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100% found this document useful (19 votes)
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Negative Green PDF

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© © All Rights Reserved
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You are on page 1/ 52

Contents PAGF.

F-orcword . . . 4

lntrod uction 5

A Short History 8

The Nature of Living Radiation 17


L ife as Energy

The Mystery of Shapes 27

The Pendulum and Whal It Does 34

Movements of the Pendulum . .. 37

The Negative Green Pendulum . . . 40

The Negative Green Battery ... 41

The Negative Green Generator . . . 44

The Radionic Computer and the Negative Green Force 45

Other Shapes and Devices that Produce the Force Fields we


know as Negative Green 46

Rays and Radiation 46


The Green Filter

lnto the Future 49

Bibliography 51

Books by the Author 52


NEGATIVE GREEN
(Nature's Secret Power)
by JjttJC
.o;
jJ)
Bruce Copen, Ph.D., D.Ljtt an c
wbil
rnigl
FOREWORD are-
Man has an insatiable urge to a t.tain kn~w ledge of a H.kinds, be H knO'
rese~
rational or irrational, and there is possibly at no t~e during
humanities' life on this planet when so m uch know ledge IS coming -th
fo rth upon all kinds of things. Even .)Q years ago, the degree of ane,
knowledae0
of the average person was re..a ted to the home and im-
mediate work surroundings. PrevioLs to this time, knowledge was a tin
slow to develop and show itself. mair
D uring the period from World War II to the present day, more to fi
information has been given to the average m an-in- the -street (as most wou1
authors put it) than in centuries past, the consequences are that but
instead of new knowledge stemming from a few bodies and offered the I
for public consumption today even scientific informa tion is given to obtai
everyone, and instead of this new knowledge being for the few, it is
fo r the many, the only pr oblem that this brings a bout, is the large
number of psuedo sciences and theories that have no bearing in fact. are u
that
The purpose of this book, is to offer for the first time in thjs other
for~1. d~ta on ~ relatively new force field and its related phenomena, oner
wh1C:h 1s explained by Radiesthesia, R adionics, and other studies. enqui
Havmg shown that we are in fact m ore complex than we had previ- so 01;
?~!ly ~ought, ~e will show exactly ho w such a new force, such as beJie\
_gative Green _ can show us the way to further interesting specu- of r~
Iation and expen ment.

muc~h~0 info~mation contained in this book has been the result of


are 00~ :~e~~~g study by many authors over a number of years, an~
information wil~ptf~e part of <?Ur sc~entific knowledge. Whether this
garden of light isg ano~ the _mcentive to open further door~ to the
somewhere in the world er .th•fing, but no doubt some searchmg soul
findings. w i 11 nd a new idea and link it with these

Let me state that an h . .


proven to exist and · t e mformatton given in this work has been
world wide path th si~ce research has been ta ken along a difficult
mena known as ~'N en 1.n colJating the knowledge about the pbeno·
knowledge about ou~;e~~~: a~reen'' w~ are then linking it with other
d the Universe around us.

BRUCE COPEN, pH.D.• v.LI~·


Sussex. t 97 ·
4
INTRODUCTION
r\' th1.' l'!tsunl rcad~r the title of this book may at first appear a
liuk t'dd. bul tlk' ll we an; dca li~g with a rather odd phenomena
in 1uttm.' '' hid1 is 1.)pl' ll lL) ~pcculall o~ and rcsca~ch by t~e reader with
1n \'}'1.'I\ mind ~m r~scn rchmg the things that give us Jife and health
~\IHbt "~ .1r1.· l)ll Parth. The problem is n ot a simple on e, as one
rnidll ,\l tlrst think. but then neither are we as simple as we thfok we
,\t\" lik i$ a high complexity of atoms, n1olecules-known and little
1'n\'\\ n and UN known things. Nothing is new, it is only our own
r~~card1. ,.:1.m~t ant l) going on- throughout every day, month and year
th.tt kad$ f\1un in hi · cca ·clc ·s search for inforn1ation, which opens
:\ n~\\ Lk"'-'r to SL)tnC hitherto unknown factor in life.

