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INTRODUCTION The pioneer of radionics was Dr. Albert Abrams (1869-1924), an American medical doctor specialising in neurology. He studied, experimented with, and utilised the radiational concept of disease in his medical practice. In this context, the term radiation refers to the energetic emissions from living tissues, the organism's bio-energy or life-field. Although radionics has moved on and changed considerably over the years, the basic principles of organic radiation and the resonances created remains intact.
BLOOD & HAIR SAMPLES The earliest sample chosen was blood as it was the one substance that had contact with every organ of the body during its circulation. As such, blood should contain all the vibrational energies/frequencies of the different organs. In modern times this has been validated by the work of Dr. E. Pfeiffer whose experiments have demonstrated that blood really is fully representative of a person's total energy field. Many other types of biological sample have be used, including urine and saliva, but hair is the easiest and safest sample. Biological samples are based on the underlying principle of individual uniqueness where modern genetic tests have confirmed that no two people have exactly the same genetic structure. This fact is used in genetic testing for ascertaining parenthood or ancestry as well as in police criminal investigations. In some cases, a single strand of hair has been analysed, its owner discovered and the crime solved. Hair samples are as unique as fingerprints. Just as genetic substance is unique, so is the energy radiated by such genes. Each person has their own unique, personal vibration or frequency, their genetic frequency, which is encoded into every part of their organism. As the genetic system lies at the heart of every cell in the body, so every organ, function and process have their own representative part of the genetic frequency. People may have the same organs, but their own specific genetic frequency is encoded into that organ, making it their own and ensuring that no two people are the same. The personal frequency encoded into blood or hair is unique and acts as a switching station or gateway for 'tuning-in' to a person using a radionic analyser. In this way a person's life-field may be accessed and quantitative measurements may be elicited through the sample giving readings at the time of analysis irrespective of how old the hair is. The personal frequency remains the same throughout life.
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