this con nection the publ ication of two G e rman scientists , Professor Fech ner a n d Professor Schleiden who were still convinced of the i nfl uence of the moon o n weather con d itio ns. They calcu lated fro m carefu l statistics that there was more rain at full moon than d u ring the new moon period . The wa rmth that may co me from the moon is so insignificant that for a long time one d id not even bel ieve in its existence. It was necessary to construct a very fi ne apparatus ( M elloni) to be a ble to measure it. Eve n its force of g ravitation is very weak. And from this weakling people d a re to expect co nsiderable effects on the e a rth. h !t is rea!!y extremely interesting to study this co ntroversy in the 18 t Century. f\io virtue whatsoever was left to the moo n . During the 1 6th and 1 ih Centuries science had abolished astrolog ical s u pe rstitions. For n atura l science the moon had beco me merely one of the heavenly bod ies. As for its activities we can o n ly a d m it forces like g ravitation , light and heat. We m ust confess, like astronomers a nd true scientists of the last hundred yea rs that we a re fu lly entitied to push the old , wea k and powerless moon from his throne of its earthly power. That is the period in which it was not scientific to speak of an infl uence of the moon o r of any other heavenly bod ies on the earth ; they were much too fa r away. Today it beg i n s to be d ifferent agai n . We are beg i n n i ng to talk abo ut cosmic waves, rad iation s as d i rect or i n d i rect ema nations of the stars . This is perfectly scientific; these em a nations come fro m every part of the cosmos, they penetrate everything - they i nfluence o u r l ife as well as prod ucing physical phenomena. The moon is co m i ng into its own aga i n . We know that lunar rad iations are responsible fo r interference with tra n s m issions fro m wireless stations. There are maxi ma and m i n i ma of inten sity in the reception of electro-mag n etic wave s , which correspond to the p hases of the moo n . There is a very interesting book b y t h e Russian bom eng ineer, Georges Lakhovsky. It was orig in ally writte n in French and later tran slated into German, Italia n a n d S pa n is h , a nd recently into Eng lish. La khovs ky d eals with t he infl uence of s u ns pots and cos m ic rad iations on life a nd hea lth.
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Georg e La khovsky points out that the s u n not only sends us light and wa rmth a nd ema nates u ltra-viol et rays , but also g ives off electric and mag netic waves especia lly d u ring the eru ptive period of the protu berances or sunspots . We see that occurrences on the s u n a re reflected on earth . And , if we ask why, then the scientist a nswers: there i s i nterference with the n o rm al field of cosmic waves by solar waves e manating fro m s u nspots . The fact was acknowledged that Planets of the U n iverse d id i n fact have a d i rect beari n g o n the growth or otherwise of a n i mals and plants around the world . It has been d iscove red that the su nspot maxi ma a nd m i n i ma are related to the cyclones and quantity of ra i nfall, not however u ncond itionally but accord i ng to the geographica l positio n of the poi nt of o bservation . As regards the summer monsoons i n I nd i a , it has been ascerta i ned that d u ring the maxima years of the sunspots the ra infa l l is higher than in the m i n i ma years . The wi nter rai nfa l l in northern I ndia fo llows the opposite cou rse. The fact of the con nection being thus established we must note that the character of the re lati o n s h i p depends upon g eog raphical and seaso n a l mod ifications. For i nstan ce , it h a s been fou nd that in the central pa rts of northern America and a long the coast of L a b rador a temperature preva ils in years of extensive s u nspots which is lower by several degrees, whil st on the oth er side of the Atlantic from the Bay of B iscay to S pitzberg e n exactly the opposite happens. The minim um epochs of the sunspots p rod uce cold years and the maxima epochs warm ones. It is most i n structive to see that on e and the same cosmic event can prod uce such d ifferent effects in various parts of the worl d . North J a p a n h a s a good rice crop in August i f i t i s wa rm . A warm Aug ust i n J apan may however depend o n the rising of the air-pressure i n the south east coast of Canada in Apri l . There is a strange i nterdepende nce of cond itions at various poi nts of the earth. VVe a re on ly beginning to reach an u nd erstand i ng of this fact. The g reater the d ifference between the temperature of the Atlantic Ocean current on its s u rface a n d a temperature at a depth of 200 metres, the better will be the harvest in N o rway - eve n the Germ a n wheat and rye crops are infl uenced by this factor. A s m a l l percentage of ice around I celand in the spring corresponds to favourable co n d itions fo r corn crops in Western Europe and North Ge rmany. We see that sunspots of changes in the air circu latio n of the oceans have l i ke other cosmic events very d ifferent effects on d ifferent parts of the earth. If we co uld u nderstand them in their tota lity they wo u!d reveal the mselves as organic dependencies in a living being. Moon a n d water a re a un ity_ Wherever there is water there is also the activity of the moon . And again we need to take the wo rd water in a wid er se nse. We do not mean only ra i nwater or d isti l led water, we mean it as a representative of the l i q u id state. The moon rhythm i s embod ied in the water itself. Once the moo n was u n ited with the earth- that is a n acknowledge fact. At that time our solid earth had not yet been formed . We m ust p icture everything as being in a more or less liq uid cond itio n . After the exit of the m oo n , the earth beca me solid but a l l the remai n i ng water still be haves l i ke the moo n . The moon itself has solid ified but it moves acco rd i ng to the same rhyt h m a s the l i q uids move on earth.
9
That space i s fu ll of forces which are u n known to us and that living beings emit rad iations o r effl uvia of which we are not aware but whose sign ifica nce has attracted the attention of certa i n observers, a re facts that have long si nce been accepted . A n ything is possible - but on e must not accept a nyth i ng except that which ca n be p roved experi m e ntally. Well- it ca n be proved experi menta lly that the moon i nfl uences the g rowth of pla nts. A d eta i led p ublicati o n on plant g rowth appeared in 1 936. Experi ments had been carried o ut fo r the past fifteen years partly i n the laboratory a nd partly i n the o p e n . These experi ments have been ca rried o ut i n cessantly therefore we have today e xtensive materi al at o u r d isposa l . Ca refu lly selected g ra i n s o f wheat (8 d ifferent species), barley and oats were i nserted i n glass d ished contai n i ng garden soi l . The soil used for these experiments were ca refu lly prepared a n d d i d not conta i n any artificial manure. After a fortnight the p l ants were measured . Normaiiy two leaves develop so the measurement was taken o n the fi rst leaf, the seco nd leaf, the i nternodes and the roots . Provid ed the gra i n had been carefu lly selected there was no great d ifference between the 30 plants g rowing i n each g lass d is h . The first experi ment started a t ful l moon and ended a t new moo n ; the second e xperiment sta rted at the wan i ng quarter and ended at the waxing q u a rter; the third experiment bega n at the n ew moo n end i ng at the fu ll moon; the fou rth experi ment started at the waxing qu arter and ended at the wa n i ng quarter; thus it conti nued fo r m a n y yea rs. Each week on e experi ment ended and the next began . The resu lts o bt a ined were highly i nteresting. Beyond any d o ubt these experiments p roved that t h e moon i nfl u enced the plant growth. The d rawbacks in ra ising fru it today are abo ut the same as they were sixty ye ars ago. One of the i m ped i ments the n , as now, a re the bird s . They a lways destroy fa r more fru it than they co uld eat. We do not destroy the bi rds because we li ke them a n d they do h elp prevent i nsects from becom ing too n u merous, but we had to protect o u rselves. To overcome th is, we cut pieces of brig ht tin out of waste materi a l . We wo uld p u n ch a hole through one corner of the tin and with a p iece of wire fasten the bright m etal to selected bra nches of fruit tree. The wind wo uld move these p i eces of metal a n d their g littering motion would scare most of the bird s away and thus spare us the fru it. Many of these pieces of metal remai ned bright long enough to last through the s eason, then they wo uld rust but many wo uld rem a i n on the trees, for no reason except it too k time to take them off. Year after yea r it was noticed that the fru it on the branches where the pieces of m etal had rem a i ned was better in every way than the fruit on the other branches. Ma ny said it was because the birds kept off those bra nches, but that did not seem to be the true reaso n . The extra large size of the fru it a lone was apparent.
10
My o bservation of the fru it trees with wire a bout them gave me a d ifferent o utlook of l ife-i n-the-open fo r a l l manner of life . I observed that all vegetation was a part of the e a rth fro m wh ich it g rew; that a n i m a l l ife i n the water was g ro u nd ed to the e a rth thro u g h the water, that a n imals of the a i r were g rounded when not flying b ecause the trees or the sleeping places the occupied were scattered to the g ro u nd; that animals on the earth were natura l ly i n some manner grounded ; that h u ma n s in their natu ra l state l ive g ro u nded ; that the fu rther h u mans departed fro m natura l l iving the less they live gro u nded and the more prone they were to ill-health. In short, h u man s a re the only l iving beings that exist part-time not g ro u nd ed, a nd the l ess time they a re i n contact with t he g ro u nd t he u n healthier they beco m e . T h e first mention o f pu re Rad io n ics being used i n Agricultu re that w e know of is i n the World Congress of Rad iesthesia i n 1956, whose published books showed a g rowing i nterest i n this work. Of cou rse i n the fo l lowing 35 years a g reat deal has tra n s p i red i n o rder to get this to a more ad vance stage we are in today. The effect of soi l rad iation on the health of all l iving things is really considerable and is referred to i n many publ ications. One of the earliest is the work of D r. Alfred Haviland, p ubl ished i n 1862 wherein he states ; "The resu lt o f m a n y yea rs express i nvestigation has shown me how m uch soil rad iation can affect the living tissue . Although the year 1868 was the first in which the resu lts of my i nvestigation s were p u blished i n the fo rm that they are now known , the o ri g i n of the study must go back a fu rth er twenty years. After all these years it has come to my notice that the relatio nship of rad iation and illness in a n imals and man is exact and d efinable" . One of the first in vestigato rs i nto m a n i p u lating the little known forces of nature for agriculture a s well as for the benefit of hum an beings was the late Dr. Georg e Sta rr-White whose m a n y books relating t o his researches are very m uch co llector's items these d ays. Dr. Starr-White's researches have grown out of pure work a nd pure rad io nics at a n early stage this i n turn has g iven us m uch of the usefu l d ata that we have today. Dr. G uyo n Richard s a nother worthwhile pioneer i n the more modern a p p roach to Radion i cs states , "Th e solar syste m and this planet Ea rth and Man who prides h i mself a s being the latest d evelo pment of life u pon it and all i n their turn the universal su bstan ce u po n it. T he elements of wh ich w e a re mad e a re t he same as in the rocks, t he atmosphere, a n d whether in the su n , or us or in the depths of the earth , obey the same chemica l , ato m ic a n d rad iational patterns. The etheric waves that are broadcast a n d received i n our wireless sets are not an isolated phenomenon, they exist throughout t he solar system". We o u rse lves are at one i n our bod i ly fu nctioning with all other a n i m ate bodies a nd we tou ch spheres where the law is difficult to co mprehend , but where there are i ntimations that it is probably the same as that which governs the physica l un iverse.
