Forwarded from 🍎🥑🥭Health is Wealth🍊🍇🥝
Death_by_Medicine_Gary_Null.pdf
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Health Book 111
Death by Medicine
Revealing the fundamental problem with healthcare of America.
Death by Medicine
Revealing the fundamental problem with healthcare of America.
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Blake_Vitamins_and_Minerals_Demystified_nutritiBookFi.pdf
8.4 MB
Health Book 112
Vitamins and Minerals demystified.
A self teaching guide.
Vitamins and Minerals demystified.
A self teaching guide.
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DISEASE BY LAW AN INDICTMENT OF COMPULSORY VACCINATION.pdf
998.7 KB
Disease By Law
An Indictment of Compulsory Vaccination
E.W. Allen
London
1884
An Indictment of Compulsory Vaccination
E.W. Allen
London
1884
Orgone Channel Telegram
DISEASE BY LAW AN INDICTMENT OF COMPULSORY VACCINATION.pdf
from
Disease By Law
An Indictment of Compulsory Vaccination
E.W. Allen
London
1884
Disease By Law
An Indictment of Compulsory Vaccination
E.W. Allen
London
1884
🔥1
Orgone Channel Telegram
https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/6028091 American College of Orgonomy (emphasis added) The American College of Orgonomy (A.C.O.) was formed as a nonprofit institution by Dr. Elsworth F. Baker in 1968. [cite book | Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm…
Elsworth Baker's Foreword to
The Impulsive Character and other writings
written by Wilhelm Reich and translated by Barbara Goldenberg Koopman.
First Printing, October, 1974
This is the first publication in book form, in English, of some of Wilhelm Reich's early writings. The book is divided into two parts. The first, consisting of the monograph The Impulsive Character, originally published in 1925, is purely psychoanalytical and was written during the author's years in Freud's Psychoanalytic Polyclinic in Vienna. The second part, written considerably later, finds Reich deeply involved in biophysics and consists of three important articles that laid the foundation for medical orgonomy. Arranged chronologically, they are: "The Basic Antithesis of Vegetative Life Functions" (written in 1934), "The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological Discharge" (also written in in 1934), and "Experimental Investigation of the Electrical Function of Sexuality and Anxiety" (written in 1936 and published in 1937). These articles, milestones in the history of orgonomy, show the development of Reich's thinking and research from psychoanalysis through his discoveries of vegetative functioning and armoring to orgone energy. One is constantly amazed at his early insights and his ability to plumb the basic issues in both healthy and neurotic functioning. He always thought in functional terms and never allowed himself to indulge in psychoanalytic psychologizing.
The Impulsive Character was written when Reich was only three years out of medical school, but even at this early date he emphasizes the importance of character analysis over the then prevailing free association method. In this monograph he deals with the dynamics of the poorly understood impulsive, or psychopath, and compares the development of this character with normal development and the development of the impulse-inhibited character, or common neurotic. His findings are still valid, though he subsequently changed some of the views that he shared then with his contemporaries. For example, in this monograph he believes that a well-developed latency period is necessary for the achievement of sublimation and thus health. He points out that the impulsive with his chaotic behavior and inability to sublimate has a very short latency period or none at all. But Bronislaw Malinowski showed that the Trobriand Islanders, who were sex-affirmative and allowed children peer-related sexual activity, had no latency period. If the oedipal conflict is decathected in childhood through such activity, there is no need for sexual repression in the latency period. Thus latency is a cultural and not a natural phenomenon. Reich came to fully accept Malinowski's findings.
A second instance in which he was to radically change his views was on the subject of infant feeding. At this time he took for granted the notion that infants must learn to nurse at scheduled intervals. He later saw that this was a compulsive attitude and felt the infant should be allowed to regulate its own schedule, not only in eating but also in its other natural needs. Thus developed his concept of self-regulation.
Little had been written on the impulsive up to that time. Such cases did not turn up in private practice, and whatever was known had been derived from observations in psychiatric hospitals. The Psychoanalytic Polyclinic was established by Freud for the treatment of the poor. Here Reich saw and treated many such cases analytically, and this allowed him to arrive at a number of conclusions about their development. Invariably their upbringing combined a total lack of supervision with the unbridled discharge of impulse, together with periods of of a suddenly imposed repressive training, cruel and sadistic in nature, by parents or other adults. This meant that many impulses broke through in their original form, side by side with the repressed id strivings—this latter giving rise to such neurotic manifestations as compulsions, phobias and amnesias.
The Impulsive Character and other writings
written by Wilhelm Reich and translated by Barbara Goldenberg Koopman.
First Printing, October, 1974
This is the first publication in book form, in English, of some of Wilhelm Reich's early writings. The book is divided into two parts. The first, consisting of the monograph The Impulsive Character, originally published in 1925, is purely psychoanalytical and was written during the author's years in Freud's Psychoanalytic Polyclinic in Vienna. The second part, written considerably later, finds Reich deeply involved in biophysics and consists of three important articles that laid the foundation for medical orgonomy. Arranged chronologically, they are: "The Basic Antithesis of Vegetative Life Functions" (written in 1934), "The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological Discharge" (also written in in 1934), and "Experimental Investigation of the Electrical Function of Sexuality and Anxiety" (written in 1936 and published in 1937). These articles, milestones in the history of orgonomy, show the development of Reich's thinking and research from psychoanalysis through his discoveries of vegetative functioning and armoring to orgone energy. One is constantly amazed at his early insights and his ability to plumb the basic issues in both healthy and neurotic functioning. He always thought in functional terms and never allowed himself to indulge in psychoanalytic psychologizing.
The Impulsive Character was written when Reich was only three years out of medical school, but even at this early date he emphasizes the importance of character analysis over the then prevailing free association method. In this monograph he deals with the dynamics of the poorly understood impulsive, or psychopath, and compares the development of this character with normal development and the development of the impulse-inhibited character, or common neurotic. His findings are still valid, though he subsequently changed some of the views that he shared then with his contemporaries. For example, in this monograph he believes that a well-developed latency period is necessary for the achievement of sublimation and thus health. He points out that the impulsive with his chaotic behavior and inability to sublimate has a very short latency period or none at all. But Bronislaw Malinowski showed that the Trobriand Islanders, who were sex-affirmative and allowed children peer-related sexual activity, had no latency period. If the oedipal conflict is decathected in childhood through such activity, there is no need for sexual repression in the latency period. Thus latency is a cultural and not a natural phenomenon. Reich came to fully accept Malinowski's findings.
