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The Science of Homeopathy – page 62

Using a high-impedance vacuum tube apparatus based on a Wheat- stone bridge, Burr developed an electrode which could be inserted into living tissue for the purpose of measuring electrical potential, without significantly disturbing the electromagnetic field of the organism. Over a period of thirty years, he systematically studied organisms of pro- gressively increasing complexity, from single cells to trees to human beings. Eventually it was possible to place the electrodes very near the surface of the organism without actually penetrating it, while continu- ing to get meaningful results. The story of this research is presented in Dr. Burr’s book The Fields of Life, which is highly recommended for readers wishing to go more deeply into the details. Here is a brief description of his initial observations:

 

With our “navigational instruments” – a high impedance ampli- fied and silver-silver chloride electrodes working through salt bridge in contact with living systems – we have been able to develop a tech- nique which gives reliable results. With this it soon became clear that every living system possesses an electrical field of great complexity. This can be measured with considerable certainty and accuracy and shown to have correlations with growth and development, degenera- tion and regeneration, and the orientation of component parts in the whole system. Perhaps more interesting than any one thing, this field exhibits remarkable stability through the growth and development of an egg.5 (Emphasis mine.)

 

Dr. Leonard Ravitz, a close colleague of Dr. Burr’s, corroborates and expands upon the implications of his research in this statement:

 

As Dr. Burr has described in the preceding pages, instruments have found what he and Dr. Northrop postulated over thirty years ago. Countless experiments have demonstrated that the electric fields they discovered serve basic functions, controlling growth and mor- phogenesis, maintenance and repair of living things. Naturally, these differ from the alternating-current electric output of the brain and heart, as well as from the epiphenomenal skin-resistance, serving rather as an electronic matrix to keep the corporeal form in shape.

Obviously such studies throw a wet blanket on scientific dogmas currently in vogue, which still assert that the special human body is principally a chemical product deriving from mystical activities of the DNA molecule. However disquieting, chemistry represents a scalar property – the downhill flow of energy – requiring some vector force to

5. H.S. Burr, The Fields of Life (New York: Ballantine, 1972), p. 43.