l b\'ing said this. it i my intention to try, if p ossible, to give but


.l tim glimpse into our complexity, in order that we n1ay achieve two
main things: the first to find out more- this is the quest; the second
to tind u~c~ for this , trn ngc ·fo rce' which has been discovered. I
w1.,uld here ha, ten to add, that l did not discover 'negative green'.
hut ha\ C' along "ith many others of many nationalities, developed
th\'.' rc~carch to find ou t how best we may use the knowledge, thus
('bt,fr1cd.

\\ c li\e in a world of the unusual, and it is because some things


arc unusual that we eck more, but we must beware within ourselves
th3t '' c do not cla ·ify the unusual with the so called "occult" and
1.'. thcr imaginative phenomena. In doing any kind of E.S.P. research
1..'nc mu t u ·c the uLmost caution to stay in the middle of the road of
enquiry. rather than take sides, one way or another; this is the mistake
so many researchers make, either they are inclined to believe, or dis-
bdic' c from the outset, and this will bring bias to the end product
of r~earch.

To be a good researcher, especially in E.S.P. work, which I have


undertaken for over 27 years, one must have an open mind- but not
open to the extent that one believes all that one sees, neither must
o.ne ha\ c. a too narrow scope so that the attention is focussed on one
~m.glc pomt to the exclusion of all others. I do not mind saying that
it 1 ~ ~ rathc~ difficult stance to take, especially when one has proven
as~m1lar point of some earlier stage in research- but this is the stance
'd' hich the true researcher must achieve in order to avoid bias or
ogmatism.

th' , ~n dealing with the 'force' whkh is the subject of the title of
b ~
1
ook, we must n ot imagine somethinO' so simple that it can all
t~· tabu_Jalcd easily, not at all. as we shall se~-it has been called many
r thin~ m many guises, but the end product of the research is much
\vh· hamc. an understanding of a force fie1d--cummon in ~ature­
a Pie bml ay be used under different disO'uises to help humamty solve
ro cm or so. o

5
an old copy of the 'Electronic Medical o·
A paragra,Ph fr~~~ we have already read: ''Someone must ;gest' 111Cl
might sum~ia~Jse weone must take the abuse, som eone must be c:J~ch jf \
rcsf
the new things. so~ then out of it all comes a new Truth to bee ed
a fraud o~ a ~:c h~g jt lo our bosom with infinite str.ength, too~~
ffOI

partd odf u · ·n by a newcomer thus we constantly receive new facts bY


goa e on aoai · f1 1d " pOS1
to make up ; ur proud possession o cnow e ge . sub
'Negative Green' the title of this book might be something of just
a mystery to many new reader.s of E.S.~. (Extra Sensory Perception),
inlC
ano
Radiesthesia. and similar subjects. so 1n ? rder not t? keep you in its c
suspense too Jong. I thought it fit that a bnef explanation of the terrn
"Negative Green" might be il_l order and then Jater to expand on the
theory and practice of the subject. and
Gre 1