A second instance in which he was to radically change his views was on the subject of infant feeding. At this time he took for granted the notion that infants must learn to nurse at scheduled intervals. He later saw that this was a compulsive attitude and felt the infant should be allowed to regulate its own schedule, not only in eating but also in its other natural needs. Thus developed his concept of self-regulation.
Little had been written on the impulsive up to that time. Such cases did not turn up in private practice, and whatever was known had been derived from observations in psychiatric hospitals. The Psychoanalytic Polyclinic was established by Freud for the treatment of the poor. Here Reich saw and treated many such cases analytically, and this allowed him to arrive at a number of conclusions about their development. Invariably their upbringing combined a total lack of supervision with the unbridled discharge of impulse, together with periods of of a suddenly imposed repressive training, cruel and sadistic in nature, by parents or other adults. This meant that many impulses broke through in their original form, side by side with the repressed id strivings—this latter giving rise to such neurotic manifestations as compulsions, phobias and amnesias.
Orgone Channel Telegram
https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/6028091 American College of Orgonomy (emphasis added) The American College of Orgonomy (A.C.O.) was formed as a nonprofit institution by Dr. Elsworth F. Baker in 1968. [cite book | Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm…
All of these patients had been exposed to a chaotic and usually brutal sex life, beginning at the age of four or even earlier and often involving rape by fathers or other adults and indiscriminate sexual play with other children. The child was unable to handle this situation emotionally, as compared to the voluntary, gentle peer-sexuality of the Trobriand Islanders. Sexuality thus remained infantile in character, largely polymorphous perverse and incapable of providing discharge of stasis, which was thus severe in all cases. These impulsives lived out their sexuality very early and with conscious incest wishes. Sadomasochistic behavior was routine. Many of the characteristics of schizophrenia were present, and in some cases it was difficult to differentiate between the two.
Reich found that the impulsive had no circumscribed fixation point such as one finds in the usual neurotic. Actually all erogenous zones were early and equally active, and it was impossible to ascribe any specific fixations. The ego was markedly narcissistic and suggested the schizophrenic. It remained polarized between pleasure ego and superego and defended itself not only against the id in the service of the superego, but also against the superego in the service of the id. This gave rise to the overriding disorganization of the impulsive character. The problem would seem to be a defect in the superego in which repression is dynamic and therefore unsuccessful. Reich coined the term "isolated" for this situation: the superego is not incorporated into the ego and systematic repression is lacking.
Ambivalence is always present, but there are no reactive formations such as one finds in the usual neurotic. Guilt is also present, but remains unattached to the impulses which are allowed expression, such as sadistic acts or criminal behavior. Rather, it is prominent in those areas where repression occurs. Reich achieved considerable success with these individuals and grew to appreciate them for the degree of life they showed, however grossly distorted it might be. He found them more likeable than the usual impulse-inhibited neurotic.
This monograph is particularly important and appropriate at this time for an understanding of the present notable increase in openly impulsive behavior among college students and young militants. This seems to be a result of the contactless permissiveness and unsupervised upbringing so prevalent during the past twenty years: the child, deprived of direction or guidance, feels unloved and cannot establish his ego boundaries. The result is a chaotic libido economy, giving rise to unbearable tension in a structure incapable of normal discharge.
Even in 1925, Reich, with his keen perception, questioned the sex-negative attitude of the times toward children and felt that they should be allowed their own sexual expression according to their age and developmental level, and that this should be affirmed and protected by society. He was to feel this more and more strongly as time passed. At the same time he deplored contactless permissiveness, which he regarded as license rather than freedom.
In the three shorter essays in this book, Reich essentially effected a departure from psychoanalysis into the realm of sex economy and biophysics. In the first paper, "The Basic Antithesis of the Vegetative Life Functions," his functional thinking took him logically and inevitably from the psychic to the physiological realm. Here he starts with the observation that the affect of anxiety, a psychic phenomenon, has a somatic counterpart in the vegetative nervous system. From this he derives a common law, energetically based, governing both the psyche and the soma—namely, the functional identity and antithesis of sexuality and anxiety.
Sexuality then becomes movement out toward the world, or parasympathetic expansion; and anxiety becomes movement away from the world, or sympathetic contraction. Reich thus solved a problem that had long puzzled physiologists.
Reich found that the impulsive had no circumscribed fixation point such as one finds in the usual neurotic. Actually all erogenous zones were early and equally active, and it was impossible to ascribe any specific fixations. The ego was markedly narcissistic and suggested the schizophrenic. It remained polarized between pleasure ego and superego and defended itself not only against the id in the service of the superego, but also against the superego in the service of the id. This gave rise to the overriding disorganization of the impulsive character. The problem would seem to be a defect in the superego in which repression is dynamic and therefore unsuccessful. Reich coined the term "isolated" for this situation: the superego is not incorporated into the ego and systematic repression is lacking.
Ambivalence is always present, but there are no reactive formations such as one finds in the usual neurotic. Guilt is also present, but remains unattached to the impulses which are allowed expression, such as sadistic acts or criminal behavior. Rather, it is prominent in those areas where repression occurs. Reich achieved considerable success with these individuals and grew to appreciate them for the degree of life they showed, however grossly distorted it might be. He found them more likeable than the usual impulse-inhibited neurotic.
This monograph is particularly important and appropriate at this time for an understanding of the present notable increase in openly impulsive behavior among college students and young militants. This seems to be a result of the contactless permissiveness and unsupervised upbringing so prevalent during the past twenty years: the child, deprived of direction or guidance, feels unloved and cannot establish his ego boundaries. The result is a chaotic libido economy, giving rise to unbearable tension in a structure incapable of normal discharge.
Even in 1925, Reich, with his keen perception, questioned the sex-negative attitude of the times toward children and felt that they should be allowed their own sexual expression according to their age and developmental level, and that this should be affirmed and protected by society. He was to feel this more and more strongly as time passed. At the same time he deplored contactless permissiveness, which he regarded as license rather than freedom.
In the three shorter essays in this book, Reich essentially effected a departure from psychoanalysis into the realm of sex economy and biophysics. In the first paper, "The Basic Antithesis of the Vegetative Life Functions," his functional thinking took him logically and inevitably from the psychic to the physiological realm. Here he starts with the observation that the affect of anxiety, a psychic phenomenon, has a somatic counterpart in the vegetative nervous system. From this he derives a common law, energetically based, governing both the psyche and the soma—namely, the functional identity and antithesis of sexuality and anxiety.
Sexuality then becomes movement out toward the world, or parasympathetic expansion; and anxiety becomes movement away from the world, or sympathetic contraction. Reich thus solved a problem that had long puzzled physiologists.
Orgone Channel Telegram
https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/6028091 American College of Orgonomy (emphasis added) The American College of Orgonomy (A.C.O.) was formed as a nonprofit institution by Dr. Elsworth F. Baker in 1968. [cite book | Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm…
Why does the parasympathetic, for example, contract the bladder and relax the sphincter while the sympathetic relaxes the bladder and contracts the sphincter? The same is true of the intestinal tract. It seemed paradoxical that one part of the vegetative system should at the same time contract one muscle and relax another, and vice versa. Reich clearly shows why when he demonstrates that the parasympathetic produces expansion, or movement toward the world, and the sympathetic produces contraction, or movement away from the world—from the standpoint of the total organism. One comes to understand that muscular armoring is simply a specific chronic sympathetic excitation (anxiety) which prevents the organism from moving out toward the world and particularly from expressing destructive aggression (hate).
Reich points out that previous investigators had erred in trying to find a meaning in physiological functions. Basic physiological functions cannot in themselves be interpreted psychologically; only their disturbances can be psychogenic. The psychic apparatus has grown out of the physiological one, and thus certain laws pertaining to the latter must also govern the former—such as tension, discharge, stimulus, response, and so on. On the other hand, certain laws apply only to the psychic and are therefore antithetical to the physiological—such as the repression of instinctual drives, introjection, projection, identification, and so on
Reich also makes the interesting observation that the muscular system, the apparatus of destruction, has its origin in the mesoderm, a secondary embryonic structure, while the apparatus of the sexual and anxiety functions is already present in the protozoon. One may recall in this regard that protozoa do not die Natural, but merely divide
Reich foresees muscular armoring by noting that living organisms tend to assume a spherical shape when threatened. In other words, they contract. In higher animals, where muscles are present, this contraction takes place largely in the muscular system.
The second paper in this series, "The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological Discharge," marks further advance into biophysics. Here Reich clearly recognizes an energy discharge in the orgasm, but has not yet identified it as orgone energy. Understandably he sees it as an electrical discharge. He accordingly defines the orgasm formula as mechanical tension, electrical charge, electrical discharge, and mechanical relaxation, and he asks whether the orgasm is a function to be found throughout living nature. He was later able to verify.
Each partner in the sexual act forms part of an electrical system consisting of (1) male circulation; (2) male boundary layer (penile epidermis); (3) female secretions (conducting medium); (4) female boundary (vaginal mucosa); (5) female circulation. The acid vaginal secretion, which is an electrolyte, represents the contact medium between the penile epidermis and the vaginal mucosa. The male and female circulations and the mutually stimulating plasmatic excitations in the autonomic nervous system represent the inherent sources of electrical charge on the organs of contact. Equalization of the potential gradient occurs between the two surfaces—penile epidermis and vaginal mucosa. We now know that the energy involved is not electrical in nature—Reich later called it "orgone energy" and viewed the organism as a total orgone energy system.
In light of these findings, the present writer has described the sexual act as follows:
"As energy increases, the body regularly builds up tension. At a certain point, known as the lumination point, the tension is felt as sexual excitement in the healthy individual. Then normal expansion markedly increases. The skin becomes warm and dry, the pulse full and slow, breathing is deep, vision is sharp, and the genitals fill with blood and become acutely sensitive. The orgone energy field expands and is highly charged.
Reich points out that previous investigators had erred in trying to find a meaning in physiological functions. Basic physiological functions cannot in themselves be interpreted psychologically; only their disturbances can be psychogenic. The psychic apparatus has grown out of the physiological one, and thus certain laws pertaining to the latter must also govern the former—such as tension, discharge, stimulus, response, and so on. On the other hand, certain laws apply only to the psychic and are therefore antithetical to the physiological—such as the repression of instinctual drives, introjection, projection, identification, and so on
Reich also makes the interesting observation that the muscular system, the apparatus of destruction, has its origin in the mesoderm, a secondary embryonic structure, while the apparatus of the sexual and anxiety functions is already present in the protozoon. One may recall in this regard that protozoa do not die Natural, but merely divide
Reich foresees muscular armoring by noting that living organisms tend to assume a spherical shape when threatened. In other words, they contract. In higher animals, where muscles are present, this contraction takes place largely in the muscular system.
The second paper in this series, "The Orgasm as an Electrophysiological Discharge," marks further advance into biophysics. Here Reich clearly recognizes an energy discharge in the orgasm, but has not yet identified it as orgone energy. Understandably he sees it as an electrical discharge. He accordingly defines the orgasm formula as mechanical tension, electrical charge, electrical discharge, and mechanical relaxation, and he asks whether the orgasm is a function to be found throughout living nature. He was later able to verify.
Each partner in the sexual act forms part of an electrical system consisting of (1) male circulation; (2) male boundary layer (penile epidermis); (3) female secretions (conducting medium); (4) female boundary (vaginal mucosa); (5) female circulation. The acid vaginal secretion, which is an electrolyte, represents the contact medium between the penile epidermis and the vaginal mucosa. The male and female circulations and the mutually stimulating plasmatic excitations in the autonomic nervous system represent the inherent sources of electrical charge on the organs of contact. Equalization of the potential gradient occurs between the two surfaces—penile epidermis and vaginal mucosa. We now know that the energy involved is not electrical in nature—Reich later called it "orgone energy" and viewed the organism as a total orgone energy system.
In light of these findings, the present writer has described the sexual act as follows:
"As energy increases, the body regularly builds up tension. At a certain point, known as the lumination point, the tension is felt as sexual excitement in the healthy individual. Then normal expansion markedly increases. The skin becomes warm and dry, the pulse full and slow, breathing is deep, vision is sharp, and the genitals fill with blood and become acutely sensitive. The orgone energy field expands and is highly charged.
