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What is Radionics?

By Douglas Bonderud
Updated May 17, 2024
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Radionics is a form of disease treatment that was invented in the early 20th century by American neurologist Albert Abrams. Abrams claimed that all living things emanated an energy field that could be detected and measured. He also called this field a frequency, but it was not measured in units of any kind. Abrams postulated that a healthy person emits different frequencies than an unhealthy one, and he developed machines that were supposedly able to detect this difference.

Initially, radionics took place with the healer and patient in close proximity. The patient or client, would provide a blood, hair, or written signature sample, known as a witness. This sample would be placed into a receptacle on the healing machine. A pendulum or other detection device would be then be used to detect areas of the witness in which surface tension changed.

These areas of strange tension were thought to be emitting diseased energy, and healing energy would be sent back to the patient via the machine, or the consciousness of the healer themselves. During his lifetime, Abrams invented at least a dozen such machines, which were never sold but always leased to clients on the condition that they never be opened. All of the devices were hermetically sealed. Abrams' most popular device was the oscilloclast, which he stated could both diagnose and heal a client based on their witness. This device became known as the black box.

After his death in 1924, the American Medical Association (AMA) opened one of Abrams' devices, and found numerous parts, including a condenser and a rheostat. They found no evidence that it could either transmit or receive energy waves of any type. A separate study conducted by Scientific American magazine in 1924, found all of his devices unable to perform the functions Abrams claimed.

In the 1930s, an American chiropractor and naturopath named Ruth Drown refined the principles of radionics. She argued that the healer and client could be a vast distance apart, and the curative abilities of radionics would still work. Drown developed her own black box, which she stated could send healing radiation across long distances. Also, the box was supposedly able to create radio photographs of a client's organs, simply by analyzing a drop of their blood. Her machine was tested by the University of Chicago but did not perform as she claimed.

Many countries including the United States and Canada still have large communities dedicated to radionics. Healing by radionics is now said to depend on the ability of the practitioner, to bring the client to a state in which they believe they are healed. This healing depends on the willingness of the client and does not happen over a specified time period.

Radionics is often referred to as a form of sympathetic magic. This is because it uses an object that represents a person — in this case, a hair or blood sample — to affect the person themselves. No scientific testing has been able to confirm any of the claims made by practitioners of this form of healing.

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Discussion Comments

By anon948389 — On Apr 30, 2014

Nowadays, most, if not all Radionic practitioners use dowsing in conjunction with their radionic instruments.

By anon948287 — On Apr 29, 2014

Western medical science has made the assumption that it and it alone has all the answers to proper health care.

Dr. Westlake, a medical physician, said it best: "Modern medicine has thus become largely a question of giving a name to a complaint, and then of treating its signs and symptoms. This is neither intelligent nor scientific and certainly no matter for complacency and, still less for ignoring any theory which might lead to the truth." Dr. Aurbrey T. Westlake B.A., M.B., B. Chir. (Cantab), M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P., F.I.Pis. Med. "The Pattern of Health."

Radionics, while not understood by modern western science, has hundreds of thousands of reports of excellent results. It is not amenable to testing by conventional double blind trials, and the absence of results in such trials cannot be taken as proof that it is worthless.

After all, clinical case studies are not much more than a compilation of personal experience accounts. Its low cost and lack of negative side effects make radionics an attractive supplement to conventional medical techniques.

Many believe that Radionics is the quintessential early diagnosis system, detecting problems in putative subtle energy systems long before the physical signs show up.

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