We owe the beginnings of Negative . Gre~n research to a Mr. use


Capes an English resid~nt of ~gypt ~ 10 lived 1!1 the l 93~'s and. did gree
much of his research with Rad1esthes1a . lie o btained certam reactions mo"V
with the pendulum over certain shapes that defied the general rule It d
of pendulum work known at that time. For example, he discovered m a
that the sand in some parts of Egypt when placed under a microscope a de:
were shown to be in a kind of pyramidal form, and with the pendulum Hav
attuned to the colour green, which should normally be positive, he whic
obtained a negative reaction over this shape. piee€
T~lcing his researches further, he experimented naturally with the
Pyramids of Egypt and he was the first to discover that not only was scien
a pyramid designed with burial in mind but the Great Pyramid itself a pa
was indeed not a burial pyramid but a pyramid designed to mummify. we a
All Egyptology students, who are many ]earned men throughout t?e and 1
wo\ld, do not bother to accept that the pyramid shape can mummify and
ordm~ry meat and animal matter. Mr. Capes merely showed the force
way m that th~ shape was designed in such a way that it haf!1essed Radi
natural magnetic fields. ?f the earth to produce a force which indeed differ
~~t:{~egr~he dec.ompos1~1on of animal matter. Since that time a great
experimentation has been done over the years.
and ~:~v~~e~e~~s a~o I did experiments with all kinds of pyrami~f
the pyramid to at ~t needs no definite power in the manufactlr~er
degree de endin pro uce !he mummifying effect in greater or ehers
around tte worfd 0~ the J~e of the pyramid itself. Other re~~~ct ii
was a force to be th~on iscovered that this was no myth, tn ver 20
years or so and corn ~ght a?out. My own researches extend 0 1cnoW
!hat not only does t~med w1~h the researches of others, ~e no~t 00Jy
m pyramid shapes buet n~gat!ve gr~en force. as we ~aJI it. edifferent
forms which we sh 11 ~so m conical shapes and m other
a go mto later
It is interest. . " hits
stuck with us ove~n~h to note that the name "Negative Grgnwe\·er.
we must not confuse~ ye~rs and no doubt will remain so. . pbeno·
0

it With a lot of other types of magnetic

6
• • which there a rc about~ but having identified the original power,
h h h" . I
if w~ can ea II it such. then we can compare 1~ wit t e 1stonca
llll: 11I 1 • •