Orgone Channel Telegram
https://en-academic.com/dic.nsf/enwiki/6028091 American College of Orgonomy (emphasis added) The American College of Orgonomy (A.C.O.) was formed as a nonprofit institution by Dr. Elsworth F. Baker in 1968. [cite book | Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm…
In full sexual excitement, not only must energy reach the skin surface, particularly the genitals, but think energy must be excited from the core. For excitation to come from the core (the vegetative system), acceptance of the genital feeling and anticipation of genital embrace are necessary. Excitation is further increased through the field and membrane of the sexual object until close contact and union of the genitals become imperative. Rhythmic friction with the medium of a mucus vaginal secretion rapidly produces a peak of energy concentration and excitation in the genital. Discharge occurs through total convulsions of the body—the orgasm—and the economic energy level is reestablished." ¹
The third paper, "Experimental Investigation of the Electrical Function of Sexuality and Anxiety," is an extremely important and brilliant essay that sets forth the experimental evidence on which Reich based the conclusions he drew from his therapeutic work with patients. Biophysics here emerges as a natural science. This was the first time in the annals of science that a subjective experience had been quantified by objective measurements. Freud's concept of libido is shown conclusively to be real energy. The basic antithesis of pleasure (outward toward the world) and anxiety (withdrawal from the world) is shown in the rise or fall of "electrical" charge at the skin surface according to pleasurable or painful stimuli, with the charge corresponding exactly to the sensations felt by the subject being tested. Though all areas of the skin have essentially the same charge in the resting state, erogenous areas have a much greater reactivity to pleasure or pain, and after a disappointment or traumatic experience, reaction to pleasure is slow and cautious. Also, a repeated stimulus does not produce so great an effect as an initial one, and this helps to explain why people who are together too often lose their ability to excite each other.
These experiments also clarify healthy and neurotic sexual behavior. For example, an erect penis shows little increase in charge unless pleasure is felt in the erection. Mechanical tumescence alone cannot increase the charge. Pleasure cannot be forced or achieved voluntarily, but only if the individual is ready for it emotionally. The highest charge is produced by gentle friction in the sequence of an initial withdrawal followed by a forward thrust. It is similar to an animal pulling back before making a spring. One can thus see the rationale of natural movements in the genital embrace.
The centers of biological excitation reside in the vegetative nervous system and lie beyond conscious control. It is therefore futile to seek an intellectual understanding of one's problems unless the body is freed of its unconscious holding and can again function spontaneously in accordance with natural law.
We are indebted to Dr. Barbara Koopman for making these pivotal works available in English and for the clarity, skill, and fidelity of her translation.
Note:
¹ E. F. Baker, Man in the Trap, New York, Macmillan, 1967.
The third paper, "Experimental Investigation of the Electrical Function of Sexuality and Anxiety," is an extremely important and brilliant essay that sets forth the experimental evidence on which Reich based the conclusions he drew from his therapeutic work with patients. Biophysics here emerges as a natural science. This was the first time in the annals of science that a subjective experience had been quantified by objective measurements. Freud's concept of libido is shown conclusively to be real energy. The basic antithesis of pleasure (outward toward the world) and anxiety (withdrawal from the world) is shown in the rise or fall of "electrical" charge at the skin surface according to pleasurable or painful stimuli, with the charge corresponding exactly to the sensations felt by the subject being tested. Though all areas of the skin have essentially the same charge in the resting state, erogenous areas have a much greater reactivity to pleasure or pain, and after a disappointment or traumatic experience, reaction to pleasure is slow and cautious. Also, a repeated stimulus does not produce so great an effect as an initial one, and this helps to explain why people who are together too often lose their ability to excite each other.
These experiments also clarify healthy and neurotic sexual behavior. For example, an erect penis shows little increase in charge unless pleasure is felt in the erection. Mechanical tumescence alone cannot increase the charge. Pleasure cannot be forced or achieved voluntarily, but only if the individual is ready for it emotionally. The highest charge is produced by gentle friction in the sequence of an initial withdrawal followed by a forward thrust. It is similar to an animal pulling back before making a spring. One can thus see the rationale of natural movements in the genital embrace.
The centers of biological excitation reside in the vegetative nervous system and lie beyond conscious control. It is therefore futile to seek an intellectual understanding of one's problems unless the body is freed of its unconscious holding and can again function spontaneously in accordance with natural law.
We are indebted to Dr. Barbara Koopman for making these pivotal works available in English and for the clarity, skill, and fidelity of her translation.
Note:
¹ E. F. Baker, Man in the Trap, New York, Macmillan, 1967.
The End of an Era, A Reflection on Dr. Morton Herskowitz
Article by Stephan Simonian M.D.
Posted on 24 August 2018.
Tags: Dr Harry Lewis, Dr Wilhelm Reich, Dr. Conny Huthsteiner, Dr. Morton Herskowitz, Stephan Simonian MD
https://www.psychorgone.com/history/the-end-of-an-era-a-reflection-on-dr-morton-herskowitz
On Monday, August 6, 2018, members of the Institute of Orgonomic Science received the sad news that Dr. Herskowitz had passed away that morning. "He gave so much and brightened so many lives,". After this news, Dr. Harry Lewis, a member of the IOS, wrote the following:
Dr. Morton Herskowitz died, it was announced this morning.
While many of us knew it was coming and were expecting it, it is still a great loss of a great person. I was fortunate to know him and share time with him. He will be missed, and this ends an era.
He was smart, funny, a gifted clinician, and a damn good person, which is very rare in this day and age–or maybe at any time.
My condolences to his family and those close to him.
Article by Stephan Simonian M.D.
Posted on 24 August 2018.
Tags: Dr Harry Lewis, Dr Wilhelm Reich, Dr. Conny Huthsteiner, Dr. Morton Herskowitz, Stephan Simonian MD
https://www.psychorgone.com/history/the-end-of-an-era-a-reflection-on-dr-morton-herskowitz
On Monday, August 6, 2018, members of the Institute of Orgonomic Science received the sad news that Dr. Herskowitz had passed away that morning. "He gave so much and brightened so many lives,". After this news, Dr. Harry Lewis, a member of the IOS, wrote the following:
Dr. Morton Herskowitz died, it was announced this morning.
While many of us knew it was coming and were expecting it, it is still a great loss of a great person. I was fortunate to know him and share time with him. He will be missed, and this ends an era.
He was smart, funny, a gifted clinician, and a damn good person, which is very rare in this day and age–or maybe at any time.
My condolences to his family and those close to him.
