
As the previous episodes in this series discussed, the middle years of the twentieth century saw medical authorites in the United States use every available legal gimmick to try to force alternative medical practitioners out of business. Wilhelm Reich, whose fate we discussed last week, was far from the only healer to land in prison on trumped-up charges, nor were his the only books to be burnt by the FDA -- longtime herbalists in the US recall the time that Nature's Herbs, San Francisco's one herbal store in the 1940s, had FDA goons come crashing in to haul the books for sale there out into the street to be burnt in public. it was a very difficult time here.
Across the Atlantic in Great Britain, by contrast, medical researchers interested in pursuing radionics and other alternative health care modalities didn't have to face the same sort of persecution. Thus the next stages in the development of radionics took place there. The trailblazer in the British radionics scene was Dr. Guyon Richards, a respected physician, who was inspired by Albert Abrams' work to begin his own series of experiments. He published a book,
The Chain of Life, in 1934. (It's long out of print and difficult to find; since Richards died in 1946 and his book is now out of copyright, it would be a good candidate for republishing.) His book and his experiments inspired other British researchers to turn their attention to radionics.

The most influential of the second generation of British radionics researchers was the husband-and-wife team of Marjorie and George de la Warr. (That's Marjorie on the right, working with one of their radionics machines.) George was an engineer who became fascinated with radionics between the two world wars. At that time nearly all radionics gear was manufactured in the United States, and getting the necessary equipment overseas was expensive. De la Warr's response was to contact Ruth Drown and get a license to build machines using her design in Britain. De La Warr Laboratories soon became a major supplier of radionics equipment to British and European researchers and physicians.

The de la Warrs -- that's George on the left -- also went to work with the strangest of Ruth Drown's inventions, a camera that apparently took pictures at a distance through radionics. They scored some eerie hits: for example, using a drop of blood from a cancer patient, they produced a photo showing a tumor in his brain. When the patient died and was autopsied, the location and size of the tumor turned out to be correct. (This was long before CAT and MRI scans, remember.)
The tide of repression on the far side of the Atlantic didn't leave them entirley unscathed. In 1969 the de la Warrs were sued for fraud by a woman who bought one of their machines and claimed that it did nothing. The suit was thrown out of court, fortunately for the radionics community, but not before the de la Warrs were deep in debt. Even so, they escaped the fate of Drown, Reich, and too many other alternative health care pioneers in the US.