., , rchc'> of "a rious authors over the years and m fact we now know
}~n~n1 1u1hor'> previous to the discovery of negative green in pyramids
,
h\ Mi ( ap~"· that the force was being used for a number of pur-
r{"'~' induu ing hea ling. If we are to research sue~ a~ unu~u~ I
~uhJCd then it comes to o~r mi_nd what can we do with 1t, or is 1t
\[ JUsl ,1n inane force that exists with no uses at a ll. But then we look
). inh) nature and we find that all the forces contained in one way or
II\
annthcr in nature are used to the benefit of nature itself or to us in
Ill ils chain of events.
~~ I believe that this book is the first attempt to try to evaluate
.1nd show an historical context of the force we now call Negative
Green. So if we now recapitulate and anyone who knows how to
t. use pendulums may tu ne thei r pendu lum in to green colour or the
id green wavelengths may then discover that anti-clockwise or negative
rll movements over certain kinds of materials and shapes takes place.
lik ll docs not follow that the discovery of the negative green force js
cd in .my way connected with green, the colour as such, but is merely
pi! a ddinition gi\cn to a force that we are in a position to evaluate.
m Having thu~ evaluated, we have to then discover the best uses to
he wl,kh it can be put and not just put it in a museum as an interesting
piece of science.
1f we accept Radiesthesia and later Radionics as a serious
l~~~~ science. then we must accept the fact that Negative Green is also
a p.1 rt of lhat scie.nce. Man has only recently been able. as far as
elf we arc aware. to discover what was unknowablc only a few years ao-o
ify. and ~vcn half a century ago much of what we know today was fictio~.
the and, 1f. some of my re~d er~ think or imagine that the negative green
l ih fore~ .. is a~other 1magmative fall.acy th~n I know different and any
the R_ad1csthcs1st who may do expenments m these fields will also know
ssed differently.
del!d
_r~~1t f Thus we may see that the term 'negative green' is a power or
a dorcc disc~vered in nature and once discovered may be evaluated
an turned mto some use for the benefit of humanity in one way
we another·
or ma d: It poss'bl
! Y h as. sever.al mterestrng
. . facets. In the first place
at the ran~!C~Ver It, and JO domg SO, WC may diSCOVer Other thino-s
day knowleda~me. d ~e can then link it into the spectrum of prese~t
and scop" y a~ m order to do so we can then evaluate its oriITTils
disc~vcri~~ of °R_~3· se~ond place, because a great deal of rad iati<~nal
or agriculture et JO~cs ~ver the years has been applied to medicine
research of N c.t. t en it behoves us to try to put the stud y and
animals whcrevega ive .ob reen to the benefit of human beings and
er POSS ! le.
uny It willinvol
way be apprec'at
1 ed t h at the science
· of Radionics does not in
'\ n1mats
L
· ve cruelty
of any kind W or ex · · with
1:enmentat1on . human beings or
· e onl y discover the natural radiational powers
7
. Is plants and the general universe around
g
of individuals, am;r~ so we' are using only nature's forces w·thand
within us and~ ~y ~~nartificial kinds of research which can only'b ?Ut rf1UI
artificial me Lcmes rin~ it v
many side effects. . . . thir
. 'd thi's the research into Rad10rncs is never ending d sigl·
Having sa1
any researchers around t he wor Id w110 are discovean fere
there
. aref very n1 d
ts of the world aroun us every ay o
d b th f rom the orthor. 0 ur
mg new ace · f · It w1'II .be appreciated
· · ad
dox and the unorthodox pomt o vie':"'. that mig
.. h..1 th pages of this book we will not contmually refer to the lhCJ
~it '~eg~ive green because it has been t~~med a number of differem a s
t~~~gs by various authors as 'M' rays. 'V1t1c' rays, and other different intc
kinds of radiational power from different .sources, and we are about
to show you what other authors have discovered over the last 50
the
years or so. in t
plea
A SHORT HISTORY bac.
Possibly one of the earliest wnters who I?ay have discovered a Ire
the origin of Negative Green was Baron von Reichenbach who about orb
1851 published his researches into Od and Magnetism, and whose
researches have been verified by a number of Scientists during the ther
following century. To evaluate the enormous amount of work and
undertaken by Baron von Reichenbach and to condense it into a suer
few paragraphs is virtually impossible, but briefly Reichenbach was cau~
a keen observer of many of life's natural phenomenon and he di~· som
c~wered that certain persons were what is generally termed 'sens1· canr
t~ves'. ~b~n. we refer to 'sensitives' we are referring to that ~ropor· port
tion of md1v1duals who can without instruments of any kind di~cover inde
or react to colours, magnetism, electricity. and so on, and Re1cheo· othe
bacb goes on to describe the 'sensitive' in the fo1lowing manner:- leav1
Wha
"S~metimes persons may think they are sensitive to Extra Sensor) fee Ii
Perception (E.S.P.), but a true sensitive has far more to their char·
acter
a than it is . fi rst rea1ise
. d . Have you never m. your J'f
'e. come,
a~~oss lpelo~Je with the strange fancy of disliking everything yello\\.
ye ow itself as a colour?"
One would thi k th . d t gold. a
fiery orange w n ~t a beautiful lemon, a resplen en the
feeling of aver:i~:omethi~g charming to look at. Where c:nwhal
colour they do like ~omde m? ~sk this same class o~ peop~Jue.
• an they will answer as with one 1dea-
Certainly the . do one
good. But ~hen azu~e of the celestial deeps is a sight to elY 1be
beautiful becomes evenmg .frames the azure in gold, then sures intll
the magnificent. w~irethmg more than beautiful and nie~er !Jlet
W man who said he now, I ask you to reflect; have you certaiot~·
d' h~nce comes it n could not endure blue? Never. t~ ad agree ill
tshke of yeUow ~ d 0 f·
that a certain class of mankJO
' n a 1agree in their liking for blue?
Wh·II{

