Lakhovsky - Radiations.pdf

(6122 KB) Pobierz
BY THE
SA.ME
AUTHOI{
L'Origine de Ia Vie (preface du Professeur d'Arsonval, de l'Institut),
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1926.
Contribution
a
l'Etioiogie du Cancer, Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1927.
L'Universion (preface du Professeur d'Arsonval, de l'Institut), Paris,
Gauthier-Villars, 1927.
Le Secret de Ia Vie (nouvelle edition revue et augmentee de
L'Origine
de fa Vie),
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1929.
EI Secreto de Ia Vida (traduction espagnole du precedent), Madrid,
M. Aguilar, 1929.
La Science et Ie Bonheur (Longevite et immortalite par les vibrations),
Paris, Gauthier-Villars, 1930.
Das Geheimnis des Lebens (traduction allemande du
Secret de la Vie),
Munich, Beck Verlag, 1931.
L'Oscillation cellulaire (Ensemble des recherches experimentales), Paris,
G. Doin et Cie, 1931.
L'Etatisme, mort des nations. Editions S. A. C. L., 25, rue des Marron-
niers, Paris, 1931.
La Formation Neoplastique et Ie Desequilibre Oscillatoire Cellulaire
(traitement du cancer par l'oscillateur
it
longueurs d'ondes multiples
Lakhovsky), Paris,
G.
Doin et Cie, 1932.
L'Eternite, Ia Vie et Ia Mort, Paris, Fasquelle, editeur, 1932.
La Terre et Nous, Paris, Fasquelle, editeur, 1933.
La CabaIe, Paris, Editions S. A. C. L.
La Matiere, Paris, G. Doin et Cie, 1934.
Le Racisme et l'orchestre universel, Paris, Alcan, 1934.
Le Grand Probleme, Paris, Alcan, 1935.
La Nature et ses .Merveilles, Hachette, 1936.
De Moscou
it
Madrid, Editions S. A. C. L., Paris, 1937.
Longevite, Hachette, editeur, Paris, 1938 (S. A. C. L.).
Radiations et Ondes, source de notre vie, Editions S. A. C. L., Paris,
1938.
The Secret of Life, Editions William Heinemann, 99, Great Russel Street,
Londres W. C.
I.
Longevitad, Libreria Hachette S. A., Buenos-Aires, 1938.
Od Moskwy do Madrytu, Biblioteka Polska, Varsovie, 1938.
La Civilisation et la Folie raciste, Editions de la Maison Frall!,:aise,
1941.
610
Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
I
,
!
RADIATIONS
AND WAVES
Sources of Our Life
by
GEORGES LAKHOVSKY
PUBLISHED
BY
EMILE
L.
CABELLA
228 EAST 45
TH
STREET
NEW
YORK.
U. S. A.
Copyright, 1941
by
GEORGES LAKHOVSKY
PREFACE
d
I
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED
BY
EMILE L. CABELLA
228
EAST 45TH STREET
NEW YORK, N. Y.
U.S.A.
PRICE: $2.50
GEORGES LAKHOVSKY showed me the translation of his
work
Radiations et Ondes,
I
realized that here was a veri-
table revolution in scientific thought of which my American col-
leagues were as yet utterly uninformed. The magnitude of Lak-
hovsky's work, although well-known among European biologists
and physicists, had not yet been presented to scientific cu:des in
this counh·y. Many eminent scholars, among them Dr. Caligaris,
Professor of Neurology at the University of Rome, Professor
Attilj, Chief Radiologist at San Spirito in Sassia Hospital in
Rome, Dr. Postma, prominent Dutch physician have published
volumes explaining Lakhovsky's theories and inventions in Eu-
rope.
It
was the reading of Michel Adam and Givelet's (French
scientists) remarkable volumes on the work of Lakhovsky,
La
Vie et les Ondes,
that inspired me to write these few inadequate
remarks. Professor Lakhovsky's modesty and repeated protests
could not deter me in my determination to open to American
science a new world of substantiated knowledge which is,
I
feel
sure, destined to revolutionize modern biology and physics.