The de la Warrs inspired many other British radionics practitioners, and helped launch a wave of innovation in the field. Among the leading figures in the movement were Malcolm Rae and Darrell Butcher, who devised radionics machines of their own designs and did extensive experimental work with them. Perhaps the most revolutionary work in the field, however, was done by Dr. David Tansley, a chiropractor who became interested in radionics in the 1960s. Tansley -- that's him on the right -- had an encyclopedic knowledge of esoteric philosophy and Asian mystical traditions, and he seems to have been the first person to explore the interface between radionics and these older ways of understanding and working with the life force. His many books on radionics helped guide other researchers and practitioners into a broader sense of what they were working with.
Today? Radionics is a thriving field in Britain, one of the recognized branches of alternative health care, with its own professional organization, the
Radionic Association. Training courses and radionics therapy are freely available, and there are several manufacturers of radionics machines doing a steady business. Somehow, despite the claims of the medical industry and its government enablers on this side of the pond, people aren't dropping like flies as a result of using radionics -- quite the contrary, in fact -- and in general, the open British approach to alternative healing has proven itself, Maybe someday we can get equally sane policies in place over here.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-27 08:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 03:57 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 02:43 pm (UTC)Just some of the more polite descriptions of the United States in common use.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-27 08:28 pm (UTC)characters from the Yellow Submarine movie, the Butterfly Stomper. One scene show the Stomper pouncing on
a harmless butterfly apparently crushing it into oblivion only to have the butterfly flit out unharmed
behind the Stomper while it scratches its head in puzzlement over the lack of butterfly remains.
If anything of radionics or any alternative treatment for that matter is humbug, that will soon be apparent from the lack of successful outcomes. Coming down like a ton of bricks without bothering to test the virtue of these treatments in a fair-minded way will only guarantee they will elude repression and go flitting merrily on their way unaffected by the stomping of FDA Stomper boots.
JLfromNH/Umber Hibernating Peacock
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 03:58 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 09:42 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 03:40 pm (UTC)a unique movie in terms of its artwork. Classic sixties Pop-art stuff but still fun to watch.
JLfromNH/Umber Hibernating Peacock
Etheric Technology in Anime
Date: 2021-04-28 12:49 am (UTC)Key has one of the most interesting and imaginative depictions of etheric technology I've seen in any fictional work. At the outset, the story it tells is about a robot girl whose creator, on his deathbed, leaves her a message telling her that she can become human if she makes 30,000 friends. But as the plot and backstory are revealed, another story becomes apparent: the story of a scientist who discovered a method for converting the etheric body into a physical substance and the various (mis)uses of the technology that followed. There's some quite scathing critique of celebrity culture and the entertainment industry thrown in as well, along with meditations on the health of modern and pre-modern ways of living.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 01:22 am (UTC)It's long out of print and difficult to find; since Richards died in 1946 and his book is now out of copyright, it would be a good candidate for republishing.
This is a recurring background theme.
Is there a potted introduction on how to do this somewhere? Or if not, how did you republish books?
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 03:59 am (UTC)Republishing
Date: 2021-04-28 07:13 am (UTC)This is a very important step that all too often gets skipped.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 02:16 am (UTC)https://blogs.loc.gov/copyright/2021/01/the-lifecycle-of-copyright-1925-works-enter-the-public-domain/
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 02:53 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 03:14 am (UTC)Hmm, if my calculator's right, that means two full decades of public domain riches available in the UK ahead of the US. (UK authors who died 1946 or earlier, vs US publications 1925 or earlier.)
- Mr. New-Writer
republishing
Date: 2021-04-29 02:57 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 01:30 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 04:00 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 07:57 am (UTC)They are in Newfoundland, of all places. It looks like the Radionics Association in Britain, where they offer services, courses and accreditation, as well as selling products. Interesting!
British attitude toward alternative health
Date: 2021-05-02 09:40 pm (UTC)Rita
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 01:47 am (UTC)I assume supplies for these radionics devices would be similar to what one would use to build a radio: vacuum tubes, switches and knobs, miscellaneous electronics parts, metal cases. All readily available in any town in the U.S. and Britain? Or would there need to be trips to Silicon Valley or London to pick up specialized components? Or some kind of manufacturing to create one's own custom tubes or whatever?
This is a continuously fascinating series. Thank you so much.
- Mr. New-Writer
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 04:06 am (UTC)2) All the components in radionics machines are standard electronic components -- variable resistors, variable capacitors, low-power transistors or vacuum tubes, switches, and the like. I built my Hieronymus machine using components purchased at a small-town Radio Shack.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 02:23 am (UTC)Perhaps Radionics Shack could now be a success in the UK?
"both ran the constant risk of getting stomped"
Or pursued by a Flying Glove or other awful Blue Meanies of Medical-Legal Compliance...
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 09:39 am (UTC)I saw some warnings on youtube channels about using orgone boxes and blankets in surroundings where there is a presence of 4g or 5g
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 06:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 12:24 pm (UTC)If there is to be a renaissance of etheric medicine, the most important question is how to keep quacks and criminals out. If etheric treatments become a hot topic, expect some guy to build a box with some lights that blink randomly and a metal tiara that connects to your head with some wires and sell it as an "Ether-Balancing Hyperbaric Phantasmotron" for $20,000. Frauds who devote all their energy to spinning lies have an easier time getting noticed than honest researchers who are focused on conducting repeatable experiments. Etheric research may be banished to the shadows now, but that may mean this is the best time for real contributions to the field.
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-29 02:35 am (UTC)They're still around, and the metal tiara's got a USB jack.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/350-anti-5g-usb-stick-is-a-cheap-flash-drive-with-a-sticker-attached/
- Mr. New-Writer
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-28 02:36 pm (UTC)Still, thought-provoking stuff...
Axé,
Fra' Lupo
(no subject)
Date: 2021-04-30 09:25 am (UTC)https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&source=web&rct=j&url=https://arxiv.org/pdf/1312.1148&ved=2ahUKEwivoIrEzqXwAhUayzgGHd18BpIQFjABegQICRAC&usg=AOvVaw2cfJYJrwzu-wHOYmNy4M38&cshid=1619773565980
Interesting cancer find
Date: 2021-05-01 01:14 pm (UTC)Not directly linked to the topic in question but I thought you'd be interested in this, given your fairly recent musings on cancer and it's rise alongside modern chemical production: https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/cancer-rates-in-medieval-britain-were-around-ten-times-higher-than-previously-thought-study-suggests
A Copy of the Richards Book is on eBay
Date: 2021-05-02 03:40 am (UTC)https://www.ebay.com/itm/401710512263
Should I grab it? Does somebody else want to grab it?
- Cicada Grove
More copies of the Richards book available
Date: 2021-05-02 03:48 am (UTC)https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?isbn=&an=richards%20guyon&tn=chain%20life&n=100121503&cm_sp=mbc-_-ats-_-used
Going for $60, $178, and $480.
- Cicada Grove