Orgone Channel Telegram
Should the Laws of Gravitation be Reconsidered? The Scientific Legacy of Maurice Allais (paperback, 479 pages; ISBN 978-0-9864926-5-5) Héctor A. Múnera, editor https://web.archive.org/web/20110806013130/http://redshift.vif.com/BookBlurbs/Allais-Gravitation.htm
from
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/Einstein2.htm
Albert Einstein's opinion about the interferometric experiments of Dayton C. Miller. A communication to "Science". New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 du 31 juillet 1925
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/Science.htm
Return to summary
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/mauriceN.jpg (4207 octets)
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/TsciA.jpg (2989 octets)
Reproduction of an article extract from the files of "Science"
New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 July, 31 1925
Albert Einstein's opinion about Dayton C. Miller's interferometric experiments
SCIENCE NEWS
Science Service, Washington, D.C.
THE RELATIVITY THEORY AND THE ETHER DRIFT
THE Einstein theory of relativity must fall or at least require radical modification, if the experiments performed at Mt. Wilson, in California, by Professor Dayton C. Miller, of the Case School of Applied Science, are correct, is the opinion of Professor Albert Einstein himself, expressed in a communication from him to Science Service.
" If Dr. Miller's results should be confirmed," he says, " then the special relativity theory, and with the general theory in its present form, falls. Experiment is the supreme judge. Only the equivalence of inertia and weight remain, which would lead to an essentially different theory. "
The Mt. Wilson experiments were intended to show the motion of the earth through the ether in space by which light and other radiations are supposed to be transmitted. When originally performed by Professor A.A. Michelson, now at the University of Chicago, and when repeated by Professor Miller at Cleveland, no appreciable result was obtained. When Professor Miller repeated it at Mt. Wilson, which is about a mile high, he obtained a marked effect, which seems to vary with the altitude.
According to Dr. Ludwik Silberstein, of the Eastman Kodak Company's Research Laboratory at Rochester, this indicated that the ether was dragged around by the earth at low altitudes, but drifted by at the higher one's. According to Professor A. S. Eddington, of the University of Cambridge, England, such an effect would produce a difference in the position of stars as observed from a sea level and mountain observatories, and no such difference has ever been observed. Dr. Silberstein answered this objection by the statement that the ether undergoes a peculiar kind of deformation, but Professor Einstein does not agree with him. He says :
" I can not share Dr. Silberstein conception in case the experiments are correct. He means that with a treory of a deformible but fixed ether the known phenomena can be explained. This, however, is not so. A theory such as that is absolutely inconsistent with the positively proved astronomical aberrations. No theory exists outside of the theory of relativity and the similar Lorentz theory which, except for the Miller experiment, explains all the known phenomena up to date.
Under these circumstances nothing remains but to await more complete publication of the Miller's results. Then it is to be hoped that a correct decision will develop. "
Professeur Allais has proved that Dr Miller's experiments are valid.
See his article published in "La Jaune et la Rouge".
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/yellow01.htm
Then, the conclusion is done by Albert Einstein himself : the relativity theory falls.
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/Einstein2.htm
Albert Einstein's opinion about the interferometric experiments of Dayton C. Miller. A communication to "Science". New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 du 31 juillet 1925
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/Science.htm
Return to summary
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/mauriceN.jpg (4207 octets)
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/TsciA.jpg (2989 octets)
Reproduction of an article extract from the files of "Science"
New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 July, 31 1925
Albert Einstein's opinion about Dayton C. Miller's interferometric experiments
SCIENCE NEWS
Science Service, Washington, D.C.
THE RELATIVITY THEORY AND THE ETHER DRIFT
THE Einstein theory of relativity must fall or at least require radical modification, if the experiments performed at Mt. Wilson, in California, by Professor Dayton C. Miller, of the Case School of Applied Science, are correct, is the opinion of Professor Albert Einstein himself, expressed in a communication from him to Science Service.
" If Dr. Miller's results should be confirmed," he says, " then the special relativity theory, and with the general theory in its present form, falls. Experiment is the supreme judge. Only the equivalence of inertia and weight remain, which would lead to an essentially different theory. "
The Mt. Wilson experiments were intended to show the motion of the earth through the ether in space by which light and other radiations are supposed to be transmitted. When originally performed by Professor A.A. Michelson, now at the University of Chicago, and when repeated by Professor Miller at Cleveland, no appreciable result was obtained. When Professor Miller repeated it at Mt. Wilson, which is about a mile high, he obtained a marked effect, which seems to vary with the altitude.
According to Dr. Ludwik Silberstein, of the Eastman Kodak Company's Research Laboratory at Rochester, this indicated that the ether was dragged around by the earth at low altitudes, but drifted by at the higher one's. According to Professor A. S. Eddington, of the University of Cambridge, England, such an effect would produce a difference in the position of stars as observed from a sea level and mountain observatories, and no such difference has ever been observed. Dr. Silberstein answered this objection by the statement that the ether undergoes a peculiar kind of deformation, but Professor Einstein does not agree with him. He says :
" I can not share Dr. Silberstein conception in case the experiments are correct. He means that with a treory of a deformible but fixed ether the known phenomena can be explained. This, however, is not so. A theory such as that is absolutely inconsistent with the positively proved astronomical aberrations. No theory exists outside of the theory of relativity and the similar Lorentz theory which, except for the Miller experiment, explains all the known phenomena up to date.
Under these circumstances nothing remains but to await more complete publication of the Miller's results. Then it is to be hoped that a correct decision will develop. "
Professeur Allais has proved that Dr Miller's experiments are valid.
See his article published in "La Jaune et la Rouge".
http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/yellow01.htm
Then, the conclusion is done by Albert Einstein himself : the relativity theory falls.
Orgone Channel Telegram
from http://allais.maurice.free.fr/English/Einstein2.htm Albert Einstein's opinion about the interferometric experiments of Dayton C. Miller. A communication to "Science". New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 du 31 juillet 1925 http://allais.maurice.free.fr/Eng…
Albert Einstein's opinion about the interferometric experiments of Dayton C. Miller. A communication to "Science". New Series, Vol 62, N° 1596 July, 31 1925
THE Einstein theory of relativity must fall or at least require radical modification, if the experiments performed at Mt. Wilson, in California, by Professor Dayton C. Miller, of the Case School of Applied Science, are correct, is the opinion of Professor Albert Einstein himself, expressed in a communication from him to Science Service.
" If Dr. Miller's results should be confirmed," he says, " then the special relativity theory, and with the general theory in its present form, falls. Experiment is the supreme judge. Only the equivalence of inertia and weight remain, which would lead to an essentially different theory. "
...
Professeur Allais has proved that Dr Miller's experiments are valid.
See his article published in "La Jaune et la Rouge".
Then, the conclusion is done by Albert Einstein himself : the relativity theory falls.
THE Einstein theory of relativity must fall or at least require radical modification, if the experiments performed at Mt. Wilson, in California, by Professor Dayton C. Miller, of the Case School of Applied Science, are correct, is the opinion of Professor Albert Einstein himself, expressed in a communication from him to Science Service.
" If Dr. Miller's results should be confirmed," he says, " then the special relativity theory, and with the general theory in its present form, falls. Experiment is the supreme judge. Only the equivalence of inertia and weight remain, which would lead to an essentially different theory. "
...
Professeur Allais has proved that Dr Miller's experiments are valid.
See his article published in "La Jaune et la Rouge".
Then, the conclusion is done by Albert Einstein himself : the relativity theory falls.
4bidden WISDOM
Human Heart Cosmic Heart.pdf
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Conversations with Dr. Cowan & Friends| Ep 31: James DeMeo
bitchute.com/video/odkUjGa3fRJE
30 July 2021
Understanding Wilhelm Reich and ‘Orgone’ Energy
"... fascinating interview with Dr. James Demeo, the world’s foremost authority on the work of 20th Century physician and psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich. Even though Reich’s work is mostly unknown, he claimed to have 'discovered' and learned how to work with the universal energy that he called orgone. In this interview, you will hear about the history of Dr. Reich and how he went about harvesting orgone energy for therapeutic purposes."
Website:
drtomcowan.com/
Subscribe
Spotify:
open.spotify.com/show/25hGTOl6fCPpNUWwwWZY4y
Apple Podcasts:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/conversations-with-dr-cowan-friends/id1530268266?uo=4
BitChute:
bitchute.com/channel/CivTSuEjw6Qp/
56 min
Wikipedia:
"Thomas Cowan is an American practitioner of alternative medicine, author, conspiracy theorist and former medical doctor. He relinquished his medical license in 2020."
bitchute.com/video/odkUjGa3fRJE
30 July 2021
Understanding Wilhelm Reich and ‘Orgone’ Energy
"... fascinating interview with Dr. James Demeo, the world’s foremost authority on the work of 20th Century physician and psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich. Even though Reich’s work is mostly unknown, he claimed to have 'discovered' and learned how to work with the universal energy that he called orgone. In this interview, you will hear about the history of Dr. Reich and how he went about harvesting orgone energy for therapeutic purposes."
Website:
drtomcowan.com/
Subscribe
Spotify:
open.spotify.com/show/25hGTOl6fCPpNUWwwWZY4y
Apple Podcasts:
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/conversations-with-dr-cowan-friends/id1530268266?uo=4
BitChute:
bitchute.com/channel/CivTSuEjw6Qp/
56 min
Wikipedia:
"Thomas Cowan is an American practitioner of alternative medicine, author, conspiracy theorist and former medical doctor. He relinquished his medical license in 2020."
Orgone Channel Telegram
Conversations with Dr. Cowan & Friends| Ep 31: James DeMeo bitchute.com/video/odkUjGa3fRJE 30 July 2021 Understanding Wilhelm Reich and ‘Orgone’ Energy "... fascinating interview with Dr. James Demeo, the world’s foremost authority on the work of 20th Century…
Ron_Unz_American_Pravda_How_the_CIA_Invented_Conspiracy_Theories.pdf
226.7 KB
The CIA invented the idiom "conspiracy theorist," as a term of political abuse, to discredit genuine investigators questioning the integrity of The Warren Commission.
https://www.unz.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Ron_Unz_American_Pravda_How_the_CIA_Invented_Conspiracy_Theories.pdf
https://www.unz.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Ron_Unz_American_Pravda_How_the_CIA_Invented_Conspiracy_Theories.pdf
Orgone Channel Telegram
Time Lapse Animation All Recorded Fission Reaction Detonations 1945—1998 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=310-GYiitpM
Unusual, Long-Distance, Biological, Atmospheric and Geophysical Effects From Underground Nuclear Bomb Tests and Nuclear Power Plant Accidents:
Suppressed Scientific Evidence
http://www.orgonelab.org/UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf
Table of Contents:
1. “Earthquakes and Nuclear Testing: Dangerous Patterns and Trends” by Gary Whiteford, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet, 2:11-21, 1989.
2. “Recent Abnormal Phenomena on Earth and Atomic Power Tests” by Yoshio Kato, Pulse of the Planet, 1:5-9, 1989.
3. “Weather Anomalies and Nuclear Testing”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 4:117-120, 1993. Graphic from Pulse of the Planet 3:112, 1991.
4. “Oranur Effects from the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 3:26, 1991.
5. “Three Mile Island: The Language of Science Versus the People’s Reality” by Mitzuru Katagiri, Pulse of the Planet 3:27-38, 1991.
6. Interview with Marie Holowka, Three Mile Island, 1986.
Suppressed Scientific Evidence
http://www.orgonelab.org/UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf
Table of Contents:
1. “Earthquakes and Nuclear Testing: Dangerous Patterns and Trends” by Gary Whiteford, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet, 2:11-21, 1989.
2. “Recent Abnormal Phenomena on Earth and Atomic Power Tests” by Yoshio Kato, Pulse of the Planet, 1:5-9, 1989.
3. “Weather Anomalies and Nuclear Testing”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 4:117-120, 1993. Graphic from Pulse of the Planet 3:112, 1991.
4. “Oranur Effects from the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 3:26, 1991.
5. “Three Mile Island: The Language of Science Versus the People’s Reality” by Mitzuru Katagiri, Pulse of the Planet 3:27-38, 1991.
6. Interview with Marie Holowka, Three Mile Island, 1986.
Orgone Channel Telegram
Unusual, Long-Distance, Biological, Atmospheric and Geophysical Effects From Underground Nuclear Bomb Tests and Nuclear Power Plant Accidents: Suppressed Scientific Evidence http://www.orgonelab.org/UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf Table of Contents: 1. “Earthquakes…
UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf
2.9 MB
Unusual, Long-Distance, Biological, Atmospheric and Geophysical Effects From Underground Nuclear Bomb Tests and Nuclear Power Plant Accidents:
Suppressed Scientific Evidence
http://www.orgonelab.org/UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf
Table of Contents:
1. “Earthquakes and Nuclear Testing: Dangerous Patterns and Trends” by Gary Whiteford, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet, 2:11-21, 1989.