My own experiences with Lakhovsky's multiple wave-length
oscillator apparatus have been such as to leave no doubt in my
mind of his invaluable contribution to our unending search for
the primary causes of life and death. To Professor Lakhovsky
I
brought a patient suffering from an advanced stage of stomach
malignancy, very painful, and symptomatized by rapid loss of
weight, general lack of vitality, etc.
I
had previously subjected
this patient to various blood examinations, radiographs, and
other h·eatments. Mter several exposures to Lakhovsky's mul-
W
HEN
10
RADIATIONS AND WAVES
SOURCES OF OUR LIFE
11
tiple wave-length oscillator machine, a gradual amelioration of
the condition was noted. This is only one of countless cases that
have been miraculously restored by Lakhovsky's invention.
Thousands of enthusiastic testimonials from all parts of the
world have expressed the gratitude of patients suffering from
many varied diseases, often incurables, completely cured by this
remarkable apparatus.
When you have read this volume, you will understand the
obligation I feel to make known to my American confreres the
tremendous scope and importance of Lakhovsky's work.
THE WORK OF GEORGES LAKHOVSKY
Everyone who reads this volume,
Radiations and Waves,
will be impressed by the remarkable results which Georges
Lakhovsky has obtained by the application of his theories and
the apparatus he developed.
In order to convey to you a better understanding of the
magnitude of his work, we have thought it fitting to introduce this
great French scholar and scientist.
Approximately twenty years ago Lakhovsky put forward
the theory of cellular oscillation to explain the fact that every
year billions of tons of living things, both plants and animals,
are brought forth on this earth.
He has shown that no living thing is without cells, and that
each cell, whether from our own bodies, from animal or plant, or
even from a unicellular microbe, is like a radio apparatus formed
by oscillating circuits - the chromosomes and the chondromes.
These elements are tubular microscopic filaments of an in-
sulating material, filled with a conducting fluid containing most
every chemical element, like sea water.
They constitute true oscillating circuits, which vibrate elec-
trically under the influence of cosmic, telluric, and atmospheric
radiations, and envelop us in their own characteristic wave-
lengths ranging from 30 kilometres to about one ten-millionth of
a millimetre.
Cellular oscillation spells life. When the cells cease to vibrate,
illness supervenes, then death. Now these cells may cease vibrat-
ing for various reasons, particularly due to marked and abrupt
changes in the cosmic, telluric, and atmospheric waves.
Lakhovsky had the idea that, in order to increase resistance
and combat disease, we must sb'engthen the surrounding radia-
tion so as to give to the cell an aperiodic oscillatory shock.
With this object in view, he built, in 1923, an oscillator pro-
ducing very short electric waves, from 2 to 10 meb'es in length,
with which he successfully treated plant cancer in the surgical
clinic of the Salpetriere.
In fact, by exposing plants with enormous tumors to this
radiation, he succeeded in curing them. in sixteen days. On
August 26, 1924, he and Professor Gosset made a joint communi-
cation on the subject to the Biology Society of Paris.
This communication received considerable acclaim at that
time. His experiments were repeated in a great many countries.
with the same positive results and became the subject of many
communications to the learned bodies of those counhies.
It was natural that, at the outset, Lakhovsky should be vio-
lently attacked by a large number of scientists who did not under-
stand the solid foundation of his theories, and such an attitude
is readily understandable in view· of their exheme novelty, for
he was indeed the first scientist to explain biology in terms of
physics.
It
is conceded, I think, that the majority of physicists
know little biology, and that the biologists are usually very little
informed in matters of physics.
It was only after numerous experiments had been made
throughout the world that most of his detractors were trans-
formed into admirers. But there is still a very small nucleus who
continue to fight him stubbornly. There is nothing surprising in
that; did not the illustrious Pasteur himself have a similar fate?
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin