You need to know three things about medicine at the end of the nineteenth century to understand what followed. The first is that the pharmaceutical industry didn't yet have the deathgrip over medicine that it has since achieved, and physicians were open to using things other than drugs and surgery to treat illness. The second is that medical experimentation wasn't yet restricted to big laboratories funded and controlled by big corporations; many physicians experimented in their own spare time. The third is that medicine in those days was still a hands-on practice, and palpation and percussion of the abdomen -- that is to say, probing and tapping the patient's belly with the fingers -- was a standard diagnostic method.
So the learned and respected Dr. Abrams pursued a series of research projects in his spare time, like many of his colleagues. He was very interested in percussion of the abdomen as a diagnostic tool, and found that under certain very specific conditions -- the patient had to be standing, and facing a particular direction -- percussion would accurately diagnose a range of diseases. The one problem was that patients who were very sick couldn't stand up for the prolonged session of percussion Abrams used. So, drawing on the theory that nerve impulses were electrical in nature -- standard medical opinion in his time -- Abrams decided to see if he could hook up a patient with a healthy volunteer using copper headbands, a copper plate under the feet, and wires connecting them. He did, and he found he could get the same diagnostic reactions in the volunteer.
This was fascinating, and it became even more so when he hooked up rheostats (variable resistors) into the wires in an attempt to fine-tune the reaction. He found quite reliably that certain rheostat settings made the percussive response much louder, but only if the patient had some specific illness. He proceeded to run more tests and build more machines, and got stranger and stranger results. He found, for example, that he could take a blood sample from a patient, hook it up to his machines, and get a diagnostic reading from the volunteer's abdomen.
He also started looking into possibilities for treatment using the same principle. The idea of using low-power radio waves for healing was common in the medical scene in those days -- one such method, short-wave diathermy, had already shown considerable promise -- and so he set out to build machines that would use his resistance settings to beam healing radio waves into patients. The sort of giddy mad-scientist hardware shown above soon gave way to elegant Victorian devices like the one on the right -- the first radionics machines, though the term hadn't been invented yet. So did other physicians and the scientific community in general respond to this by saying, "Good heavens, Abrams is a respected physician with a good track record, so we ought to investigate this ourselves"? No, of course not. He got the same response from them that Mesmer and Reichenbach did. They pulled a Randi -- ad hominem attacks followed by strenuous efforts not to replicate his results, which got lots of publicity in the press and the medical journals. They recognized, as Abrams apparently never did, that the results he was getting could not be the product of ordinary electricity, but had to derive from something else -- the same "something else" that Mesmer and Reichenbach had been investigating, a "something else" that mainstream science insisted did not, could not, and must not exist.
The medical industry was all but unregulated in his time, however, for reasons that today's physicians don't like to talk about. Medicine had been heavily regulated in the US at the beginning of the nineteenth century, but that resulted in a very low quality of care at sky-high prices, and state legislatures responded by throwing out most legal restrictions on medical practice and allowing the market to do its job. That enabled Abrams to continue his work unhindered, and publish several detailed books on his methods until his death in 1934. Later investigators weren't so lucky.
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Date: 2021-03-16 06:38 pm (UTC)It's important to note that the US Energy Dept was funding most of the projects and research for hot fusion. Also, many of the DoE's people had connections to MIT. Cold Fusion was seen as a threat to this cash cow.
La plus ca change, I guess. I still wonder about his mysterious death.
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Date: 2021-03-16 11:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2021-03-17 03:38 am (UTC) - ExpandThe Healing Balm of Shortwave Radio
From:Re: cold fusion as a viable energy source for the future
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Date: 2021-03-16 07:09 pm (UTC)Does this imply then, that the signature of maladies that have etheric componentes, which I would assume is most of them (i.e something else that a broken bone or physical trauma) can be transmitted and diagnosed separately and then healed remotely? That is seriously mind boggling and quite remarkable.
Mexico has an open culture for alternative medicine, you don’t need a license controlled by the establishment to exercise medicine. I wonder if some of my medical friends with alternative inclinations would be open to listen to this once I review the packet you sent and get some experience with it in a few years. Here is to hopping!
By the way, remember the plant experiment with microwaved water? Too early to be conclusive evidence but of the 10 cantaloupe seedlings I have sprouted this season and the microwaved watered is the only one that looks like this. This is a picture from a few days back, now the bottom leaves are completely like that and the top ones have started to as well.
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Date: 2021-03-16 11:30 pm (UTC)2) Fascinating. Thanks for the experimental data!
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From:Homeopathy in a lab
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2021-03-18 08:32 pm (UTC) - ExpandYou sort of need a license. Maybe...