2. “Recent Abnormal Phenomena on Earth and Atomic Power Tests” by Yoshio Kato, Pulse of the Planet, 1:5-9, 1989.
3. “Weather Anomalies and Nuclear Testing”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 4:117-120, 1993. Graphic from Pulse of the Planet 3:112, 1991.
4. “Oranur Effects from the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 3:26, 1991.
5. “Three Mile Island: The Language of Science Versus the People’s Reality” by Mitzuru Katagiri, Pulse of the Planet 3:27-38, 1991.
6. Interview with Marie Holowka, Three Mile Island, 1986.
Suppressed Scientific Evidence
http://www.orgonelab.org/UnusualNuclearEffects.pdf
Table of Contents:
1. “Earthquakes and Nuclear Testing: Dangerous Patterns and Trends” by Gary Whiteford, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet, 2:11-21, 1989.
2. “Recent Abnormal Phenomena on Earth and Atomic Power Tests” by Yoshio Kato, Pulse of the Planet, 1:5-9, 1989.
3. “Weather Anomalies and Nuclear Testing”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 4:117-120, 1993. Graphic from Pulse of the Planet 3:112, 1991.
4. “Oranur Effects from the Three Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant Accident”, by James DeMeo, Ph.D., Pulse of the Planet 3:26, 1991.
5. “Three Mile Island: The Language of Science Versus the People’s Reality” by Mitzuru Katagiri, Pulse of the Planet 3:27-38, 1991.
6. Interview with Marie Holowka, Three Mile Island, 1986.
The Problem Of Recognizing The Emotional Plague
https://charleskonia.com/2013/02/27/the-problem-of-recognizing-the-emotional-plague/
Charles Konia, M.D.
The emotional plague’s existence depends on its remaining hidden from everyone’s awareness. But why is this so? Why can’t people see this universal sickness of armored humans? The difficulty that prevents this understanding lies primarily in the defensive ways of people’s thinking.
Comparing infectious medical diseases such as tuberculosis, polio or cholera to the infectious bio-social disease, the emotional plague, it is clear that in the case of the medical diseases the bacterial pathogen that causes the infection is not viewed morally as being “good” or “bad,” “right” or “wrong.” Nor is there a moral concern whether the pathogen “meant” or “had the intention” to cause the illness. These moralistic ideas about infectious disease were part and parcel of the thinking of past centuries. If people looked at infectious diseases morally today, the sciences of bacteriology and virology would not exist, and knowledge about infectious diseases would still be where it was 300 years ago.
But this is exactly where people are today when judging destructive human ideas and behavior. They view them morally as being either right or wrong, the product either of a virtuous versus villainous individual or the result of a person’s good or bad intentions. These ideas are examples of defensive, armored thinking and the moralistic attitudes behind the thinking of almost everyone including the political left and the right.
Because scientists looked at the function of the medical pathogens in its relation to the life of the host organism, whether or not they were destructive to it, these medical sciences thrived. Regarding social problems, the questions that need to be asked are: What is the effect or function on others of a person’s behavior or thought? Are these consequences harmful to the core functions of people’s lives? Asking these questions immediately brings the emotional plague as an infectious bio-social disease into sharper focus and takes the problem of the destructiveness of sick humans out of people’s moral ways of thinking and out of the strait jacket of politics.
https://charleskonia.com/2013/02/27/the-problem-of-recognizing-the-emotional-plague/
Charles Konia, M.D.
The emotional plague’s existence depends on its remaining hidden from everyone’s awareness. But why is this so? Why can’t people see this universal sickness of armored humans? The difficulty that prevents this understanding lies primarily in the defensive ways of people’s thinking.
Comparing infectious medical diseases such as tuberculosis, polio or cholera to the infectious bio-social disease, the emotional plague, it is clear that in the case of the medical diseases the bacterial pathogen that causes the infection is not viewed morally as being “good” or “bad,” “right” or “wrong.” Nor is there a moral concern whether the pathogen “meant” or “had the intention” to cause the illness. These moralistic ideas about infectious disease were part and parcel of the thinking of past centuries. If people looked at infectious diseases morally today, the sciences of bacteriology and virology would not exist, and knowledge about infectious diseases would still be where it was 300 years ago.
But this is exactly where people are today when judging destructive human ideas and behavior. They view them morally as being either right or wrong, the product either of a virtuous versus villainous individual or the result of a person’s good or bad intentions. These ideas are examples of defensive, armored thinking and the moralistic attitudes behind the thinking of almost everyone including the political left and the right.
Because scientists looked at the function of the medical pathogens in its relation to the life of the host organism, whether or not they were destructive to it, these medical sciences thrived. Regarding social problems, the questions that need to be asked are: What is the effect or function on others of a person’s behavior or thought? Are these consequences harmful to the core functions of people’s lives? Asking these questions immediately brings the emotional plague as an infectious bio-social disease into sharper focus and takes the problem of the destructiveness of sick humans out of people’s moral ways of thinking and out of the strait jacket of politics.
Charles Konia, M.D.
The Problem Of Recognizing The Emotional Plague
The emotional plague’s existence depends on its remaining hidden from everyone’s awareness. But why is this so? Why can’t people see this universal sickness of armored humans? …
👍1
Orgone Channel Telegram
The Problem Of Recognizing The Emotional Plague https://charleskonia.com/2013/02/27/the-problem-of-recognizing-the-emotional-plague/ Charles Konia, M.D. The emotional plague’s existence depends on its remaining hidden from everyone’s awareness. But why is…
"The emotional plague’s existence depends on its remaining hidden from everyone’s awareness.
"...
"Because scientists looked at the function of the medical pathogens in its relation to the life of the host organism, whether or not they were destructive to it, these medical sciences thrived. Regarding social problems, the questions that need to be asked are: What is the effect or function on others of a person’s behavior or thought? Are these consequences harmful to the core functions of people’s lives? Asking these questions immediately brings the emotional plague as an infectious bio-social disease into sharper focus and takes the problem of the destructiveness of sick humans out of people’s moral ways of thinking and out of the strait jacket of politics."
Charles Konia, M.D.
The Problem Of Recognizing The Emotional Plague
"...
"Because scientists looked at the function of the medical pathogens in its relation to the life of the host organism, whether or not they were destructive to it, these medical sciences thrived. Regarding social problems, the questions that need to be asked are: What is the effect or function on others of a person’s behavior or thought? Are these consequences harmful to the core functions of people’s lives? Asking these questions immediately brings the emotional plague as an infectious bio-social disease into sharper focus and takes the problem of the destructiveness of sick humans out of people’s moral ways of thinking and out of the strait jacket of politics."
