Orgone Channel Telegram – Telegram
Orgone Channel Telegram
554 subscribers
662 photos
772 videos
498 files
1.69K links
Orgone Channel Telegram
—Exploring classicists succeeding WR and avant garde succeeding JD.
Download Telegram
The only YouTube content creator more heavily censored than Maverickstar Observatory that I've found is Dr Sean Hross, PhD.
I can't even get the YouTube download bot to retrieve their videos quite often, nor even save from Firefox extension!
If you want to archive their videos, it's often better to look for them on another website.
1
Orgone Channel Telegram
Seifritz on Protoplasm mirrored from Alexander Lowen YouTube https://youtu.be/_ihSxAn4WR8 Cell nuclei swim freely in slime mold protoplasm, circulate in spiral motion, have been compared to stem cells, protids, somatids, bions, microzymas, sanals, and other…
HISTORY - Günther
Enderlein

https://www.biologicalmedicineinstitute.com/gunther-enderlein

Professor Dr. Gunther Enderlein was born July 7th, 1872 in Leipzig, located in eastern Germany. Enderlein is often called the founder of isopathic medicine, though the work of Johan Joseph Wilhelm Lux and Antoine Bechamp does [precede].

Professor Enderlein published more than 500 scientific articles, mostly about insects. In May of 1924 he was conferred the appointment as ‘Professor’ and retired from that appointment in 1937 during the trouble years Nazi rise to power.

Death and Legacy
On August 11th, 1968, Enderlein died in Wentdorf near Hamburg at the age of 96 from injuries suffered from being hit by a truck. In 1975, the equipment of the IBICA Company was sold.

Included
Professor Enderlein with Mr. Heinrich Kehlbeck
Orgone Channel Telegram
FLASHBACK 17 December 2007 OBRL Newsletter James DeMeo announced: Suppressed and (Nearly) Forgotten Scientific Innovators of the 20th Century: A chapter-by-chapter review and theoretical integration of the works of scientists such as Wilhelm Reich, Frank Brown…
HISTORY - Günther
Enderlein
Enderlein Picture 2.jpg
German-Flag-Sphere.png
Professor Dr. Gunther Enderlein was born July 7th, 1872 in Leipzig, located in eastern Germany. Enderlein is often called the founder of isopathic medicine, though the work of Johan Joseph Wilhelm Lux and Antoine Bechamp does proceed. He was born into a family of teachers and developed early an avid interest in science. He studied natural science, physics, and zoology at the University of Liepzig and specialized in entomology. He graduated in 1889, summa cum laude, with a PhD zoology.
Early Years 1872 to 1937

In 1889, following graduation, he worked as assistant at the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, department of Zoology.



In October 1900 Enderlein became an assistant at the Zoological Museum in Berlin (administration of Hymenoptera and Myriapods for a monthly salary of 100 marks.)



He married in 1904 and in July of 1906, he and his first wife moved to Szczecin, now in Poland. There Enderlein became curator at the Stiidtisches Museum in Stettin.



In 1912, he became head of the Zoological Museum in Berlin department.



In 1914, the First World War began and Enderlein enlisted as a doctor in a German Military Hospital in Stettin. He primarily served the military as a surgeon major even though he was a zoologist, as there were not enough physicians available at that time.



He returned to Berlin in 1919 and remained there until 1937.



April 1, 1919, he became the "Curator for Diptera and lower Insects" and administrator of the ‘central office for blood-sucking insects’ at the Zoological Museum der Universitat Berlin.



His first wife died in 1920 and he remarried in 1937. During his life he was blessed with children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren.
Enderlein Picture 7.jpg

From 1916-1922, Enderlein conducted groundbreaking research on his theory of bacterial life cycles and published his findings in a book ennoscriptd Bakterien Cyklogenie (The Life Cycle of Bacteria) in 1925. Owing to the prevailing conditions resulting from the war, his monograph on this subject was only published in 1925. As he was describing morphological facts that had previously been unknown to microbiology, he developed a whole new terminology; however, this resulted in the procedures he described being difficult to understand.



Bear in mind that Professor Enderlein conducted his microbiology studies approximately 100 years ago. This was the beginning era of chemistry and electrical innovation. Beyond optical microscopic methods and rudimentary laboratory procedures, there were not any other instruments available that would have made it possible to do microbiological/genetic research as we are capable of today. At that time microscopy using the optical mode of darkfield was standard equipment in any university microbiological laboratory. With only darkfield microscopy at that time it is amazing what researchers like Enderlein were able to discover.

Professor Enderlein showed that the patient's inner milieu is principally responsible for the development of degenerative and microbial diseases. Most infectious and bacterial diseases can therefore be countered by changing this milieu in the direction of normal homeostasis. The "milieu" is determined in part by the acid-base balance, by the protein content of the organism, excessive protein of animal origin, and the content of minerals and nutrient elements. The over-acidification of the organism (tissue hyperacidity) is the result of the long-standing, mostly protein-heavy malnutrition, as well as the increasing depletion of base-trace elements and minerals (chromium / zinc / manganese / selenium / magnesium / potassium / calcium, etc.). Through proper nutrition and the replacement of missing nutrient elements, as well as by supplying base equivalents and isopathic active remedies, the inner milieu can be improved in such a way that chronic diseases can be influenced and regressed.