George Van Tassel
referenced the Biefield-Brown Effect, the works of scientists
George Lakhovsky, George Crile and the works of Nikola Tesla in relation to his
work here at the Integratron. He and his colleagues studied these
pioneers in Antigravity, Human Cell Rejuvenation and Time Travel.
For information about the
Biefield-Brown Effect, please visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biefeld-Brown_effect
For information about other great minds and
geniuses of Science, please visit:
Supernatural
Minds - Home of the greatest minds in the world.
Using the Lakhovsky
Multi-Wave Oscillator for Healing
Excerpts from the "MWO
Handbook", by Tom Brown, published by Borderland
Sciences Research Foundation. MWO design by Bob Beck, 1963. Updated design
available through Borderland Sciences.
Theory of Operation
Lakhovsky pointed out that all cells capable of
reproduction contain in their nuclei "filaments" of
highly conductive material surrounded by insulating media. This
filament, which may be the RNA-DNA complex, is always in the form
of a spiral or helix, in other words, a coil. Therefore, each
will react as a tuned circuit if its resonant frequency can be
approximated by an external oscillating coil.
Lakhovsky did not carry this to its
conclusion; however, I postulate that by exciting the nuclei with
electromagnetic energy a "charge" can be induced by the
long established principle of electromagnetic induction. This
demonstrably raises the energy level and perhaps the vitality of
every call in the field simultaneously. Since each cell is an
individual, and of slightly different physical dimensions, the
exciting wavelengths must be multiple, and must span a broad
frequency spectrum. Diathermy machines, limited to
crystal-controlled single frequences in the 27.255 MC region, can
do nothing but heat the tissue; and yet this approach, abandoned
by Lakhovsky in the 1930s, can still be found in
"modern" doctors offices!
The electromotive force (emf) produced by
the MWO and induced in the cell nucleus, can raise the cell's
metabolic rate by electrolysis, and perhaps jog the RNA-DNA
"memory" and reproductive capabilities to their level
at an earlier, younger age, thus the rejuvenation. Even more
subtle changes might be postulated, such as a magnetic
"progression" of effects as evidenced by heavy water in
magnetic fields.
Perhaps, in cancer, the emf induced by the
MWO raises the vitality and memory of marginal cells to normal
reproduction levels. In the case of other diseases, perhaps cells
given higher energy levels can more readily throw off affliction.
The MWO described here radiates a bandwith
of radio frequency energy from the audio frequencies up beyond
microwave frequencies. By actual measurement with standard field
strength meters, this vast bandwidth of frequencies and harmonics
can be shown. In fact, a bluish glow of "brush
discharge" surrounds the antenna when operating. A
fluorescent lamp held anywhere within several feet of the subject
glows brilliantly. Within this multiple-wave range of
frequencies, every cell in the body can find its ONE resonant
frequency and absorb energy at its own natural wavelength.
Obviously the electrostatic energy cannot
penetrate the body. This is known as the "skin effect".
However, the electromagnetic component of the energy can and does
permeate and will induce an emf in each cell. It is precisely
this energy to which Lakhovsky attributes his almost miraculous
"cures".
Top
Nikola Tesla
Called a madman by some, a genius by
others, and an enigma by nearly everyone, Nikola Tesla was
possibly the greatest inventor the world has ever known. He was,
without doubt, a trail blazer who created astonishing, sometimes
world-transforming, devices that often were virtually without
theoretical precedent. It was Tesla who introduced us to the
fundamentals of robotry, computers, and missile science and
helped pave the way for such space-age technologies as
satellites, microwaves, beam weapons, and nuclear fusion. Yet,
Tesla still remains one of the least recognized scientific
pioneers in history.
Certainly he was one of the
strangest of scientists -- almost supernaturally gifted, erratic,
flamboyant, and neurotic nearly to the point of madness. A dandy
and popular man-about-town, he was admired by man as diverse as
George Westinghouse and Mark Twain and adored by scores of
society beauties. Yet his bewildering of compulsions and phobias
extended from such mundane subject as food and clean linen to
pearls and women's ears. He was fond of creating
neighborhood-threatening electrical storms in his apartment
laboratory and once nearly knocked down a tall building by
attaching a mysterious "black box" to its side. (He
claimed he could have destroyed the entire planet with a similar
device.) And because he kept so few notes, to this day we can
only guess at the details of many of the fantastic scientific
projects that occupied his fevered intellect.
Adapted from "Man Out of
Time" by Margaret Cheney
Nikola Tesla (1856-1943) was a
Serbian-American inventor and researcher who discovered the
rotating magnetic field, the basis of most alternating-current
machinery. He was born in Yugoslavia and worked as a telephone
engineer in Prague and Paris, where he conceived a new type of
electric motor which had no commutator, as direct current (DC)
motors have, but instead worked on the principle of a rotating
magnetic field produced by polyphase alternating currents (AC).
He produced a prototype, and finding no interest in Europe,
emigrated to the United States in 1884. He worked briefly and
unhappily with Thomas Edison, the champion of DC, then
established his own lab and continued his prodigious output of
inventions. He obtained patents on polyphase motors, dynamos, and
transformers for a complete AC power system.
He formed an alliance with George
Westinghouse, who bought polyphase patents for $1 million plus
royalty. With Westinghouse, he engaged in a struggle against
Edison to convince the public of the efficiency and safety of AC
over DC. They succeeded in getting AC accepted as the electric
power system worldwide. Also with Westinghouse, he lit the
Chicago World's Fair, built the Niagara Falls hydro-power plant,
and installed AC systems at Colorado silver mines and in other
industries. By the turn of the century, he was lifted to
celebrity status comparable to Edison's as the media promoted him
along with the expanding electric power industry.

Experimenting independently in his
Manhattan lab, he developed and patented electric devices based
on the superior capabilities of high-potential, high-frequency
currents: the tesla coil, the radio, high-frequency lighting,
x-rays, electrotherapy. When his lab burned to the ground, he
rebuilt and continued. He moved his lab to Colorado Springs in
1899, where he built a huge magnifying transmitter. There, he
experimented with wireless power, radio and earth resonance and
studied lightning. One of the most famous photographs of Tesla
shows him in his large lab surrounded by giant bolts of
lightning.
After that, he returned to New York where,
with the encouragement of financier J.P. Morgan, promoted a World
System of radio broadcasting utilizing magnifying transmitters.
He built a huge tower for a magnifying transmitter at
Wardencliff, Long Island as the first station in the World
System. He received enough from Morgan to bring the station
within sight of completion, then funds were cut off and the
project collapsed. He continued to invent into the 1920s, but the
flow of patents was meager compared to earlier torrents which
amounted to some 700 patents worldwide. His high-frequency
inventions were ignored by established technology, as were the
disk turbine, the free-energy receiver, and others. The media
ignored him except for his birthday press conferences. At these
events he predicted microwaves, the TV, beam technologies, the
cosmic-ray motor, interplanetary communications, and
wave-interference devices that have since been named the
"Tesla howizer" and the "Tesla shield." In
the 1930s, he was involved in wireless power projects in Quebec.
His last birthday media appearance was in 1940.
He died privately and peacefully at the age
of 87 in a New York hotel room. His personal papers, including
copious lab notes, were impounded by the US government, and
surfaced many years later at a Tesla Museum in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia. Of these notes, only a fragment, "Colorado
Springs Notes", has been published by the Museum.
Links to related sites:
€ Bogdan Kosanovic's Tesla site