An Internal Battery. Every functional change in the body is associated with electricity, but the source is uncertain. It is known that all the elements from our food give off electrical radiation. Carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium and all other minerals combine to form an electrical battery within the body.
Our pulsating heart produces an electrical current that creates electrical magnetic fields, measuring less than one-billionth of the earth’s magnetic field. However, it is still not known how these magnetic fields affect our biological metabolism, although their presence suggests that changes in the earth’s magnetic and static electricity fields do have a bearing on the nervous system.
Dr. Hans Neuberger told delegates at a Pennsylvania Health Conference that many investigators have confirmed that natural atmospheric electricity affects living organisms. Scientists now can predict certain sensory responses in humans and animals on the basis of expected weather changes, he said.
Over the past 200 years, Dr. Neuberger noted, it has been shown statistically that the atmospherics can produce pain, stimulate labor and childbirth, and terminate fatal disease. Moreover, atmospherics can slow physical reaction time, “perhaps thereby favoring traffic and industrial accidents.” Television, radio and radar waves closely resemble these atmospherics.
Little is known about the mechanisms involved in physiological reactions to atmospheric electrical factors. Various body functions may well respond to different frequencies of radio-wave pulses, the meteorologists have theorized, but investigations should cover the whole frequency spectrum.
Experiments that have been conducted furnished some clues to the possible limits of human responses to electricity, Dr. Neuberger said. But much more needs to be done, he added, because it is obvious that atmospherics have great significance for anyone concerned with environmental health.
If air ions and atmospheric electricity can stimulate or reduce pain, encourage or discourage the growth of certain diseases, it is possible that electricity in prescribed amounts could do the same.
It’s even possible that in a few years, five cents worth of electrical current will replace today’s handful of pills, concludes the report.
No comments:
Post a Comment