Date: 2021-03-17 12:38 am (UTC)Regarding the state of alt-healing in Mexico, it is a bit more complicated than that. There are, maybe five healing traditions other than orthodoxy that are recognized by law; Traditional Herbology and Homeopathy are the most popular and better known, Acupuncture/TMC are rather exotic imports for the urban trendy classes, then there are some more physical arts, like therapeutic massage (I don't recall if Chiropractics made the cut or not).
Some other therapies and health products are in a sort of legal grey zone. They are not explicitly forbidden, but their not being regulated technically implies that they are only legal to practice by M.D.s (who, to be honest, sometimes do). These ventures survive by being discrete and sometimes by advertising as nutritional supplements, but when they get the wrong kind of attention they get closed down.
What happens with all these is that compliance is hard to enforce. A country that cannot prevent their ex-governors from being gunned down at bars can hardly be expected to produce the manpower to go out and audit every healer operating out of their living room. Even people who are licensed do not follow every regulation all the time.
Re: You sort of need a license. Maybe...
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From:Later Victims of the AMA
Date: 2021-03-16 07:27 pm (UTC)Bruce
(Ren-man)
Re: Later Victims of the AMA
Date: 2021-03-16 11:32 pm (UTC)Re: Later Victims of the AMA
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Date: 2021-03-16 08:25 pm (UTC)I also find it funny that you have to explain what was standard knowledge at the time as if we were talking about a far away land and time. It seems to be part of the propoganda of the current medical industey and pharmaceutical influence. We couldn't possibly know useful things before thry bestowed us with their knowledge.
I've noticed that a lot of recent posts have been about occult knowledge of health. Thanks for sharing. Ive incorporated some new habits. Though I have to say the biochemical cell salts are frequently sold out. I wonder how many ecosophians are in my area.
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Date: 2021-03-16 11:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2021-03-16 08:46 pm (UTC)Can you point us to additional reading about how and when the US Govt of that time (1830-ish??) decided to deregulate medicine?
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Date: 2021-03-16 11:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-03-16 10:01 pm (UTC)Since abrams died in the 1920’s, I assumed that meant that his works would be public domain.
However I’ve found that getting free writings by him is a lot more difficult than I expected. Do you know where I can find free publications by him?
J.L.Mc12
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Date: 2021-03-17 12:01 am (UTC)Muahahaha!
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Date: 2021-03-17 03:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:Magnetism
Date: 2021-03-17 01:16 am (UTC)Do you think this is inadvisable?
Re: Magnetism
Date: 2021-03-17 03:17 am (UTC)Re: Magnetism
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2021-03-17 03:11 pm (UTC) - ExpandRegarding the medical industry in the US
Date: 2021-03-17 11:15 am (UTC)Re: Regarding the medical industry in the US
Date: 2021-03-17 10:18 pm (UTC)Re: Regarding the medical industry in the US
From:Re: Regarding the medical industry in the US
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2021-03-18 04:52 pm (UTC) - ExpandPercussion on the abdomen - ultrasound ?
Date: 2021-03-17 03:45 pm (UTC)The percussion on the abdomen techniques reminds me of a strange experience where I was a "model patient" as part of a medical conference a few years back. A medical company was trying to interest medical staff in Ultrasound machines.
Using sound waves they give incredibly clear images of the insides of the body. It is also a very cheap system for diagnosis. It seemed to my amateur mind that this was an obvious game changer for a Doctor to have, however it still remains relatively rare to see one being used in a doctors surgery.
I could never understand why these machines are not more popular, since the process is non-invasive and relatively painless.
Scans of various other types are also often under utilized by medical professionals. Perhaps it is the modern unwillingness to look at a patient holistically. Having worked in health care the few holistic minded practitioners are always the exception, unfortunately.
Best regards Northern Ben
Re: Percussion on the abdomen - ultrasound ?
Date: 2021-03-18 02:53 am (UTC)Re: Percussion on the abdomen - ultrasound ?
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2021-03-18 01:58 pm (UTC) - ExpandDuncan Laurie ?
Date: 2021-03-18 10:57 pm (UTC)Sorry if this gent has previously been mentioned in your posts .....
You may have already run across Duncan Laurie in your Radionics travels. He seems like a guy you would love to have a talk to.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IrRJvpzmkxE
https://www.duncanlaurie.com/radionics
https://www.bookdepository.com/Secret-Art-Duncan-Laurie/9781933665429?ref=grid-view&qid=1616106920913&sr=1-3
Cheers,
Steve
Re: Duncan Laurie ?
Date: 2021-03-19 04:00 am (UTC)