11
When M arco n i d iscovered a method of send ing messages across space he was not creating; man ca n not create in this sense, he was merely adopting for our use i n b u s iness and i n pleasure what Nature was a lready d o i ng . We know but l ittle a bo ut this form of rad iation but there are facts which show that waves of probably very s i m i l a r n ature are sent o ut by plants, animals and men , a nd received often at a great d ista nce. The contention is that rad iations fro m the ato m take place from a l l kinds o f matter and are a lways operative from a l l t h i n g s a n imate and inanimate and that it is possible by means of a con structed mecha nism to identify the elements in living su bsta n ces by these wireless waves which are continually being sent out a nd offer a rel i a ble means of d iagnosis i n cases of d isease. If we care to reca ll forty or so years ago the very thou g ht that man may one day reach the moon w as considered science, fantasy, rub b i s h , and an improba bility; they said there was no air in space so no rad io waves could go through it - not only has m a n g o ne to the moon severa l ti mes but has com m u n i cated and brought us television pi ctures i n colour, and what is more, travelling space u n its are at this t ime pro b i n g the o utside pa rts of the Solar System send ing us back p hotogra phs and rad io wave s. So m uch for early scientific theory of forty years ago - the thing is - what wi ll we fi nd in forty years hen ce? All this bri ngs me to the point of where is Radion ics going? Or better stil l will Radion ics h elp our Agricu lture? I n m ore recent years, five at the most, so many new a uthors a n d researchers have co me forward to re-establish the theory a nd probabil ity that Rad ion ics today is more on a truly scientific footing than it has ever bee n . With mod ern Rad ionic Co m p uters the area i n wh ich the Agriculturist c a n work is very large starting from an y area one wishes a nd going to pure and easy s peculatio n - from analysis of the soi l , plant, the pests that attack the plant, the reason wh y certain plants h ave d i seases and what is more i m porta nt how to so lve the methods of e l i m i nating pests and plant d iseases. In recent years the system of Rad ionic Broadcasting has more than proven itself to be accurate and simple if appl ied in the correct manner, and vario us reports co m i ng to me from time to time have shown that the methods we teach are at this time more effective over long d i stances. No doubt more scientific advances will come to fore as o u r knowledge grows . There are many new and i nteresti ng facets i n the rea lm of Agriculture to d o with orthodox agricu ltura l systems related to t he moon phases of rad io in nature. H owever in Rad ionics pro per the advances are more in the u nseen rather tha n in the s e e n , or in the m i nd , or are step ping i nto somet hing that is a new d i mension with our type of research. The type of eq u i pment used i n rad ionic treatment of soils e l i m ination of harmful rad iatio ns, harmfui insects life and so on is affected in advanced nature of o u r researchers. Three basic factors occur in nature which is q u ite indisputa ble and which can be used to operate the agricultural side of rad ionics . I m ight add that these sa me rules a p p ly to any form be it veterinary, agricu lture or as it is mostly used for, i n m edica! wo rk.
12
The s a m p l e , o r a s it is sometimes called the witness, is an essential part i n d o i n g a n a nalysis o f the item u n d e r d iscussion a t the t i m e o f t h e exami natio n . Th is s a m p l e in med ica l terms i s usually a s pot of blood , or a lock of hair, i n agricultural terms it can a l most be a nything - a p a rt of a plant, flower, a n i m a l , soil sample, or a n ything that rep resents the item we a re studying. Ana lysis i s on ly one side of the p roblem, what is more i nteresting is the broadcast treatment in agriculture , which bri ng s the most d ram atic results, and for this the sample i s q u ite i n d ispensable because without it we can d o nothing. Sam ples used i n agriculture should be a representative of nature , that is to s ay, if you have a field of corn it is best to take a small sample fro m several parts of the field and mix them rather tha n h ave one small part because through the p h e nomena of nature it i s possible to treat one plant and not the whole field under ce rtai n circu mstances. Nature i s a m ost powerfu l way of utilising its own forces and in a sample we have a l i nkage d irectly with the object of our exercise. The second factor is the n atura l waveform. Natu ra l waveform ra dionics usually referred to as Rates are co nta i ned i n the i n struction literature for use with our type of e q u ip ment. Everything i n nature has its own natural frequencies or rate by which it vibrates e ither through its ato mic structu re or through general metabolis m . Fo r every m i neral there is a rate , fo r every a n imal or piece of so i l , section of a tree, there is a rate . It is possible to detect th e rates co nti n uously and our pol icy has always been t o expand the n u mber of rates so that the agriculturist may use this field extensively for the best results . The N atura l waveform has a lways been rather l i ke electricity - it has always i n nature been present. U ntil electricity w a s d iscovered i t was tho ught that i t was so mething n ew, but i n fact electricity i n one form or another is a part of nature and we ca n not get away fro m it. Beca use we u se certa in types of eq u i p ment the electricity is m a n ifesting itself a nd being used i n o u r hom es , s o it is just as li kely that the type of rad iation we are dealing with i n rad ion ics has always existed - without it there would be noth i ng . The o n ly d ifference is that we are using equipment that will d etect it and u se to the best advantage throu gho ut nature , be it the med ical sphere or the a g ricultura l sphere that are now d iscussing . Then 'vve com e to a d imensio nal as pect of this work. Theories and practice over the past t h i rty years, especia l ly over the last twenty, have to a certain extent proven that rad ionics is essentially a d i mensional science, that is to say, that it by-passes in some way, time and space . No one really knows why this i s ; although we know we have a television program co m i ng fro m somewhere to o u r sets - none of us has any proof that the television or rad io programme you a re watch i ng or liste n i ng to i s co m i ng fro m a nywhere - we believe it does - but we have no proof because it can not be in two places at the same time.
13
Likewise , o n e h a s to accept the possi bil ity that we are worki ng on a d i mensional science i n a n y form of rad ion ics, and this d i mensional science will no d o u bt be opened u p in future time. Experience has shown that the very molecules a n d atoms of the e q u i p m ent are subject to the same laws as everything e lse. What we try to do is to g e n erate this natura l energy force so that it can be used in a d irectional a i m . If we look at telepathy to a certa i n extent it has been proven by many a uthorities that there i s n o physical reason that we can send a telepathic message fro m one cou ntry to a nother and yet it happens. There is no particular reason that with i n us there is a generator that will generate enough energy to send a message telepathically across the world or down to the next street to a certain i n d ivid u a l , bearing i n m i n d o f cou rs e that every other ind ivid ual h a s the s a m e capacity. So there m u st be something else totally d ifferent to approach this thing that we call d imensional science . This is the o n ly way we can explain the resu lts obtained with rad ionic broadca sti n g to people, an imals, and plants and so o n , dowsing from maps, plans and p hotog raphs to actually d oing physica l treatments through the med ia of i nstru ments. Res u lts more often are i m mediate. Research has shown that treatment with the rad ionic broadcaster to a d i stant a rea can show res u lts with i n an hour or so, so the d i mensional aspect of rad ion ics m ust not be d isregard ed as something we ca nnot see though the great possibil ity is that if we did know a n d were i n th e d i mensions w e are tal ki ng abo ut - w e m ay not exist. Now it may be decided from the readers point of view that if one ca n do good , o n e can do h arm; however there is a scope with i n rad ionic treatment of agricu lture that it is a bsol ute ly 100% safe; it does not req uire chemica ls, d rug s, or other harmfu l m aterials - it i s d rawn a s it were from the ether using and m a n i p u l ating natura l fie ld forces in ord er to obtai n the objective . I n order to experi m e nt i n our field or area it is essential that we o bta i n so meth ing t o go by - th i s w e di d i n the early 50 's with sweet corn a n d other types of cro ps- these were at that time passing experi ments in order to b u i ld up our knowledge of the end prod uct. The experim e nt referred to d id prod uce an a mazing crop of sweet corn as compared with the areas o utside our control led one. In fact, i n some cases, the cro ps were a l most twice as larg e . From these sim ple experime nts it was decided to pursue them further. H owever, a s has a lready been stated , the greater majority of rad ionic practise has been i n the med ical field connected with human beings and a nimals, therefore it seem s a s if the agricu ltural side of rad io nics is the poor rel ation - but now that the i nterest i s growing fast throug hout the world and that there are growi ng n u m bers of pests that d estroy plants amongst which civi lisation relies, we fi nd that rad io n ics i n agriculture i s now com i ng to the fore very fast.
14
In my g ard e n wh i ch i s a very large one, we have grown fru it trees, bushes and vegetables of a l l k i n d s ; we h ave never used a spray or artificial fertiliser at any time and we have never had pests or d isease in our soil, but I remember a few years ago we bought some bean p l a nts fro m a nursery a few m i les away , and , in England as in m o st parts of the world , most nurseries use chemicals a nd fert ilisers of an artificial nature to produce their crops. We planted these beans i n our garden and i mmed iately they showed signs of having black fly. Curio usly enough we had a lready planted s o m e beans in the adjo i n i n g row some 3 feet away but the black fly ig nored them. We treated the d i seased i m po rted beans overn ight a n d the fo llowing day the n u mbers were red uced , we contin ued the experi ment for a week and no further signs of the black fly occurre d . A colleag u e of m i n e d iscovered that b y treating g reen fly, for exa mple, with the rate 7983 17 1 the pests j ust dried u p and fad ed away. There is the possible explanation that as pla nts become accustomed to a b a l anced so i l , a soil i n which n o fertil iser or chemicals have been placed i n them , the p l a nts become healthy. Having gone throu gh this we can appreciate that if there is a d eficiency of any k i n d in the plant of trace elements , then the plant will be deficient for a certai n kind of pest to attack it. It i s the law of n ature that the wea kest fails, if it is the pest who is the weakest, he wo uld n ot exist. So we find the weakest plants are the easiest prey - the l i o n whose prey normally i s an other animal will not attack another a n i mal of a similar kind for fear of losing - he wiii attack the weak and the oid. This is li kewise with agricu ltural pests a nd d i seases that occur i n plants, the m i crobes attack wea k o n es but the processes are not i mpossible. I n using rad ionic e q u i p ment over a period of time there is no reason why we can not get 100% good or a bove average cro ps. The researcher must be a sincere one; the farmer or landowner who uses rad ion ics in a m an ner will gain positive res u lts - there is no doubt about th i s . Over t h e years we have been experimenting with positive results. You and I a re i n d ivid uals, we are i n d ivid u al to the poi nt that we are the only one of a kind i n existence i n t h e world ; rad ionica l ly s pea king t h i s is of co urse proven with the use of m ed ical rad ion ics and the speci men (sample). If it were not for this facu lty in nature rad io n ics would not exist. Duri ng the year 1929, while working for the Bell Telephone Laboratory i n A m erica , a techn ician fo u nd that his own body i nterfered with experiments when h e was workina with waves below four metres i n lenath. A oarallel case occurred so me years ago when a skil led worker was sent to i nvestigate errors i n the testing of s u b marine cables i n So uth Africa . It was fo und that the observer's own current ca u sed the errors that varied d uri ng the day. The waves that we are d iscussing here h a ve not yet been measured with certainty, but there has been a growi ng tendency to reg ard these waves i n their varying intensities as reliable i n d icators of health and d i se a se. �
�
15
'
So we come back to the time and space facu lty again where we find the end p rod uct of o u r work harm o n ising with nature and p rod uci ng some d ramatic res u lts to g ive us o u r rewa rds. Everything in nature is in its own way creative; it creates the circu msta nces we wa nt. Where do you think the novelist gets h is stories? He p u l ls t h e m as it were , out of the a i r, through his intelligence on to the paper, just a s I am taking facts a n d knowledge fro m t he hig her self that y ou can read it. Perhaps my m ethod is not perfect, p e rhaps the novelist' s one is not perfect but the facts remain we actua lly p u l l fro m out of the a i r as it seems, the theory we profound , the i nformation we need . So i n Rad ion ics as we have seen briefly , it is possible to achieve the end p ro d ucts in agricu lture m uch in the same way as i n med ici ne. If you already have so me eq u i p m e nt, thorou g h ly read the literatu re that goes with it - beca use the i nstructio n s given will be identical to that used i n a g riculture. It is j ust a case of a p p lying the knowledge you have in you r s pecific bra nch . Broadcasting treatment i s much the same; it is simple, straightforward , and it works , as you will see later. An i nteresting fact a rises that if we look in the va rio us reference books rel ating to Rad iesthesia and Rad io n ics we find many instances on s m a l l scales have occurred but have passed relatively u nnoticed by the average rea d er. O u r laboratory is i n d i rect con nection with a n u mber of governmental d e p a rtments and private o rg a n isations throug hout the world ca refully researching into agricu ltural aspects of our work while at the same time not neglecting the cause of o u r medical work as we h ave a lways done. Here , the reader m i g ht say - wel l , how is it all done - we have already explai ned - we m ust have a sample, an instru ment, a nd an objective . The s a m p le we h a ve briefly o utlined , the i n strument we will d iscuss, a nd the objective we have to d ecide fo r o u rselves.
