Magnetic field therapies – the future of medicine

The electromagnetic smog that is thickening around us year after year, mainly due to cellular telephony and wireless Internet, is disrupting the functioning of our bodies at the cellular level, resulting in a progressive increase in diseases that are increasingly difficult to treat.

It is known that the lines of force emitted by the nucleus of our planet create a powerful field in the center of which we live. From this point of view, our body is just an animated magnet that interacts harmoniously with the frequencies that our Earth, the Sun, the Moon and the entire Cosmos send out. Subjected to cosmic forces, it draws the necessary energy for its development. Hence, it is normal that magnetic waves can help us maintain the equilibrium and efficiency of our defense system, provided we can “tame” these spreading lines of force, which are omnipresent, yet invisible and untamed.

Magnetic field treatment
Tran Ky, Pierre Laget, Jean-Michel Guilbert

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Magnetism, and the life of modern man.

Natural magnets were recognized as important remedies in regulatory therapy by Chinese medicine more than 2,000 years ago, and magnetotherapy had already been used in therapeutic practice some 1,000 years before acupuncture applications were first described. Ancient Korean medicine, Indian Ayurveda and advanced Central American civilizations also harnessed the healing power of magnetism. Also in ancient Greek and Egyptian cultures, treatment with magnetite and magnet bars was among the therapeutic methods. Already Aristotle in the 3rd century BC confirmed the existence of the therapeutic capabilities of the magnet. The attractive and repulsive properties of magnets were described in the work De rerum natura (On the Nature of All Things) by Titus Lucretius Carus (1st century BC), while Pliny the Elder (1st century AD) claimed that magnets could heal. Galen in the second century AD used magnets to eliminate or weaken pain caused by various diseases. In Persia in the 10th century AD, magnets were used to remove muscle spasms.

In the 13th century, Frenchman Pierre Pelerin de Maricourt (Petrus Peregrinus de Maricourt) conducted experiments in magnetism and in 1269 wrote the first modern work on the subject: the Epistola de magnete. Today, the European Union of Earth Sciences awards the Petrus Peregrinus Medal to outstanding scientists for their special achievements in the field of magnetism.

In 1877, the French Royal Society of Medicine initiated the first significant study of magnetotherapy. Austrian physician Franz Anton Messmer (late 18th century) played a major role in this regard. He claimed that the effect of magnetic fields on the human body stimulates the primal instincts of telepathic communication hidden in the right cerebral hemisphere, and his method of treating neuroses, inducing hypnotic states, and stimulating clairvoyant and telepathic abilities was called “mesmerism.”

Today, it is known that a magnetic field with parameters properly taken causes self-regulation of cellular work and an increase in their activity, affects the strength of the immune system and restores homeostasis of the body. The existence of the Earth’s magnetic field is therefore a fundamental condition for the survival of all life forms. The human body, like any other, works through an exquisitely coordinated network of electromagnetic fields and the forces they produce. They regulate most of the body’s functions and influence the retention of a state of natural balance.

Our Mother Earth is a great magnet, while the lifestyle of primitive man caused him to be constantly influenced by the earth’s magnetic field (he walked barefoot, slept on the ground covered with animal skins, etc.). Over time, we have lost the natural instinct and the knowledge encoded in us that, in the words of Nobel laureate zyk Werner Heisenberg, “magnetic energy is the elementary energy on which all the life of the world depends.” Among other things, it has a fundamental influence on the types of elementary particles (including those that make up our bodies) and their patterned interactions, as demonstrated by 2008 Nobel Prize winners Yoichiro Nambu, Makoto Kobayashi and Toshihide Maskawa. Developing civilization has gradually deprived us of the life-giving effects of the earth’s magnetic field.

The last century has been a leap and a shock to civilization, which has radically changed the natural environment of man. “We have entered the age of high technology with the structure of primitive man,” said German biophysicist Professor Ulrich Warnke of Saarbrücken University. The acceleration of technological development has far outpaced the body’s adaptive and self-regulatory capabilities. Man is moving farther and farther away from his original state, while losing the healthy instinct that would tell him what is beneficial and what is not for his health. “Currently unprecedented levels of exposure to magnetic, electric and electromagnetic fields.

having a source in many wireless technologies interferes with the natural information system and functioning of humans, animals and plants. The consequences of this expansion, which have long been predicted by critics, can no longer be ignored. Bees and other insects disappear, birds avoid certain places and lose track of others. People suffer from functional disorders and diseases. And insofar as the latter are inherited, they will be passed on to future generations.” (Ulrich Warnke, Bees, Birds and Mankind Destroying Nature by Electrosmog)

Deficiency of natural magnetic field in biological environment leads to
to disruption of metabolic processes, which causes 90 percent of all diseases

Enclosed concrete construction, the covering of land with asphalt and concrete, and the generation of artificial electro-magnetic fields by modern electrical engineering and electronics clearly have a negative impact on human biomagnetism. Current flowing through high-voltage lines causes a corona phenomenon – the formation of a magnetic field around the wires that ionizes the surrounding air within a radius of several hundred meters. It is a source of discomfort and many health problems, including life-threatening diseases. Our
dwellings are electromagnetic cages with bars of steel armor and a dense network of electrical wires in the walls, in which currents are induced that generate electromagnetic fields, and an array of household electrical appliances that we can no longer do without today (at least we think so).

In the distant past, humans were influenced by natural magnetic fields with diffuse, incoherent radiation. This constituted a kind of “feeding” of natural electromagnetic energy. Currently, the intensity of the earth’s natural field is steadily funneling, while destructive magnetic fields artificially generated by civilization with concentrated, coherent radiation are rapidly increasing, creating the so-called electromagnetic smog. Global levels of electromagnetic pollution are becoming so dangerous that the World Health Organization (WHO) introduced the term “global electromagnetic pollution” in 1995.

This extremely dangerous phenomenon disrupts all vital processes, which initially manifests itself as pains of unknown origin. They are indicative of reduced vital energy, oxygen impairment of the body and disruption of homeostasis (vital balance) mechanisms. Each year, this threat is increasing. As a result, civilization diseases arise (although they have other additional causes as well). We pay for our severed ties with nature and loss of healthy instincts with disorders in our bodies – neuroses, insomnia, spinal degeneration, anxiety attacks, loss of vitality, cancer and premature aging. Deficiency of the natural magnetic field in the biological environment leads to disturbances in metabolic processes, which causes 90 percent of all diseases. That is why the need to understand the effects of magnetism on living organisms, especially the therapeutic effects of selected bands of electromagnetic fields – the ranges and methods of their application – is so important today. Traditional medicine, despite its advances, is not effective in treating many modern diseases …

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