8
Colour-physics teach us that yel low and blue stand in a ~erlain
utual relationship. they are complementary colours, occupying as
;~were opposite poles. is jt possible that underneath this fact some-
thing else ljes hidden than the mere effect of the colour of your eye-
sight? Some n1ore fundamental difference than the mere ?Ptical dif-
ference of colour fam iliar to all of us, some difference which escapes
our senses? Could there be appropriated to the perception of such
a difference also of human facu lty, a difference to the effect that some
might be able to perceive what is unrecognisable by others? Could
there be, so to speak, men with two sorts of senses. That would be
a somewhat pecu liar state of affairs. Let us try and get further
into it.
A girl, we may take it, is well enough pleased to see herself in
the looking-glass. Perhaps, also, there are men who take pleasure
in the reflection of themselves and who would begrudge them the
pleasure when a successful copy of God's f a ir master piece smiles
back upon them, and awakens a nticipa tory joy in the conquest, which
already flushes their cheek? ls there a nything in life more glorious
or beatific than the beautiful M yself?
How would it be though-and it n1ight really be possible-if
there were girls, women, men, who shy off mirrors? W ho turn away
and cannot bear to see themselves in o ne? I n ver y t ru th there are
i
such persons. There are men, a nd not a few in number, who are
s caused .a peculiar feeling of distress by a looking-glass, as tho ugh
some sickly, repellent emotion came to them from it, so t hat they
cannot. stay qmet there fo r a m inute. It is not merely their own
portra1~ the mirror throws back to them, it returns them a lso some
mdescnbable, ~ainful sort of in1pression, which som e feel mor e a nd
fthers less, w!1ile to others it is only just so far perceptible as to
~~~~ them .with a definite d islike of mirrors. Wha t is this? A nd
f r does it come from? Why do som e m en only exped ence this
ee mg of repulsion? Why not all?
in thNo do~bt you have often travelled a nd have come across people
sive ~ y~ibus, coach or ra ilway carriage, who w ith the m ost a ggres-
carria:e s ~e~s wherever they may be, insist on throwing open the
hurn·ce wm ows: Be the weather as bad as m ay be blowing a
ane or as ,c0 Id
fellow-traveller · h · •
h as ic~. t ey will sh ow no considera tion for the ir
You have s r euma t1sm, but conduct themselves insuffera b1y
judgment ~ef~~ded this as bad form; but I ask you to postpone yo u;
They will 1 c at any ra te until a few m ore comments a re ma de.
fined Iimit~u~~e~d, "perhaps, in convincing you that, within the con-
~1nrecognised a present com pany~', things whose na ture is still
irresistible to a:a; ont to ha ppen thmgs strong enough to be quite
others have not th ~ ?f the persons who form the compa ny, whiJe
. e amtest sense of their existence.
1
Wb. t. is possible th t .
un it is neve r t 3: abmong all your fnend s you have none whose
0 sit etween others in a row, be it a t table, in the

9
. cict or in church. but \.Vho always want the corn . tone·
c.
thealt~e. inlfso Tak~ note of him. he is ou r man; we shall sooner scat u Id e'<I
i.:oU
for 11mse . ' . . come
to closer acquaintance w1th 111m. )f1CI
:;tanding.
You have 1 am sure o~scn·cd la.dies .who often feel faint in crowds, '
chu rch. though otherwise thelf health 1s quite goo~. They may be the hand
occupying the corner sea t.' but e~en there they will feel faint and anY Jeng
r.ometimes have to be ca rr~ed out in a ?W?On. If you pay any auen- oet it fre
tion to the matter, you will find that 1t 1s alwayc; _the same. !hat is ~re there
only a certain class of pe~s~n:; who arc affecte~ th1~ way. They ar~ comfortn
absolutely incapable of s1tt~ng any length of time m the nave of a
church without growing famt. and yet they are otherwise health) We
people. such reu
defined c
Your doctor will tell you that. if you want a good. sound sleep
you must lie on your right side. Do you ever ask him why? If he Wei
is honest. he will say be does not know. He is ignorant of the cause; imaginal
but he does kr.ow from his varied experience that there are many perhaps.