16
The Use of the Radionic Computer in General Agriculture:
This information has been co mpi led to assist those readers who are using or wish to u se the M a rk I I electro n ic co mputer. This instru ment is capable of the ful l a nalysis of plants, s o i l , pests, mi nerals , animal h u m a n beings etc. The object here is to g ive a m ore u p-to-date knowledge i n order that the i n stru ments may be used to the best adva ntag e . Our i n stru ment will operate o n what is generally termed as menta l , physica l , a u ric a n d s p i ritual planes t h a n th i s . I n us ing the instru ments for a n a lysis yo u wi l l g o by the basic i n st ru ction which we lay o ut fo r any other kind of analysis, that is to fi nd the l acking or otherwise of m i n erals and elements in plants , ta king i nto co nsideratio n the possibility of h a rm by rad io-active fa ll-out. We tend to look u pon pla nts as a low level of life with no conscio usness but in fact, experim ents over the years and published i n a n u mber of books show that plants do have a reso n ance with nature on certa i n levels. There a re of co u rse many pests that attack plants as there a re plants themselves, from the th i n nest and most delicate to the more robust as in the case of trees. Therefo re the rad i on ic analysis and treatment in this field is u n i q ue in as much that it s u rpasses time and space and is effective where all else fai l s . I n o rd e r t o o utline the treatment o f plants w e must appreciate that t h i s k i n d will not replace a m ineral or a tissue lacking in the plant itself but rather lets the p la nt m a ke its own m ind up as to the ava i la b i l ity of the su bstan ces that a re around us, rather in the same case as the h u man bei ng- human beings a utomatic selective system of the body will accept or reject the mi nerals or the food etc. that we p ut i nto it. Com p a rative a na lysis between pla nts and also h u man beings show that the basic elements a re the same and the basic processes are the same throughout all nature, which i s to accept food and reject waste and i n betwee n to select the s ubstances that will m a i nta i n a healthy life . All things being perfect, no treatment wo uld be necessary for plants , a n imals or h u ma n beings. U nfortunately we do not l ive i n a perfect wo rld and therefore vast sums of money, big chemica! concerns a nd pharmaceutical co ncerns are a part of everyday l ife of a com m u n ity, whether to treat the h u man being, the plant or the a n i mal. However, what we would normally cal! the more norma! methods i n giving p l a nts harsh q ua l ities of such outlawed su bstances as D . D.T. and other similar cures of nature where a l l this has fa i led , the agriculturist is turn i ng to rad ion ics in desperation to save not on l y his crops but t o save natu re as a who le, beca use b y u s i ng the more severe s ubstances i n t he treatme nt of plants and s oil w e are com i ng to realise a g reat futu re lies ahead which will eventually in the long term , rebalance nature so that d isease a nd d isaster is red uced to a m i n i m u m and beco me nearer the perfect world - rather tha n the i m perfect one we have had in the past.
17
The treatment of plants themselves req u ire the plant to be ana lysed to fi nd essential trace elements that are lacking i n ord er to replace these things or the plant may grow i n a soil that i s deficient i n the su bstance req uired , this in turn will weaken the structure of the system and plant d iseases and pests will take over d estroyi ng everything i n its path . Over the last fifty years great strides have been taken to underm ine the cause of a lot of h u m a n d iseases, and some are practically u nknown today, yet the farmer has sad ly neglected h is particular fie ld beca use whereas the human being a nd the a n i mal are i n o n e place , the field of crops ca n come from one acre to m a ny thousands of a cres i n di mension and it is e ither very expensive or virtually i m possible by orthodox methods to control the whole thing , but with the advent of rad ion ics we now co me to a po i nt where whole acres ca n be treated either d irect fro m the i nstru ment to field , or i n stru ment through the field fro m a plan or map. To those who do not know how the m a p system works it wo uld seem not only o utrageo u s but i m possible, but i n fact, all over the world, on an experi mental basis the treatmen t of plants , a n i mals and soils by rad ionics with the use m a ps or plan have co me to a rea lity, irrespective of what we think about it - the facts speak for themselve s . There a re a n u mber of methods i n the ana lysis of the plant, either t o ana lyse a part or a wh ole of the system of the growing pla nt. We have to test the soi l fo r lack of, or excess of, certa i n d i m i nishing materials. Then we have the d iseases or pests that are preva i l i ng , these are of course more easily identified and need no ana lysi s , whereas the d iseases in some cases may b e ra rer. We m u st remem ber the plant is a living p u lsating atom being of its own structure i n the same m an ner that we are a u n iverse with in ourselves. B efore we can have a plant, we m ust have the soi l ; it may be healthy or un hea lthy depending on what you want to grow i n i t, but generally speaking u n less t he s oi! is arid desert or mo unta i n o u s , plants will usually grow. The p roblem I th i n k in the past with the agriculturist is that he has p ut vast q u antities of synthetic fertilisers i nto the soil and tends to forget that nature provides her own fertilisers in the i mpurities broug ht down by the rai n, wi nd , etc. The s o i l has been prod ucing plants s ince time immemorial without the help of m a n . When vve fo ndly imagine that by putting to ns of chemicals i nto the soi! we are prod ucing som eth ing of a miracle, we are i n fact , d oing just the opposite . The soi! itself is a l iving thriving co m mun ity of bacteria and substances co nti nually c h a n g i ng fro m one day to the next, fro m one hour to the next hour. I n d ifferent a reas there are excessive m i nera ls, a n d lack of them i n other areas, a n d i t i s not just replacing these elements b y way o f fertilisers can we correct the so il i mbalance , b ut purely by rad ion ics - beca use t he s oil ca nnot co rrect itself.
18
I n order to u nd e rstand the fu nctio n i ng of th is u n ique system a nd by accepting it without bias - a nd it has been proven a fact fo r many years - we may assume that the treatment req u i res no d i sta nt l i m itations as long as we have a sample of the area we need to treat , or a s a m p le of the su bstance we need to treat. Experi m ents d o n e so far in this field have bee n between England and A u stra l i a , E n g l a nd and Africa , and i n some extreme parts of America and fro m E u ro pe to the Far East. S o it appea rs that whether the area to be treated is j u st down the road or fro m the othe r side of the wo rld , there is virtual ly no l i m it - and why is there no l i m it? If yo u o n ly wish to treat the so il then it is best to wait u ntil there are no crops in the field , because we are not treating the crops we are treating the soi l . If you desire to treat the crops, the best time as we stated i n earlier pages , is i n the rising of the m oo n , whe n the moon is g etting bigger - rather than the wan i ng moo n . It a ppea rs as a l unar cycie, which has an effect on the mag netic properties of the earth varying and d e pending on the area i nvolved . So we have not o n ly a deficiency fro m the physica l point of view, we have a m a g n etic deficiency or excess, etc. If you wish to g ive treatment to plant pests , then the sa me proced ure takes p l a ce except of cou rse yo u do not want them to g row, you wa nt to get rid of the m . W e m a y look u pon Rad ion ics as a rather d i mensional factor a n d i n some o f my e a rlier vvorks I mentioned the sidereal force which we tend to theorise as beyond time a nd space , rath er l i ke a telepath ic factor which is the scientist' s enigma and which can prod uce the most sta rtl i ng revelations whether done sponta neously or u nder scientific contro l . A great number o f people wo uld accept telepathy more or less witho ut q uestion since it has been the source of a number of books and scientific research p rograms over the years , a n d yet the sid ereal force as I like to cal l it has no basis, in fact no tangible materi a l t h i ng that we may ana lyse , but is there , as I am sure are other forces of nature which we do not understa n d . We o n ly have to look a t the ho moeopathic principle of med icine to see that the h i g h d i l ution of the su bsta n ce produces better effects than the s u bstance itself, and t h u s it is cal led spiritua l ised medicine and a sid ereal fo rce and then be used to g reater effect i n the particu l ar field we are now dea l i ng with . Eventually it will be d iscovered that a great deal of research wo rk u n d e rtaken a l ready w i l l prove to be very usefu l , beari ng in mind that this is nature's system and not a dangerou s chemical system - it harms nothing and only req u i res specia l ised e q u i p ment to m ake it work, b ut wh ich takes a great deal of experience to build . We have had thirty yea rs of experience in this field and gained 1 00% resu lts a l l the time.
19
J u st a s a genera l ra nge of rad ionic operation will be assumed , agriculture covers a very wide and com p l icated area of wo rk a nd rad io n ics to d ate has been used in a n u m ber of s i m p le exercises that tend to assist nature i nto rectifying itself. At the moment the researches wh ich tend to assist nature i nto the fertil isation of large tracts of areas wh ich co u ld not be fertilised by any other method , that is to say, by u s i n g the rad ionic broadcasti ng system it is q u ite possible to use a ferti l isation p rog ra m me and activate a g iven area that has h itherto been barren . The area control of i nsects of various kinds has co me under the scrutiny of m a n y i nteresting a reas of the wo rld where these problems occur. The co ntrol of weed type p l a nts which affect crop p roduction and the co ntrol of plant d iseases and pests , it is i n these areas that the application of rad ion ics of a large sca le to areas which are m o st n eeded around the worl d . The L i ke scientific explanation a s to why rad ionics wo rks does not a ppear to worry most researchers i n this field , beca use the end product of the research is positive , beari ng i n mind there are many th i ngs i n t his world that are tota l l y u n be li evable b u t neverthe less work a n d research i nto the many d iverse fields with rad io n ics apart fro m the present known ones are going on a l l the time by lead i ng i ntere sted parties . The basic system of treatment is using the Complimentary Rate (CR) to ca ncel o ut the basic frequency rate of the subject under treatment; this usually is on a 24h o u r basis with slight i nterva ls to g ive the treatment momentu m . ��o d o u bt , i n the fut u ie, some enteipris ing researcher will g o i nto the more biza rre a spects of agricu ltural rad io n ics i n ord e r to p rove without doubt that it works. H owever one lead ing system to wo rk on i n this field is to fist d o the a n a lysis of the o utsta nd i ng problem, and havi ng done th is, then to apply the necessary treatment. The system thus applied will produce the res ults a nd , as I have a l ready mentioned , I be lieve that rad ionics operates in a d i me n sion free of time or space as we know it othe rwise how could it o perate when using a n electrical piece of apparatus i n a house thousands of m iles away from the actual s ite , and not only that but to be able to control the area i n which the treatment or ana lysis is being made. The method of map dowsing over the years has been known i n many co u ntries a n d was p ioneered m ai n ly i n the early part of the century in Fra nce by the Abbes, and it is sti l l used today with maps, plans and d iagrams. What Rad io n ics does is to bri ng t h P IM n n i P t"n i n n "n i c Of tho ) � i nt '-' � C i P ntific p pr� '-' p ort i 1 10 in n rrl ....... e r t h � t cnmo c r i o ntifi r a n a l \/c system may be applied. "' '
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As a l ready stated the most used piece of apparatus fo r work i n this fi e!d is the M a rk II Rad io n ic Computer. There is also an attachment that is plugged i nto the main u n it that ca n restrict the area that is being treated or ana lysed . S o, how do we go about the basic proced ure? In the first place you have to approach the problem you have i n m i n d , and in o rd e r to fi nd the an alysis one must contai n a specimen of the particu lar s u bsta nce yo u a re trying to a nalyse; be it a sample of wheat, grass, plant, tree, a n i m a l or an yth" . .1ng.