Charles Konia, M.D.
The Problem Of Recognizing The Emotional Plague
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Forwarded from Orgone Channel Telegram (ned)
Bibliography on Orgonomy
A Complete Chronological Listing of Published Books and Research Articles, with searchable keywords.
•Part I: c.1920 through 1957, Research Covering Wilhelm Reich's Lifetime
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography.htm
•Part II: 1958 to 1999: Research After Reich
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography2.htm
•Part III: 2000 to Present: Research After Reich (Continued)
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography3.htm
Additional Information and Resources:
•Click here for more information on the
background, structure and organization of this Bibliography on Orgonomy.*
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogINFO.htm
•University Dissertations and Theses, on the Subject of Reich and Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogDISS.htm
•Short List of Major Books by Wilhelm Reich, M.D., in the English Language
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogWR.htm
•Short List of Major Publications by Various Authors, on the Subject of Reich and Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogOTHERS.htm
•Wilhelm Reich Legal Documents & Court Records
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogLEGAL.htm
•Emotional Plague Bibliography
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogPLAGUE.htm
*Information on the Bibliography on Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogINFO.htm
This Bibliography on Orgonomy had its beginnings, and was built upon the main citation list of my Bibliography on Orgone Biophysics (Natural Energy Works, 1986) which is now out-of-print. The goal of the current effort is to have a complete listing of Wilhelm Reich's voluminous publications, along with all those by his associates and co-workers, and others who took up the subject of his research over subsequent decades. On many occasions, research scientists have asked me where they could find information on one or another aspect of Reich's work, or if something had been replicated or not, and it was a constant difficulty to provide assistance to those honest inquiries. Also, the "skeptics" have continued to misrepresent this large body of work, as if it did not exist. With the coming of global internet, a new possibility opened up for making these materials available, world-wide. This Bibliography on Orgonomy should be a helpful tool for researchers, allowing name, noscript and keyword searches using ordinary internet browsers. It should also finally put to rest the chronic misrepresentations that "only Reich" made observations [of] the various orgone energy phenomena under discussion. ...
Since this is a scientific bibliography, I have included research publications which yield both positive and negative findings, though it must be said, the number of honestly-undertaken research efforts which obtained wholly negative results on Reich's work are extremely rare. By contrast, the malicious attacks against Reich, his associates and contemporary research scientists and physicians investigating this subject, disinformation smear articles as appearing in the popular press and occasionally spilling over as commentary in a few scientific journals (but without research support) are far more abundant. Due to their patently unscientific nature, such materials have been segregated into a separate Emotional Plague Bibliography which also includes published rebuttals against them. I also have made a separate listing of university theses and dissertations focused upon Reich and orgonomy, as these will be of special interest for students. Most contain excellent support for orgonomic research. Similarly, a separate list has been made of various court documents and records of the Reich legal case, as many of them are in book form, and contain materials of both scientific and historical importance. The rebuttal-materials, university theses and dissertations, and the Reich legal-case materials are all included within this main Bibliography on Orgonomy making it the most comprehensive source.
James DeMeo, Ph.D.
Director, Orgone Biophysical Research Lab
Greensprings, Ashland, Oregon, USA
A Complete Chronological Listing of Published Books and Research Articles, with searchable keywords.
•Part I: c.1920 through 1957, Research Covering Wilhelm Reich's Lifetime
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography.htm
•Part II: 1958 to 1999: Research After Reich
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography2.htm
•Part III: 2000 to Present: Research After Reich (Continued)
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliography3.htm
Additional Information and Resources:
•Click here for more information on the
background, structure and organization of this Bibliography on Orgonomy.*
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogINFO.htm
•University Dissertations and Theses, on the Subject of Reich and Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogDISS.htm
•Short List of Major Books by Wilhelm Reich, M.D., in the English Language
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogWR.htm
•Short List of Major Publications by Various Authors, on the Subject of Reich and Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogOTHERS.htm
•Wilhelm Reich Legal Documents & Court Records
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogLEGAL.htm
•Emotional Plague Bibliography
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogPLAGUE.htm
*Information on the Bibliography on Orgonomy
http://www.orgonelab.org/bibliogINFO.htm
This Bibliography on Orgonomy had its beginnings, and was built upon the main citation list of my Bibliography on Orgone Biophysics (Natural Energy Works, 1986) which is now out-of-print. The goal of the current effort is to have a complete listing of Wilhelm Reich's voluminous publications, along with all those by his associates and co-workers, and others who took up the subject of his research over subsequent decades. On many occasions, research scientists have asked me where they could find information on one or another aspect of Reich's work, or if something had been replicated or not, and it was a constant difficulty to provide assistance to those honest inquiries. Also, the "skeptics" have continued to misrepresent this large body of work, as if it did not exist. With the coming of global internet, a new possibility opened up for making these materials available, world-wide. This Bibliography on Orgonomy should be a helpful tool for researchers, allowing name, noscript and keyword searches using ordinary internet browsers. It should also finally put to rest the chronic misrepresentations that "only Reich" made observations [of] the various orgone energy phenomena under discussion. ...
Since this is a scientific bibliography, I have included research publications which yield both positive and negative findings, though it must be said, the number of honestly-undertaken research efforts which obtained wholly negative results on Reich's work are extremely rare. By contrast, the malicious attacks against Reich, his associates and contemporary research scientists and physicians investigating this subject, disinformation smear articles as appearing in the popular press and occasionally spilling over as commentary in a few scientific journals (but without research support) are far more abundant. Due to their patently unscientific nature, such materials have been segregated into a separate Emotional Plague Bibliography which also includes published rebuttals against them. I also have made a separate listing of university theses and dissertations focused upon Reich and orgonomy, as these will be of special interest for students. Most contain excellent support for orgonomic research. Similarly, a separate list has been made of various court documents and records of the Reich legal case, as many of them are in book form, and contain materials of both scientific and historical importance. The rebuttal-materials, university theses and dissertations, and the Reich legal-case materials are all included within this main Bibliography on Orgonomy making it the most comprehensive source.
James DeMeo, Ph.D.
Director, Orgone Biophysical Research Lab
Greensprings, Ashland, Oregon, USA
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