Magnetic Resonance and the “Healer Phenomenon”

Magnetic Resonance and the “Healer Phenomenon”

Evidence that healers can diagnose the site of a disease process by giving off some type of electromagnetic field from their hands was presented in Chapter 4. I have theorized that the field given off by the healer induces electromagnetic resonance of some body component, and that the healer senses the returned signal. The healer gradually builds up an image in his or her mind that is similar to that of the magnetic imager but has lower resolution. This theory does not require that the hydrogen ion be the target particle. It could be any one of a number of biologically significant ions, or it could be a specific molecule, such as an enzyme or a peptide. It may be possible to explain the therapeutic effect produced by healers on a similar basis. If verified, this could lead to the development of specific clinically useful devices. We should not only think of influencing specific ions within an area of pathology, but we should also consider some resonant reaction between the fields given off by the healer and the intrinsic electrical-control systems within the body. While these currents have a vanishingly small flow, they would nevertheless produce local DC magnetic fields within the tissues. These fields, in combination with a frequency field given off by the healer, could result in resonance with other charged particles.

Because this theory rests on complex resonance, the Earth’s steady magnetic field must be involved. The oscillating field from the healer should then be in the appropriate ELF range. Because the strength of the Earth’s field varies on a diurnal cycle, the resonant frequency range should also vary slightly, and the healer’s emitted frequency should shit accordingly. However, it would appear unrealistic to expect a healer to perform with the precision and capability of a frequency generator. Therefore, the range of frequencies possible from the healer is probably limited to that required by the natural variations in te Earth’s steady-state field.

If this theory is correct, healers should be able to work with greater precision and display greater diagnostic and healing abilities during times of quiet geomagnetic-field conditions. Conversely, they should be adversely affected by periods of magnetic storms and perhaps by locations in which man-made, high-strength, steady magnetic fields or competing ELF fields are present. None of these possibilities have yet been explored in relation to the healer phenomenon.