20
This a n a lysi s can be done i n the comfort of you r home, office or laboratory and having done the a na lysis o n you r co mputer to fi nd a n a n swer to the problem ; be it a m i neral deficiency, a ferti lisation p roblem or anyth i ng of that nature, the treatment t h e n is to beg i n i n a n area where you ca n prove to yo u rself that the system works . Many researchers use aeri a l photog raphs i n order to get a lifelike response fro m the actual site. Som e researchers use maps or plans of the a rea to be treated a n d this is where the u n usu al part of rad ion ics comes i nto be i n g , because fro m the a rea of the photogra p h , m a p or plan we have a defin ite l i n k with the su bstance under treatment o r a nalysis. For exa mple, i n o rder to have a co ntrol area, we plug i n the map-dowsing s e n sor and place this o n the edge of you r map or p hotograph. Your sample of the s u b stance i s placed on plate A of the Co mputer, that is, the substa nce to be treated . B y setting u p your rates - assu m i ng you want to treat a n area for lack of phosphorous, yo u set u p the rate for phosphorous on the rates d ia l of the i nstru ment and switch it o n . Having done t h i s , t h e dowsing m a p attachment will broadcast to the area the rate for phosphorous, that is the area covered by the plan or photograph. Now s u p posing we wish to l i m it the area so treated then all we need to do is to have a p iece of ord inary copper wire and bend it to the shape of the area you wish to treat leaving the two ends of the wire slightly apart - this piece of wire should then be laid flat on the map or photo g raph with the ends of the wire facing the disc on the map d owser. This will then l im it the g iven a rea of the treatment or analysis . There is no feasible explanation why this s i mple piece of wire does restrict the area, but in the old d ays, about 2 5 years ago, such experiments were taking place and one had to go i nto the field or the a rea of treatment and set i nto the g round several aerial posts to restrict the area for analysis , but today with our knowledge consta ntly improvi ng we a re fi nding the easier methods are the ones being o utli ned . To the o perator of Rad ion ics who may be a l ittle doubtful on the outco me of these expe ri ments, let m e assure h i m , that g iven t ime the results will prove positive ; it w i l l a lso be borne in m i n d the life cycle and length and breadth of cycle of certain th i ng s in order to estimate the i m p rovement or otherwise. Th is applies to the removal of pests that need to be cleared fro m an area. I am constantly being asked , by people i nterested i n th is work , Can I get rid of this bug, or that pest and so on. Rad ion ics can be appl ied to remove the incentive of the maraud i ng pests so that they no longer breed and proliferate i n a g iven a rea . F u rthermore , rad ionic treatment strengthens the g rowth of pla nts and g ives resista nce a g a i nst pests. It is estimated that a bout a q u a rter of the whole earths' pla ntatio ns are ra vished by pests of one kind or another. Any method that will prod uce this must i n the long run prove to b e eco nomically viable.
21
I n Rad io n ics we have m a ny theories which vary from one person to another, some are being proved usefu l , others to be d iscovered later o n . There is no doubt that the i nstru ment which has opened u p many new fields of research is the Radionic C o m p uter and its a ssociated e q u i p me nt, and to gather i nformation on the level we req u i re, such e q u i pment i s vita l . I th i n k the A ncient Ch inese P h i losopher Confucius put our research for knowledge i n a n utshell when he was quoted sayi ng ; " I t is better to l i g ht a small ca n dle, tha n to curse in darkness". There are m a ny fol k in the world tod ay who decry their fate - who waste val ua b le knowledg e time when a slight g l i mmer of lig ht ca n give them the way to s h i n e a bri l l i a nt l i g ht to i l l u m i n ate the darkness of the ig norant, a n d having done this, to add fuel to the l i g ht of knowled ge by offeri ng to use this new-fo u n d knowledge to help one's h u ma n a nd a n i m a l friends wherever they m ig ht be. Man m u st fol low the task laid on him. He is g iven the physica l , mental and s piritual attrib utes for the job he has to perform . The problem I think i n the greater m ajority of us is that in the h u stle a nd bustle of j ust living in our com pl icated world t i m e is not on our side. In 1 938, Dr. Ruth Drown i n the foreword of her book The Science and Ph ilosophy of the Drown Radio Therapy, or as we genera lly ca ll it today - Rad ion ics ; a m seeking some way to research about l ife . One who i s busy l iving life will seldom find ti m e to write a bo ut that which he truly learns and p ut i nto words so that others may be able to acq ui re h i s viewpoi nt" "i
22
For th e interest of my readers , here are a few rates for the eradication of certa in Agric u ltural and Horticu ltura l pests ; For clearing a n area of fruit trees of a p h id s , that is the type of insect we get in E ng land - Green fly, black fly and similar pests - the rate is 5 4 1 22633234 . For clearing a n a rea of rats and m ice - the rate is 1 3244634323. For clearing an area of rabbits - the rate is 1 2232332333 . For clearing a n area of docks, th istles a nd nettles, which in England are very pro l ific in some areas - the rate is 5 48634865 77. These rates have been used successfully by a n u m ber of farmers in E ngland a nd Europe for the control of these particu lar pests, but of course in some parts of the world the pest pro blem is more severe . If any user of our eq uip ment and interested in agricu ltural research req u ires an a d d itional rate that we ca n p rod uce i n our laboratory , w e need a l ist o f t h e su bjects i n order that we can evolve the rates s u itable for the work involved . S o if you care to send to me perso nally a list of the problems you may wa nt to solve, we may a lready have a n u mber of rates for treatment or we may be a ble to prod uce them in the not too d ista nt future. For those interested in the ba sic testin g , I a ppe nd here a short l ist of frequencies in order to g ive the sa lient facts . First , we h ave the soil an alysis , and this g ives yo u t he basic o utline, a n d I stress basic o utl ine of the imba lance possibilities of the soil . For more detailed informatio n , this is obtained within the rates sets and s u bsequent research into this work. Agricultural Rates : Soil Analysis
Porosity 33991 C irculation (Air) 664 1 C irculatio n ( Water) 665 1 M a g netic ph en omena (positive) . 303002 M a g n etic phenomena ( N egative) 99000 0 1 Bacterial co u nt 33 1 1 09
99 1 1 1 Moisture M ineral imbalance 5388 77771 Temperature (p lus) Tem perature (minus) 991 1 1 5525 H u mus 662554 Fertility
Next we have the basic parts of pla nts that are not too deta iled but g ive the essentials that are requ ired for a na lysis of the plants. Treatment of Plants : Plant Parts
Roots D " '"' .f. ,..... /+ ,..... - \ I '\U U L;::> ' LU J-1 } ·
Vei n s etc. Tru nk (tree). Tru n k (stem ) . Leaves (evergreen).
2232 223389 2622 82252 72252 988771
23
Sap (tree) . S ap (Generai). Fru its (genera l ) . Flowers (genera l ) . Leaves (genera l ) .
22224 2222776 44453 223391 7761 1 0
We then co m e to the basic types of fertilisers that are used throug hout the world not i nclud i ng the m i n era ls etc. , but the basic m a nures etc. that are used and a n alysed with the aid of the Rad ionic Comp uter. Basic Fertilisers; M anures
Cow Pou ltry I rish Peat G eneral Peat Leaf Mould (genera l ) . Wood Ash ( genera l ) . N itrate of Potas h Hoof and Horn m ixtu re Potassiu m Chloride S l a ked Lime Lime Su per phosphate
445588 44788 1 2222 1 0 442201 44222 1 5500006 44 1 55 1 44981 661 0 1 01 5 5223 33 1 09
Horse 44661 0 Pig 447730 Sphag n u m Moss 3322 1 00 Seaweed 6044 Bone Meal 8443661 Dried B lood 2000555 H o p Man u re 5 5 1 80 N itrate of Soda 443552 N itro Chalk 5 5 1 091 Basic S lag 9 Ammo n i u m S u lphate979761 0
Then we have a very i mportant section which may come i nto the working of agriculture wh ich i s not gen era lly accepted outside science and this is the very harmfu l effect the rad i o-active fa ll-out can have on the healthy plant and I append the ge nera l fal l-out rates a s well call them which ca n be used either for analysis or treatment of p l a nts . 7760 1 9 G e n eral Rad i o Active Fall-O ut Test 8903338 1 General Mag netic Fal l-Out Test 776099 1 0 Genera l Siderea l Radioactivity 302238 Rad ium Stro ntium 90 S r. RIA Iod ine . . . 344551 Pluto n ium Pu. 369 1 1 Krypton Protactinium Pa. 3752 Thori um Tel leri um Te . Ura n i u m 303422 Tita n i u m Tl . 30339 Ora n i u m Ytteri um Y. Bari u m 44009 1 73 Reducing X-ra d i ation use
Ra . 834300 Ie. 834884 Kr. 30936 Tho . 345901 235 8349009 Ore . 934099 5 590773
I n the above tests except for the first three, add 206 to any rate for testing actual fa ll o ut a bsorption of p l a nt life - ex. 30936206. For testing conta m i natio n of foods however, add 347. For testina of conta m i n atio n of m i l k or milk foods , add 908. One exceptio n to the rule is for testing i rrert su bstances such as furn iture , bedd i ng , wa lls, and cloth i ng conta m i natio n . The figure 73 should be added i n FRONT o f the rate - ex Ura n i u m 235 - rate 8349009 when testing inert substa nces i . e . use as 738349009.
24
F u rther to the a n a lysis of the plant, i n ord er to fi nd a n excess or lack of certa in e l e ments, which i n some parts of t he world is i m portant w e append a l ist of the e lements a nd their co m po u nd s : Elements and their Compounds :
A1 Aluminium A l u mi n i u m a l loy A nto mony Sb Ac Acti n i u m Am A mericiu m A Argon Arsenic As B a ri u m Ba B e rke l i u m Bk B e ryll i u m Be B is muth B Bo B o ro n Br B romine Cadmium Cd Caesium Cs Erb i u m Er Eu E uropium F l uorine F G ad o l i n i u m Gd Gallium Ga G erma n i u m G e Au G o ld H afn ium Hf Helium He Holmium Ho H H yd rogen II I ll i n i um Indium L 13 I o d ine I rid i u m lr Fe l ro n (ferrum ) I ro n ( phosphate ) Kr Krypton La L a nth a n u m Lu L uteti um Lead Pb Lime L ith i u m Mg M a g nes i u m Mn M a nga nese Ma M a s uri um Hg M ercu ry Mo M o l ybde n u m Nd N eodymi u m
8349799 1 55 1 0 834909 34489 32246 391 8 8344999 301 1 56 32233 30044 33883 30055 3835 30348 3204 32368 3 1 863 30099 3 1 964 343 1 1 35332 834803 302 772 30022 32267 300 1 1 1 3 1 661 3449 834884 33277 834492 3459 30936 304792 302671 8341 609 31 0034 30 1 33 387755 83455 3743 358909 30642 35600 1
Calcarea carbonica 3402 Calcarea fl uorica 34 1 4 Calci u m Ca 32055 Ca lci u m phosphate Cf 30694 Cal iforn i u m 66556 Carbo n c 388 Ceri u m 3 1 358 Ce r' l Chlorine 381 88 Chro m i u m Cr 3624 Co balt Co 36003 Co l um b i u m 3253 Cb Cop per Cu834 1 0937 4549 Cop per Sulphate Curi u m 6753 Cm Dysprosium 32 1 66 Dy Pal lad i u m Pd 3 1 46 379 1 Ph osphorus p Plati n u m Pt 3 1 099 Pluto n i u m P u 34455 1 Pol o n i u m Po 33984 3454 Potassi u m K Pra seodymium Pr 3 1 459 Protactinium Pa 369 1 1 Rad i u m Ra 834300 Radon 341 86 Rn Rhe n i u m 33075 Re Rhod i u m Rh 3945 Rubid i u m Rb 30 1 37 3 1 762 Samari u m Sm 3032 1 Scand i u m Sc 30734 Selen i u m Se Si 3607 S i l ico n S i lver Ag 8343880 Na 83455 Sod i u m 304 30433 Sod i u m Ch loride Stronti u m S r 302238 834446 Sulphur s 32873 Ta Ta nta l u m 3752 Te Tel l uri um 32965 Tb Terbium 3368 1 Th Tha l l i u m Tho 34590 Thori u m Tm 32469 Th u l i u m Tin S n 834 1 1 84 '-' '
25
Neon N eptu n i u m N ickel N io b i u m N itrogen Osmium Oxygen Z i rco n i u m
Ne Np Ni Nb N Os 0
Z5
Tita n i u m Tungsten U ra n i um U ra n i u m Vanad i u m Xenon Ytterb i u m Zinc
300 1 1 0 42547 3 1 28 354 1 30077 33 1 76 3088 34400 1
Ti
303422 w 32974 u 934099 U235 9349009 v 30523 Xe 30954 Yb 32570 Zn8345009
Further a n a lysis u s i ng Colour rates ca n be used a n d these are listed in o u r n o rmal Rates Book.
Treatment o f Plants and Soils from a distance :
The most co m m o n M ed i a apart from the instru ment and the sample is the a erial photograph and p rovid i n g it is not m utilated or cut in any way it reta i n s its potency - if it is m utilated then its effects will be lessened . Another m ethod i s by u si n g detai led plans - a d rawi ng of the area. I t a ppears that the type of plant to g row, o r to be growi ng i n a g iven area is not critical a s l o ng as a s pecimen i s obtai ned . Th e re seems to be a little co nfusion as to whether a p hotograph take n o n g ro u n d level will do the same th i n g . Experi ments have shown that the best sam ples i n this media in rotation a re aerial photographs which show i n fi ne deta i l - architectu ra l type o f d rawings a re not s o good a n d photogra phs taken from the g round across the field appear to be the least effective. It would seem t h at a g reat n u mber of first thoug hts i n using the method of m a p d owsing i n t h i s manner i s fo r ki lli ng the pests p ure and simple, but remember they a re the cycle of l ife i n a cha i n of life which from it g oes the lowest to the highest a nd therefore if a set of pests attack a set of pla nts there m ust be a reason . Rad ion ics can possibly fi nd that reason . However, fi rstly we may try using the m a p o r p lan to rectify the i m bala nce i n nature i n the area we wish to treat. Now it may be said that if we have a sample of acreage of fields a thou s a nd m i les away how do we know we are not treati ng ten thousand other acres a n other thousand miles away. The an swer i s s i m ple rea l ly. As we have a l ready found every field, every p a rt of a field is d ifferent fro m a nother part of the fie ld depend ing on the gro u nd struct u re , the mag netic structure a n d a thousand and one things that go to make t he sample yo u have d ifferent fro m the sample of you r neig hbo u r. However the basic sample yo u have fro m that field will remain the same, but if yo u take a sa mple from a field i n a nother d i rection it wi l l be q uite d ifferent i n structu re , then of co u rse yo u h ave the m a p or plan and this is a focal point wh ich will restrict o r otherwise the area yo u wish to treat.
26
Then there i s the q uestion of what is termed a Peyre mag netic board crossing first d iscove red by Marcel Peyre around 1 940. These a re mag netic li nes about a m etre a p a rt that are spread a l l a ro u nd the world . It is said that plants growi ng on an i ntersection of these areas g row better than those who d o not. Then we have the e a rth rad iation problem that ca n affect crops and if you look at an aerial photog raph of a fie l d of corn the d i stant area wi l l g row better than other areas. So we n ot o n ly have a deficiency from the physical p oint of view, but we have a m a g netic d eficiency or excess etc. and g radually we b u i ld a p icture i n that treatment of s o i l , thus rad ion ics is not as simple as was first tho u g ht a lthough the principles a re s i m ple we h a ve to ta ke i nto co nsideration nature itself - but com i ng back to m a p d owsing - o n e would the n say - wel l I have a map a n d I have my broadcaster o r com p uter - what do y o u d o? F i rst of a l l there m ust be a l i n k between the photog raph and the i nstrument. Experi m e nts h ave shown that i n some cases you may merely p ut the i n strument on top of the p hotograph and the energy generated with the s pecimen on plate 'A' a nd the i nstru m en t on the photog raph will produce the desired effect. However, i n recent ye ars a specia l sensor has been made which may be placed on a photograph to e n a ble i n effect a n u mber of photographs to be used together. It works thus, we have a p hotog ra ph of an area which you wish to treat; you place yo u r specimen substa nce to be treated on plate A and the m ineral or whatever you wish to treat, fo r exam ple a p l a nt, either o n plate B o r o n th e rating system of the i n strument and set the level to which the broadcasting can take place. If you have the sensor sometimes cal led a scanner or probe, which is a small d evice , this i s pl ugged i n to the i n stru ment a nd placed d i rectly over the area to be tre ated . If the m a p you h ave is a very large one, over half a metre , then you wo uld need two sensors, one at magnetic north and one at mag netic south, these can be set at the edg e of the m a p . Let u s exa m i ne o u r specimen m a p . I t is usually best to try a n d photog ra ph the exact area yo u wish to treat, this i s not always possible and you may o n ly have a g e neral p hotog raph of the are a . Therefore , if you wish to restrict the area which is to b e treated then a l l you n eed to do is to outline the area by d rawing a recta ngle a round it with a b a l l-point pen or someth i ng s i m i la r, as long as each line joins u p com pletely a n d there a re no gaps i n the rectangle then this will fi nd the treatment for that area . If yo u wish to g ive treatment t o what is generally termed as bugs that i s t o say, p l a nt pests , then the sa m e p roced ure takes place except of cou rse yo u d on't want t h e m to g row, yo u want to get rid of them. Th is can be done in stages. As an experi m e nt I suggest yo u first obta in a sample of the creature itself, it is best to have a living one in a container (or a dead one will do). On plate B you pi ace the toxic s u b sta nce to that particu lar pest, and then switch the i nstru ment on after placi ng the sensor over the a rea to be treated . When given continuous treatment over 24 - 48 h o u rs the effects will be felt i n the treated area. It depends on the severity of the s u b stance you place on plate B as to the toxicity or otherwise of the pest - this ca n be a d eterrent in o rder to chase them away as it were and a su bsta nce that is fata l to those pests but not fata l to the pla nt.
27
I n recent experi m e nts it has been fo u nd that p ro p rieta ry weed kil lers fo r exa m p le if placed on p late B and using a map or p l a n of a control led area will remove the weeds with i n a wee k depending on the type of weed killer you use and the a rea you a re i n , b ut in order to get rid of these so-called pests it is of cou rse up to the p e rson to fi nd a n d know the su bsta nces they use best; remember you do not have to use a n y q u a ntity i n th is type of experiment, only a s m a l l a mount placed on plate B a lo n g with the specimen to be era d icated on plate A is a l l that is needed . Eventually, a s the system i m p roves, it will be fo und u seful to those experimente rs need i n g this system - bearing in m in d that this is nat u re's system - it harms noth ing and only req u i res s pecia l i sed e q u i pment wh ich takes a g reat deal of experience t o build . The end p roduct of these res u lts wi l l be better p lants, hea lth ier so il and a better enviro n m e nt with no sid e poll ution of any kind . So in using nature we are assisti ng nature a n d as w e assist nature then it will assist us . S o fa r w e h ave got to th e ana lysis of t he p lant o r t he area for t he minera l s . I n o rd e r to do the best ana lysis say, i n a fie ld of co rn , w e ta ke one p iece of corn a n d find it q uite d ifferent from an other piece of co rn in its rad iationa l p roperties rad ionically. You ca n d o p re l i m i na ry tests by going into any field of co rn (or any other cro p ) and taking sam ples, placi ng them in separate containers ( pa per containers prefera b l y) a nd testi ng each one i n d ivid u a lly. I n a l l cases you will find that every sample i s co m pletely d ifferent - t h i s being the case you will wo nder how on earth we ca n bala nce the whol e . Th u s we have a problem on maki ng an ana lysis of the entire a rea . We h ave to obta i n a sample; a rel ative sample to the whole structure of the field is to sta nd with the sun on the fu rthest side of the field showing towards yo u . Take any s a m p le from that field a n d it will b e representative . I f yo u pick a sa m p le with the sun b e h i nd you then it is not representative , but a single sample taken from the field - each part of wh ich is entirely i n d ivid ual from a nother. Th is has been proven by many researchers over the years , so we m u st remember this when we take a sample fo r analysis o r treatment.
Radionic Treatment of the Soil :
First we need to take the ana lysis of a piece of soi l , you can of co urse g et any o ld sample at a n y time of the day, b ut if l ike everyth ing else you go by the rules of nature, you wi l l g et better resu lts . When taki n g you r sample and ass u m i n g yo u have a specimen area of say 5 a cres in the i mmed iate vicin ity, from yo ur a na lysis yo u can place on plate B of the instru ment yo u r rem edy o r trace element, o r vvhatever is lacking; or you may set it o n the frequency di als of t h e co mputer leavi ng the ievei at t he lowest range. This treatment should be contin ued for at least 3 to 4 days i n order to have any decisive effects. After this time, if yo u are doing it on a p u rely experimenta l basis you ca n take a nother sample of soil from this area and retest it. If you ca n cease fo r one d ay a nd re peat the experiment - remembering we a re d o i ng it merely as an experi ment at this stage - yo u wil l fi nd conti n u ing improvement in that area.
28
There wi ll of co u rse be d ra m atic fa i l u res - I leave these to be fou n d out by you . Ass u m i n g you a l ready have a crop of plants i n that field a n d you wish to treat t h e m ; after yo u have d o ne the an a lysis then place a sample of the part of the plant yo u wish to treat (or the whole) a n d place this on plate A; you then treat this plant in e xactly the same way a s yo u d id the so i l . You ca n either use the rates system to correct the i m bala nce o r place the i m ba l a nces on plate B . The s a m e th i ng occu rs except that the treatment sho uld contin ue for 7 days witho ut a break giving a 2-day pause between that and the next 7 days. I n some cases where the magnetic a reas a re favou rable the times fo r treatment can be red uced ; in a reas of u nfavou rable co nd itions then longer periods a re needed and this can o n ly be done by experi mentati o n . In all plant treatments yo u can use e ither level A or level B ; if the situation has been a long sta n d i ng one, yo u can use the h igher p l a nes and having g iven a series of treatments in this manner yo u can then watch the t reatment and g a i n knowledge fro m experi ments. It will be remembered that every part of the world has its own pec ulia rities; its own fa ll-out, mag netic a cceleration or d eceleration , the general state of the weather a n d the type of soi l ; therefo re no hard and fast rules can be pl aced in o rd e r to give you 1 00 % resu lts as soon as you switch the instrument o n . It is essentia l that you do p re l i m i nary tests fi rst. The cycle is co m plete . Many readers will ach ieve thei r own resu lts of experiments thus g ivi n g more force to this i nteresting field of Ag ricultu ra l Radio nics . I n recent years a certa i n amo u nt of experi mentation i n the treatment of plants a n d a n imals with the use of the Radionic Computer has been undertaken with very satisfactory resu lts . The treatment of a n i mals is a foregone conclusion beca use we treat them i n exactly the same way as h u man bei ngs. I have a g reat n u m ber of letters that ask me more or less repetitively if one can k i l l i n sects or pests from certa i n crops . However, to this I must categorically say No , because rad io n ics operates on purely nat ura l waveform and will not k ill anyth ing . Therefore we have to i ntroduce a bio logical rad iational deterrent. Over the last n u m ber of yea rs it wi ll have been seen that the bala nce of nature was i n severe d a nger of being upset beca use the fi rst tho ught of the scientists was to d estroy the so-cal led pests of va rious crops, but we tend to fo rget that the endless chain of food throug hout nature is its own d eterrent. The refore if we wish to have a hea lthy crop of a given type then we m ust make s u re that they a re hea lthy and i n being hea lthy will act as a se lf-d eterrent to pests. M o dern pesticides tend to wea ken the piant structure and the soil structure killing m uch of the bacteria a n d o rganism that go to make a healthy plant. Yo u have o n ly to g o to any ag ricu ltu rist or horticulturist and find that the conti nual spraying of a g iven p a rt of a field or greenho use has weakened the plant to such an exte nt that ce rta in d iseases and pests will attack each succeed ing generation of plants g rown i n that s o i l . And having u pset the balance of nature , nature tends to re-adjust itself.
