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The Science of Homeopathy – page 68

tients” – leaves of grapevines, apple trees, tobacco and so on. In every case, the Kirlians could establish whether or not the plant was ill long before there were any physical pathological changes in the leaves or the plants, by studying the leaf’s energy counterpart body in high fre- quency photos.12

On another occasion, this effect was observed on Semyon Kirlian himself. While calibrating his equipment, he tested his own hand in the machine, but he was unable to get the usual pattern of emanations no matter how hard he tried. His wife, however, was able to get the machine to work perfectly. Shortly thereafter, Semyon fell ill with an acute ailment and realized that he had seen the change in his electro- dynamic field prior to the actual onset of the illness. Since then, further studies have confirmed this observation:

Kirlian and Kirlian (1959) note that when a person is in poor men- tal and or physical health, the photographs taken of that person reflect changes in his field (e.g., in diameter, in color, in regularity). This finding related to Presman’s statement (1970:6) that, in the living or- ganism, systems that handle information are ordinarily shielded from interference from external electromagnetic fields, but in pathological states the barriers break down and more of an influence is exerted by the external forces (e.g., solar flares, lightning discharges).

Lewin (1951) has noted that the ordinary boundaries do not func- tion well in pathological states.13

They have found that a withered leaf showed almost no flares and that the clots barely move. As the leaf gradually dies, its self-emis- sions also decrease correspondingly until there is no emission from the dead leaf. Likewise, the finger of a human body, dead for several days, exhibits no distinctive self-emissions. The self-emission of living things seems to be a direct measure of the life processes occurring within their system.14



Working with Harold Saxton Burr’s technique, Louis Langman, M.D., of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, New York University College of Medicine and Bellevue Hospital, studied large numbers of women in the outpatient clinics by inserting electrodes near the cervix and on the external abdominal wall, and recording the potential differences. This data was then correlated with the subse- quent clinical course of the patients, with the following results:

12. Ostrander and Schroeder, Psychic Discoveries, p. 202.

13. Krippner and Rubin, The Kirlian Aura, p.90.

14. Ibid., p. 102.