29
I n England , fo r exa m ple, the widespread use of pesticides kills off very m an y type s o f insects etc . , wh ich are the staple food for s ome birds. O bviously t he birds then re-adj ust themselves and beg i n , in order to keep themselves a l ive , to eat the b u d s fro m the fru it trees red ucing the eventual cro p o n the trees. If we care to j u st stay awhile and th in k a bo ut it, we could have a natura l environ ment with no pesticides a nd use the biologica l structure of nature to re-adj ust itself, and then we need not fea r t h e microbes and organisms that tend t o d estroy o u r crops. We h ave rea l ly o n ly to read a little a bout the food cha in of nature from the s m a l lest to the h ig h est and the com plete cycle a ro u nd again to fi nd that we need only o n e link to be broken and nature tends to throw o ut other l i n ks to re-adj ust itself. I n England we g row a great many to mato plants. The plant beg ins to g row a sturd y stem and in between leaves occasionally a nother stem \AJill beg i n to g row . !f we l et these extra lim bs g row the eventual fru it yield will be many small fruits of not very g ood q ua l ity, so we have to take off the side-shoots, a s we ca ll them, and have one m a i n shoot or bra nch going stra ig ht to the top thus g iving us large fruits , but not quite so many. B ut no m atter how we tend to take these sid e-shoots out, nature will try to rectify itself by send ing s hoots out somewhere else and u ntil such ti me as the pla nt ceases to fu nction, once it has borne fruit. This is a very simple exa m p le of co u rse a n d shows us how nature tends to assert itself a n d I have no need here to go into what has already been said and shown on television and films of the wide pattern of nature we may encounter. Rad ionics may j u st be the answer to m a n i p u latin g the d i mensional aspect of correcting or g uid ing nature ; there is a g reat deal of d ifference between g u i d i ng nature and destroyi ng a lin k in nature from the use of h a rmfu l chemicals . As stated e a rl ier, I have a very larg e garden and we never u se chemicals or pesticides of any kin d ; nor have we had pests or d iseases in o u r g a rd en. We have years when there m a y be less fruit or more fru it and so o n , but we d o not have d i seases merely because we o bserve nature , rotate cro ps a n d use rad i o nics when everywhere else, the fa rmers , the gardeners , are complaining of this d iseases or that d isease or so m ething else, and it is q u ite possible that if yo u , the reader, are interested in the a g ricu ltu ra l side of rad io n ics there is much work to be d one, but the golden rule must be l a id from the fou ndation upwards; Yo u ca n not b uild a h ouse o n sand witho ut a food fo undation - so yo u m u st have a good fou n dation fo r all yo ur work. So t h row away all you r pesticides and chemicals and thi ngs of a similar nature. U s e o n ly natu re's own remed ies. Some of the so-ca l led old fashioned ways of kee p ing the g a rden or farm free fro m d isease may be quaint today but were very p rod uctive vvhen they were used , and this trend of using the oid fa shioned methods is g ra d ually creeping back i nto the vocabulary of fa rmers everywhere .
30
I n many cases the reason for crop fai l u re apart fro m a n im a l pests is lack of m i nerals and so i n the soil d ue to a n im balance in the so i l . Remember that healthy p l a nts wi l l keep ravages of pests at bay by themselves. If a p l a nt is weak then nature w i l l change its com position by d e stroying and return i ng it to the soil in one way or a nother. So in ord e r t o o bta in stro ng and hea lthy pla nts only t he natura l methods of g rowing wil l g ive the best res u lts. O n ly by observing natures rules wil l the best results take place , and remember that weakened plants not only do not prod uce good crops b ut will not prod uce good food . So it is better to experi ment with Radion ics that is a p u rely natura l fo rm of rectifying n ature's fau lts o bta i n ing the best resu lts. With the Rad ionic Co m puter and its use in Agriculture we may do two basic t h i ngs . First we can d o a n a na l ys i s of the soil and second ly to g ive treatment to the s o i l . We h ave over the years been col lecting more decisive information from aro u nd t h e world and this has been co m p i led in our study of Ag ricu ltura l Rad ionics . Apart from the d irect m i n e ra l content of the soi l we have a lot o f other factors t h at occur and this w il l g ive n ew d epth to the s ubject. S uch factors as porosity, the d eg ree of moisture , the air a nd water circulation , rad iation such as atomic fa l l-out, chemica l fa l l-out, etc the a m o u nt of warmt h, the fertility potentia l , plus other u n known factors, bacteria, bi-d yn a m ic l ife , h umus and so o n . These are the factors that Radio nics can d iscover with a h i g h degree of accu racy. We h ave to note that in d ifferent parts of the world res ults wi l l be vastly d iffe rent so it is not necessary fo r us here to go into deta ils of specimen a nalysis etc. because an an alysis from on e p a rt of a field may be d ifferent from a nother part of a field so a l so the a n a lysi s of one cou ntry will be completely d ifferent fro m a nother co u ntry. B ut yo u can obta i n a genera l pictu re for a g iven area and by having a good bala nce i n the soi l , and then it is possible to grow germ-free and virus-free crops. Of co u rse there i s a lways the problem of pests of va rious kinds and it is possible to clear these pests or to make them h a rm less by giving the soil its co rrect p roportions i n the analysis stage. The soil treatment however we can find fro m a list of m a n u res etc exactly what is lacking , we ca n then p ut this back into the soi l . By d iscoveri ng what is lacki n g we can then broadca st i n the normal broadcasting m a n ner, missing chemica l s , biodynamic m i nerals and so on. There are of cou rse a g reat n u mber of elements and cosmic i nfl uences and it is up to the operator the n to d iscover what is req u i red and g ive it treatment. It is possible with a g iven plan to do a co mplete ana lysis of the entire plant with o n ly a s m a l l spec1 m en , and if we use the method outli ned one may treat one plant or a whole field of plants. Another method is to b road casi io a g iven area the deficient mi nerai etc that may be lacking in the p a rticular p a rt of the soi l . A simple method of broad casting is as fo l lows: Select a sma l l area for experi menta l p urposes. This can be anyth ing fro m a few square feet to a few a cres. Obta i n some cop per rods - these may be copper t u b i n g , copper rod s, an yth in g as long as it is co pper. At each co rner of the selected p a rt push a copper rod into the soil so that one metre only is protruding out of the so i l .
31
Ta ke a specimen of a plant with i n that area a n d test it o n the Co mp uter for lack of m i nera l s a n d other trace elements etc i n the soi l . Then broadcast the minerals or tra ce elements etc that may be m issing once 24 hours aro u nd the clock, once every 4 o r 5 d ays a n d g ive it a break for another 2 or 3 d ays i n betwee n . It is best to use th i s m ethod w h e n the moon i s waxing , that is to say when i t is getting towa rd s fu ll moon as better res ults were o bta ined with crops at this time. If yo u wish to broadcast to a separate part of the field co mpare the two and you will fi n d that the same broadcasti ng tech nique from the same specimen will have effect. The a re a yo u have stacked out will obtai n the best a n d m a rked res u lts. O bviously t h i s will not occur over-night but may ta ke some weeks, but after this time the d ifference b etween the a rea you have stacked outsid e of this, with the same cro ps of cou rs e , will be marked . Different crops will req u i re longer or shorter periods of broadcastin g , but as a genera l g u ide the harder the cro p , such as woody types and root crops will n eed longer tha n corn or similar crops g rown a bove the gro u n d . The scope o f Radionics as you may beco me aware is a very wide o n e a n d i n m a ny cases m ay bri n g o ut t h e i m agi native a rtist i n t h e user, as l o n g as we keep the whole thi n g in perspective and use it as a reg ular scientific project and not lose sig ht of the fi nal object of our research . The t er m ' research' ten d s t o g ive a n amateur us er of Rad ionics a menta l picture of a l a bo ratory fi l led with bubbling bottles of curious s ubsta nces that we see d e picted in most so-called research laboratories. I n fact nothing is further fro m the trut h . The user of the Radionic in strument is working with nature in a neat, cleanly cut syste m , th ro u g h which self- expression may abound and the researchers may be a s w i l d as one wa nts them to be, or as precise as w e feel they should b e . It is o n ly by d o i ng wild researches at times that we find our u n usual th ings, for insta nce , wo uld we sti l l have the telephone, television and all the other m i racles of tod ay's l iving if pio neers had not wo rked on their own ideas and systems that were not the accepted . Rad i o n ics to the scientist of to morrow is what the tel ephone was when it was i nve nted , a n d a lthough having 70 or 80 years behind it, in the future , science would gain more g ro u n d . Radi o n ics is a true science i n its own rig ht even though it deals with the known a s well as the u n known theory. It has th us been my i ntention to offer yo u , the reader with a spark of i nterest that will bring forth many more pioneers for the future not only of Rad ion ics but a l so of science in genera l . I do n o t know whether t h e rod a n d pend u l u m were used i n co n nection with a g riculture p ri o r to 191 4, but i mmed iately after, when there was a reviva l of dows i n g , one often h e a rd mention o f its use fo r various agricultura l purposes. S i nce then Ag ricultura l Rad i o n ics has been co nsidered developed and used . Rad ionics i n the form that we know it is - as fa r as we a re aware is now reaching its 90 1h b i rthday. During th is time there have been many researchers a nd m a ny new methods of using Rad io nics to the betterme nt of health and healing of the i n d ivid u a l .
32
Over the past 30 yea rs I have constructed many p ieces of apparatus that are i n u se in every co u ntry i n the world by practitioners a n d laymen alike and it is d ue to the contin u ed interest of these pioneers that we have been able to prod uce new method s, which in their u ltimate effect are far-reach i n g , a n d which wil l , in the futu re g ive us a co m plete pict u re of man and his enviro n ment. It has been known fo r many yea rs that every person is d ifferent from another in that every blood sample taken exhibits its own pecu liar p henomena as far as Rad ionics is concerned . These facts have g rown into more facts over the years u ntil we fi nd that man is not o n ly a n ind ividual but he is a co m p l ete u n iverse in himself- the m icrocosm in the macrocosm. This universe that man is is interlinked with other u n iverses - oth er i nd ivid ual s - merely by rad iational phenomena. The longer we look at life the more com p licated it a ppears to be, u ntil at this po i nt of time we are on the t h reshold of n ew realm s of tho ught, new ideas of the u n ive rse , new facts that ca n not be denied. Rad i o n ic broadcasting a n d d iag nosis of p lant, animals or man is known to be without a time-space co nti n u u m , in other word s , it takes no passage of time and no a mo u nt of what we ca l l space to co mplete the cycle of events . Whilst we are on the s u bject of cycles, it is al so known that Rad ion ics ca n trace the cycl ic periods of any p a rt of living o r non-livi n g m atter. Not u ntil recently have we been able to d iag nose the physical and menta l selves and a l so been able to treat the astral and spiritual selves by the phenomena of Radionic B roadcasting , but whi lst it has been known that every single person has a Perso nal G e nera l Rate of his o r her own , it has come to light that every person a lso has, apart from their cyclic period s, a Personal Astral Rate and a Personal Spiritual P ro gression Rate and other rates on a higher plane. Resea rch i nto a n d exam ination of the higher pla nes of existence can be bought a bout by the use of the instrument, the Rad ionic Ana lytical Com p uter, Mark 2 . Tod ay w e l ive in a fast-movi ng world , but despite the swiftness of everything , if we stop to th i n k a n d med itate a wh i l e , we shall come to know that great th ings are ind eed poss i b l e . O ut of the in ventio ns of Man we are using some of the by-products of research to im prove the u n usual method s as ap p lied to Radionics . It is a field of i nteresti ng a n d wo rthwh i le research that can take you th rough a l ifetime, and even if yo u l ive to be 200 years of age, there will sti l l be more to learn . Of a l l the branches of o u r a rt, Rad ion ics i n its ap p l ication to foods and to a g riculture is d esti ned to be the most popular. I n its latter form , (the theme of our stud y) it is of interest to m i l lions of people whether engaged in fa rm ing, gardening, and the cultivation of w i n e s o r fo restry. The fa rmer ta king the word in its wid est sense is d a i l y confro nted by an i nfin ity of problems, most of wh ich can be solved by Radio nics and we ca nnot ad vise h i m too strongly to use the instru ment.
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To b eg i n wit h , h e has to study the q uestion of water supply, for water is essential t o the farm, the g a rden a nd pasture land. Often enough it is with i n his reach without knowing it. The fa rmer should also have some knowled ge of food s , what to g ive his a n i m a l s so that he will get m uch better res ults and effect considera ble eco no m ies. In m ention in g foods it is found that certa i n vegetables conta i n lim e, i ro n , iodine etc. i n app reciable q ua ntities that give them pronounced thera peutic a n d a l i menta ry p ro perties. These can be appreciated by the method of samples. N atura l ly, adj u stment has to be fol lowed by the ta king of coefficients in order to g et an idea of the approxi m ate content. As a m atter of i nterest, the Hazel a p pears to conta i n gold , l i me and s i lver. The B eech has been fo u n d to conta in copper a n d the Oa k., i ro n but in i nfi n itesimal q uantities. In our enlightened age it is beco m i ng constantly aware to us that we live i n a world of moving , seeth i n g atoms both fro m withi n and without. We l ive i n a U n iverse of o u r own m i n d s a nd bod ies apart from the U niverse itself through space. Over the centuries m a n has experi mented , some th rough mistaken ideas, some through rel i g i o n , and others thro u g h fear and superstition. It was n ot u n ti l th i s centu ry had beg u n that a new era i n t he understa n d i ng o f m a n came i nto being . Very l ittle about t he h ig her self and t he i n ner working of t he h u man bei n g or th e living plant or l iving a n i ma l had been achieved previo us t o this centu ry. It is through the u ntiring efforts of researchers i n va rious parts of the wo rld that we have today a new system that is enjoying a new popularity unheard of in the h i sto ry of h u man understa n d i n g . From t h e outset l e t me stress that it i s not a cure-all for all illnesses. It wi ll not d iscover everyt h i ng . As t i m e goes on the tech n i q ues are beco m i ng perfected and have been perfected u ntil today we have very efficient eq u i pment and so s i mple to use that even the a mateu r with no p revious knowledge may u nfo ld the secrets of nature without a pre-tech n ica l ed ucatio n . I f such a science i s to be popular it m u st be proved to be of va lue and Radio nics has proven to be of va lue for the past 70 or 80 years . S i nce 1 947 w e at B ruce Copen Laboratories have p ioneered many tec hniq ues a n d researches, u ntil tod a y we have fine eq u i pment that is used i n a l l corners of the wo rl d . Now it i s all very well expla i n i ng to the reader all about this fine eq u i pment, but what do we know of the backgro u nd lead ing to its eval uation and of understa nd ing a little more about ou rselves? The term Rad ion ics is a corru ption of two wo rd s , Rad io a nd Electro n ics , and it is not o n ly Radio and Electron ics but also a basis for Rad iesthesia that is the use of the pend u l u m i n the d etection of unseen Rad iations.
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The idea that we a re a moving mass of atom s wh ich grow as we g row a nd d ie w h e n we d ie a n d carry o n throughout nature fo rever i s not a new one and is based o n p roven scientific fact. Radi on ics however has taken it a l ittle fu rther in establishing the nature of the self, of the lower self, the higher self and the spiritual self along with various pheno m en a . T h u s we will become i n itiated i nto a new miracle science that will ta ke ove r from the m o re d a ngerous sciences, a n d crude sciences that operate i n the world tod ay. B efore the con clusion of this work on Agricu ltura l Radion ics, I would l i ke to g ive some short expl a n ation of the use of Rad io n ics as a science to detect the little k nown rad iation of the U n iverse in which we live and which is with i n us. Rad iatio n i s the science of rad iation d etectio n wh ich uses the extra sensory p e rception of the o p e rator and a utomatic i nstruments of wh ich the Rad ionic Computer is b ut o n e . Modern Rad i o n ics i s a combi nation of the older Rad iesthesia (d etection with the pend u l u m ) and the more modern semi-automatic i nstrument ( Rad ionics ) . T h e s e i n strum ents w i l l ca rry o u t a co mplete d iag nosis ( a n a lysis) of the patient; not o n ly from the p hysical b ut a lso from the menta l , a u ric and spiritual planes also, fu rthermore it will d iscover deficiencies i n vitami n s , m i nera l s , tissue salts, remed ies a n d m uch more . It will d iscover the root ca u se of any a ilment i n m a n , animal or plant i n the m i n i m u m of time . It will d iscover an illness before it becomes pathologically appare nt - fo r i n stance i n the com mon cold - we can detect this u p to 5 d ays i n adva n ce b efo re it comes i n the u s u a l fo rm of stuffy nose , sore throat etc. We ca n be i n a position to g ive p reventative med icine. Of late research has shown that we can d etect a n d a n alyse poisons i n water, foods etc a nd d i scover fal l-o ut from atomic work etc. I n the treatment we use on ly natura l method s of healing such as B iochem ics, H o moeo pathics , Bota n ies and sim ilar fo rms of treatment . There i s no d o u bt that as yo u become enlightened as the result of using Rad io n ics , l ife will only respond to natural forces and not to many of the harmful c h e m icals and d rugs fo rced u pon us these d ays . O n ce you have become awa re , then you wil! start living a nd e m ploying an i nterest ing and rewa rd ing existence by knowi ng of the U n iverse that i s with i n us. The i n stru ment i s l i ke no other in existence of that I am certain since it is u n l i ke the co nve ntion a l mach i n e i nto which we must p ut d ata before obtaining the ca lculated res u lt. The Rad ion i c Co m puter makes an analysis fro m a simple speci men o n ly a n d does n o t req u i re pre-knowledge g ive n i nto the circu itry. This tru ly asto n i s h i ng i nstrument will cove r a ny field of i nvestigation to which the o perator m ay ca re to p ut his mind, not only to name, but to man ufacture electro nic horno eo pathic type remed ies an d g ive rad ionic-broad casti ng therapy at any t ime the operator wishes .
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The Comp uter i s a h a n d m a d e product req u i ri n g the utmost del icacy i n m a n ufactu re a t all stages. T h e g reater part of its usefu lness is i n its automatic F R t u n i n g , Rad io n ic Thera py, Reflective Ana lysis, Ho moeopath ic type man ufacture of remedies a n d the u n i q ue auto matic feature i n making u n p roven remed ies by the t ra nsferen ce method . No other i n stru ment ca n possibly be inco rporated with so many s im p l e but very accurate and effective study features. We l ive i n a new and vital stage of Man where i n the a uto mated machine takes over fro m us in the more repetitive a n d compl icated proced ures, once taking months, weeks, d ays to ach ieve b ut now red uced to seconds a nd m i l liseconds. To do th is work M a n h a s i ntrod uced a mach i ne called t he Comp uter. S i nce it was i nvented , there have been many d ifferent kinds d esig ned , some of wh ich save many hours of m a n powe r every week. Basica l ly the com puter has a s pecial lang uage of its own a nd i n order to get i nfo rmation out of it, the i nformation m u st be fed i nto its memory banks, wh ich are often in the fo rm of reel s of perforated ta pe. No o rthodox type of com puter ca n g ive yo u the a n swer to a pro b l e m u nless the i nformation fo r it to ca lcu late u pon is first fed i n to it - this i s called pro g ra m m i n g . However the Rad ionic Com puter is q u ite d ifferent since i t does not need t o be p ro grammed beforehand , and its scope is far beyond that of any other s i m i l a r i n strument yet mad e . The Radionic Com puter m a y be used i n very many d ifferent s pecialised fields and i n doing so, it will o pen up a new facet of ed ucation for not only will i m m ed iate d ata come to light but fut u re resea rch wil l g ive i nfo rmation fo r many yea rs to com e . I t h a s been sai d that this pa rticu lar i n stru ment is many years ahead of its t im e - we h o pe the operato r wi ll a cknowledge this fact and we hope yo ur data will help people a l l o ver the wo rld . i n a i i fie ids of wo rk with such a piece of a pparatus the basic use fo r it is i n th e d iag nostic and therapeutic aspects of M a n , Animal and Plant, by analysing not on ly the physical b ut the menta l , a u ric a n d s p iritual p lanes of existence. To the Doctor a n d healer one will know how t he scope w ill affect t heir wo rk. To the Agriculturi st the res ults of the co m p uter may be appl ied towa rds that pa rticular study. To t h e Geolog i st, th en w e have a nother scope - everyone will use the i n strument to h is or her benefit, d e p e n d i ng on the pre-knowledge obtainable.
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The Radionic Computer Analysis:
The Rad ionic Com p uter has more than two million possible co m binations of rates, ra nging fro m the p hysical to the spiritual, and withi n its ranges lays the secret of a l most every p ro blem that may be con nected with h u man , a n i mal a n d vegeta ble l ife . Therefore we have a tool that will fin d the g reatest accuracy a nd cause a nd cu re of an y g iven p ro b l e m . The accuracy is m uch g reater than that of any p revio u s i n stru m en t and depend ing on the sensitivity of the operator - 1 00% is u s u a l . T h e C o m puter a n a lysis in the medical a nd p sychologica l sense g ives a co m plete p ictu re fro m every angle. It can of co u rse g ive a variety of tests from the s i m ple to the co m plex, b ut h ere we outl ine the general and psycho log ica l tests . When d o i n g any a na lysis by this m ethod one m u st always a llow for age and the patient's own sensitivity to treatment. The mea s u re ment for over and under fu nction i ng is g ive n as a Positive fo r over-functio n i n g and a Negative for under fu nction i n g with the N eutra l as normal functioning . Fro m this we measure in percentages the d eg ree positive or negative from the normal and depend i ng on the d eg ree of percentage we ca n assess the whole analysis. The ph ysical pa rt of the Co mp uter a na lysis i nclud es all m uscle, tissue, s keleton and nervo u s system s etc. - in fact the whole body structure , includ ing lack of or excess of; vita m i n s , m i nerals a n d trace elements etc. The physical analysis is very a ccurate and may be reco nstructed by the practitioner to fo rm a n overa l l op inion of the patient. The idea is to g ive an internationally acceptable method of Rad ionic Co mputer a n alysis, reco g nisable by practitioners a l l over the world . Every d isord e r, n o matter whether it is physica l , psychological or spirit u a l has its i n itial ca use a n d is most importa nt. The psychological aspect of the personal ity ca n help or h i nder ones actions and d ecisions in d aily l ife , a nd an y form of thera pe utics. In this con nectio n , by ca reful se lection of the positive and negative elements in the analysis, one may g ive g u id a nce , a nd in d ue co u rse , overco me d ifficulties wh ich othervvise m ight not h ave been a ppare nt by n o rm al method s of analysis. The treatment stresses the natural way of hea ling and with its a id one may use the person a l rates fo r rad ion ic broadcasting , or one may use any selected therapy as i n d icated by the a na lysis. Every com monly used natural therapy is listed and the res u lts of the a n a lysis g ive the best treatments in order of preference and possible effectiveness As you may be aware, the cornpleteness of such an analysis i s way a h ead of a n y othe r known m ethod , fo r not o n ly do we make a com plete analysis of the whole being a s an i n d ivid u a l , but we can d iscover the ca use and know the effects of tre atment i n advance; in many cases, we ca n fo recast the breakdown in tissue etc. i n advance.
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This m i g ht appear to be a n exaggeration , b ut if we look at the situation i n a sensi ble way, it i s q uite possible. No ill ness just switches on or off no matter what the p hysical sympto ms m i g ht at first appears to be. Every ill ness, s light or severe , ta kes its t i me to a ppear as physical or menta l sym pto ms. Therefore, i n whatever parts affected there is a loweri ng or rising of the normal cel l activity. I n some cases this lets in bacteria , virus etc. that fu rther d e p letes , or i n cases of, say, fever, aggravates the co n d itio n . But long before physical sym pto ms a ppear, th e backgro u nd fo r that i l l ness is laid . By the u se of the Rad i on ic Computer this under-lying ca use ca n be detected at a ve ry early stage and p reventative mea s u res can be taken . L i kewise i n the case of pl ants or a n i mals , we may analyse the basic cell structure if req u i red and i n so d o i ng we d o not have to have special eq u ip ment neither do we have to experi m e nt on living beings whether they be plant or a n i m a l . The whole procedu re is based on existing waveforms g iven o ut by the subjects u nder test. This method employs o n ly the natura l forces in all a n i mate and i na n i mate things and th us may be the med i u m for searching the Universe for the beg in n i ng of life itself u s i n g no other tool than the Rad ionic Computer. Only those who work with these i n stru ments will appreciate the type of work they a re underta ki ng . They are the scientists of the future - l iving and working on the b ri n k of knowledge of the Source of Life . They will be using no com pl icated e q u i p ment; it can be understood and mastered in a very short time, and it will give a l ifetime of service and i nterest i n the field of Ag ri cu ltura l Radionics.
Cornish Divining in 1 80 8 :
Whilst writing t h i s I have just been re-read ing one o f m y treasured books: 'A To u r through Cornwa ll i n Autumn 1808' by Revd . Richard Warner published in 1 809 and n ow probably u nobta i n able today. Toward s the end of his delig htful d escri pti o n of the to ur, the a uthor swells awhile on the subject of d ivini n g . He m e ntions that he i s fu lly expected t o fi nd among the miners of Cornwa ll many superstitious notion s , but the o n ly remna nts of superstition that he d iscovered a mongst them were the careful absta i n ing from whistling when underg ro u n d , and a fi rm belief i n the efficacy of the Diving Rod . H e agreed that the vi rtues of the Divi n i ng Rod were acknowledged by other m i ners besides those of Co rnwal l , fo r he had heard them positively asserted a mong the m i ners e m ployed i n the mines of the Mend i p . Those m i n e rs he said "Wo u ld , a s soon as doubted the power o f g u n powder i n blasting the rock, a s the i nfl uence of this magica l wa nd in po i nt ing out the i nvisi bie co u rse of m i n era l vei ns" . The a uthor stated that 'The D ivi n i ng Rod was i ntrod uced i nto this cou ntry d u ri ng Queen Anne's reign by a S pa n iard named Ca ptai n Ribeira , vvho deserted fro m the service of his own co untry and was made Captai n Co m mand ant of the garriso n of Plymouth ' .
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The efficacy which it a ppeared to possess in his hands made it a pop u l a r i n strument i n a l l t h e E n g l i s h m i n i n g cou ntries and a n i m pl icit faith accompanied its use , to those accidental d iscoveries wh ich it was i mpossible co uld not occasionally o ccur i n d istricts i ntersected by lodes, to persons who tried the cou ntry with it, served to i ncrease its cred it; while the d isappo intments, or m i stakes which more fre q uently a ttended its operati on , were ever p ut to the accou nt that the d iving rod being i rreg u larly made, i mp roperly held or the person ca rrying it not being the one i n whose h a n d s it would act. Who ca n res ist a smile at such an ingen ious arg ument? What an ornam ent was lost to the legal p rofession when the a uthor chose the ch u rch. He g ives however d u e cred it to Pryce , whom h e describes as one of the most scientific and experi enced m i ne rs in Co rnwa ll a nd I g ive h i s acco u nt of the co nstruction and use of the rod . The rods formal ly used were shoots of one yea r's growth that g rew fo rked ; but it is fo und that two separate shoots tied together with some vegetable s u bsta nce as pack thread will a n swer rather better than those which g row forked as their s hoots being seldom of e q u a l len gth , or bigness, they do not handle as wel l as the others which may be chosen of the same size. The sh ape of the rod thus prepared wi ll be between two and a half a n d three foot long. They m ust be tied together at their root end s the smaller being held i n the hands. Hazel rod s cut in the wi nter such as are used for fish i n g rod s and kept u ntil they a re d ry do best, tho u gh where these are not at hand , apple tree suckers , rod s from peach trees, cu rra nts or the oak , tho ug h g reen w ill answer tolerably wel l . I t is d ifficult t o d escri be the manner of holding and using the rod ; i t should be held i n the hands the s m a l l e r ends lying flat or para l lel to the horizo n , and the upper p a rt i n an elevati on , n ot perpe ndicular to it, but at seventy degrees. The rod being pro perly held by those with whom it will answer, when the toe of the rig ht foot is within the semi-d ia meter of the piece of meta l or other s ubject of the rod , it will be repel led toward the face and conti n ue to be so wh ile the foot is kept fro m touching or being d i rectly over the subject i n which case it will be sensibly a nd stro n g ly attracted and be d rawn q uite down . The rod should be fi rm ly a n d stead ily grasped , fo r if, when it has beg u n to be attracted , there be the least i magi nable jerk or o p position to its attraction it will not move anymore u ntil the hands a re opened and fresh g rasp ta ken. The stronger the g rasp the l ivelier the rod moves provided the g rasp is steady and of an equal strength . The observation is very n ecessary as the operation of the rod in many hands is d efeated p u rely by a j erk or cou nter actio n , and it is fro m thence co ncl uded there is no rea ! efficacy i n the rod , o r t h at the person who holds it wants the v i rtue; whereas by a proper atte ntion to this circu mstance in using it. Five perso n s in six have the virtue as it is cal led , that is, the rod 'vVill a ns'vver in their hands. When the rod i s d rawn down , the hands must be o pened , the rod ra ised by the middle fi n gers , a fresh g rasp taken and the rod held again i n the d i rection d e scri bed .
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A l ittle practice by a person i n earnest about it, will soon g ive the necessa ry a d ro itness i n the use of the i n stru ment, but it must be particu larly o bserved that as o u r a n ima l spi rits a re necessary to this process, so a man ought to hold the rod with the same i nd ifference a nd in attention to or reasoning a bo ut it or its effects as he holds a fis h i ng rod or a wa lking stick.
If the m i nd is occupied by doubts, reaso n i ng or any oth er operation that e n g a g es the a n i m a l spi rit, it wil l d ivert this power fro m bei ng exerted in this process i n which thei r in stru menta l ity is absolutely necessary, fro m thence i t is that the rod con stantly an swers i n the hands of peasant, women and chi l d ren who hold it simply without p uzzlin g their m in d s with doubts or reason i ng . Whatever may be thought of t h i s o bservation it is a very j ust one and of g reat consequence in the practice of the rod . All
Divi n i n g Rod s i n a l l hands answer to springs of water.
I hope this l ittle a rticle written so long ago has a ro used some spark of interest i nto the virtues of Dowsi ng that is still being used today. There have been many books and ill ustrations going back i nto h istory of the m e rits a n d· o ri g i n s of the power of the rod . Good books on the subject are The E l ements of Dows i n g ' by H e n ri de France, and a new and rational treatise of Dowsing p resented by Pierre Beasse. To those read ers i nterested in more knowledge of Dowsing I would reco m me n d my book ' Dows i ng For You' which I wrote in 1 975 . In my introd uction I wrote"We tend to t h i n k of Dowsing as an ancient g ift fo r d iscovering water by some o ccu lt o r mysterious mea n s , and on looking back through h i sto ry we can not wonder at it" . There is no d o u bt that the history of water d ivi n ing has had its successes and fai i u res , its giants and its pio neers . Over the cent uries it h a s been utilised for many va ri o us types of work, b ut it is not until this century that the d ivining rod was used to a n y extent to solve problems con nected with m i nerals, ores, hidden treasure, m issing people and a lot more . Some say that water dowsing i s a facto r of I ntuition - whatever that might be i n this context - others say it i s a m uscular phenomenon and others say i t i s the wo rk of G o d , while there a re dozens of other theo ries that have been p ut fo rwa rd over the centu ries. If you read the fo regoing a rticle you will see that h u n d reds of years ago the t i n m i ners of Cornwa l l used the dowsi ng rod s to locate new so u rces of the m i nera l , t h e n t h e lead m i ners d id t h e s a m e , but we can still go back fu rther i nto histo ry t o note how the rod has been developed i nto today's science. One ca n easily i magine the i m portance of the dowsing rod i n agriculture and fo r the provision of water for towns and facto ries . No matter what a nyo ne says about the accuracy or othe rwise o f the dowsing rod , certa i n fo lk h ave an i n born ability to use it, while those not so sensitive ca n a cq ui re this ability and o nce you have it yo u never lose it.
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But, what does the dowsing rod do? It moves u p , d own or stays immobile a ccord i ng to the co n ditions at the time; it is held under tension i n the hands - but one t h i ng is very ce rtai n that o nce the rod d ecides to move - it moves and nothing can sto p it - u n l i ke the pend u l u m which ca n be stopped by thought alone. Stro n g m e n have tried all kinds of gadgets to retard the movement of the d owsing rod without ava i l - the best one ca n descri be the movement of the rod is that the move m e nt, being very sudden, is l ike a mysterious h a nd which grasps the end of t h e rod and either moves it up or down, even at times when one is practising on somet h i ng that i s known to be present, the shock of the movement is so sudden that o n e wond ers where the power comes fro m . M y experience with t h e rod has proven without d oubt that i t does 1."/0rk - this i n t u rn l e d m e o n to dowsing with the pend u l u m , to Rad iesthesia and to Radio n ics. Rad io n ics is ind eed nature's miracle science - its scope is u n l i m ited and fascin ating to the extre m e , and I hope you will conti n u e to research it for many years to co me. If we ca n understa nd that little bit more of the wo rkings of nature, then this s m a l l work will have contri buted to the readers understan d i ng of the nature of t hings and of the ways to spread the word to others , to erase p roblems and help us to have a better a n d m o re hea lthi e r world through nature's way.
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