people who never can get to sleep when lying on their left side. His lt may s
patient<; have often told him that, but what is really at the bottom of the m
of the fact is unknown to him. people i1
I have c
lf vou care to go more cJosely into the matter. you wilJ find out particula
individuc
thal it is not all men who have to lie on their right in order to get fication
~o sleep. and that very many people sleep habitually on their left· present ,
m fact there are plenty of people who are quite indifferent as to
hov.· they go to s1eep, right or left, and to whom a night's repose on matter c
' he Ief~ ear brings just as much refreshment as one on the right. But to these
vou w1~l a~so find that those who cannot sleep on their left. ?ut only
case as ii
?n their np;ht, make. a minority so subject to this peculiarity ~ ~ Wh1
clas5 that tl~cy can he on their left hour after hou r. without getlln.:: all of the
10 sle~p. while so so?n. as the~ turn on their right si~e they get off 1 ~ never, n,
sleep m .a .moment, it 1s certainly a very peculiar thing; but you ea to Yello\
observe it mall the countries of Europe. . \rvho flin
eels fa·II
of GHow ma~y peopl~ a re there who cannot eat from .a fork ni~~
]'
.1ke CC)d
oth erman s1lv~r. white copper, argentum, Chinese s1l.ver. or for it is the,
er alloy of silver, whilst others do not detect anv d1fferen~e pi\ Unbro}{ '.
common use from genuine silver How many people whO stl11 ii fro111 ~·
fond
~~~~ot endme coffee, tea, or chocoiate made in a brass kitchen utens · d1i
ness
1
e most other people would never notice the difference?
lheirl'he
How many I . . f m hOl food· of th Po:
especially peope, again, have an aversion ro tdisheb· t1. e Ii:
and infinit~ver-cooked food, from rice d ishes also a~d sw~~b as are •tere .
~llio lS ;
slightly ~tref~r cold and simple foods. and espec1allY ~ong 1hei;e in t n. a
011
r.ersons ev· 1e side of acidity? No small number an bC heur~ fr 0~tn
to remark 't~~ ~~ extraordinary liking for salad and mt~ 0 thC s:il:t
cy wou Id give up the rest of the menu '"l
10
, Others are unab le to imagine how so unqualified a preference
alone. .
cou Id exist.
There are some people who sim~ly cannot endure. having anyon~
[l\'l f . d' o Jose behind them; they avo id popular gatherings of all sorts,
l'l , Ullll .
l~y I))· ·' in s.~~;wd~t:> ~nd markets. Others find it disagreeable to take anotl~er by
~\! \ I'· . 1\) be
.,\y '\ uint an·1\J
~he ha~d. and abso lutel y unbearabhle for anyoneffel~e.ftotbretam fort
. length of time the hand they t emse1ves pro er, 1 ey canno
' ny au
\atnc. lhatc~. a~{ it free otherwise, they wi ll pull it away. Then how many peo~Ic
ty TI IS, ~re there who cannot bear the heat from an iro n stove, but feel quite
· lcy arc comfortable when it proceeds from one of stonework?
lle nave f
. . oa
t Wise hcahh) We can oo on enumerating fo r your reading hundreds of other
such reasons to excite our wonder a t the attitude of a certain well-
defined class of individuals.
d. sound sleep
Well what are we to think of it a ll? l s it simply a case of
n wh)? If he
,l of the cause:
imaginati~n and neglected education, or bad ha bits occasioned.
perhaps. by local disturbances of an otherwise healthy equilibrium?
:lcrc are man~ lt may seem so of course, to those ·who on ly take a superficial viev.
left 5ide. Hf~ of the matter; and unfortunately such seeming has only too often led
al the bottom people into acts of injustice towards such sensitive persons as those
l have described. Were these peculiar phenomena verified only in
par~i~ular insta nces, scattered as chance occu rrences among different
ou will find out md1~1duals in varying situations, there might perhaps be some justi-
·n order to get fication for regarding them as of small importance, which up to the
; on their Jeft present day has not been considered worthy of attention, sets the
nd j{Terent as 10 matter on quite a different fooling; all the peculiarities atlributed
. 11t's repose on to these persons are not fo und in them as individuals but in every
1g . l But case as in a class. '
\ the rig~\ onlY
-.j r left. .0 as a all f?en you .tr?~ble to i~westi~ale, you find most, and frequently
"'peCLl \iaf 1t~e~ting 0 tt1e pecuhan t1es mentioned m one and the same individual· but

without e ~LO lo ii not one s·mgle tune


never . d o you fi nd one only by itself. The, foe
I ('Jet 0 wh~e fl?w sh~ns t~e looking-glass; it is the person in the corner-seat
le theY ~you can feels f~~~ i~ Je wind.ow open; the ri gh~ ~ide sleeper is the one who
. g· blll like cold d c~urch, the people who d islike brass and German silver
111 '
it is they ~°ii simple eatables and are fastidious over fat and sweets;
unbroken ser?esa~~ f~md of sa l.a~s an~ so on; in every case the whole
from disl'k f hkes and d1shkes is to be found in the same person
fondness ~f eblo dyellow down to disinclination for suO'ar
0 and fro~
ue own lo keen appetite for salad. '

· There
ll1e1r is a. solidar·t
possesso · · all these wonderful peculiarities in
. 1 Y uniting
of the list ha r, experience shows this on all sides· whoever has one
lher · . a connect·
. e is s, as a rule
b · all the o tl1ers too. T he conclusion
' · is· clea r·
~lion, and, if lh~~~s etw~en them all which cannot be refused recog~
f turn to a fund so, it can only be because they are all related
rom Wh 1·ch they amen
all tar I bond. of uruon.
· to a h'd
1 den secret source,
P oceed m common. Now if this source be

11
- --
and absent in others it is obvious that t
present in some ~;n view. there are in effect ~wo classes of ~~en ,,
from thts point h have none of all these faculties of sensibility n,
ordinary m~n. W ~bject to excitation. _who are excited in the' !nd
1
those pecuha.rbyd on every trifling occasion. ay
already descn e
. class may be called 'Sensitives', for they are, in fact ,,
Thetl 1atm.eorre sensitive than a mimosa. They are so in the very'
ths ofYtheir nature, a nature t hey can ~e1"ther I~y .a?1"de nor treat
(requen ,,
d~pl b'trary violence· and whenever thelf pecuhant1es have been
wit 1 arfor1 whims and 'contrariness
taken • · f eer1ngs have a Iways been
t heir ,,
hurt by the fact.
They have quite enough to suffer without that from our everyday
world which has never hitherto taken any account of them. Their
sufferincrs are the consequence of their hitherto unrecognised peculi- "
arity inbthe sensory faculty, and they are enti tled to more considera-
1ion than has hitherto been accorded them. Their number is not "
small, and we shall soon see how deeply human life is penetrated by
these peculiar factors, of which I have now given you only the most ,,
elementary and superficial sketch.

.~n.d so we have seen that there is a great deal more to personal "
se~s1ttv1tx than at first appears and the user of Radionics inevitably ,,
us mg thetr E.S.P. ea pacity from the beoinning will improve it as time
goes 0 ~ and there is no doubt that o~e's personal E.S.P. improves
dramatically as one tends to use the intuitive powers within us. "

on t~avinf, ~hus described the "sensitive" person Reichenbach g:J "


amazin~~~~:J: a ~umb7r of exciting experiments which P!od~00k
on the sub'ect s an are m fact published in his now out of pnnt ,, .. "
or the cdd f · He refers a lot to magnetic light which he calls Od
at the poles 0rc~dand refers in his work to the luminous phenome:
who are actuattst oer of strong magnets. He says "s~nsi_tive ~~~ar
m th~ magneti~ be apparently h~althy perceive nothing in partJ with
th~ s1~k sensitive 0;ond th.e. excitement of its force field. bu!nergY
will discover th t a sensitive who is run down on nervous 'des
of a ma~net
. a t11ere is pi
as well
si .
easant or unpleasant fee1.ings at thex~ri·
~ent with visual as a~ the ends". Reichenbach goes on to et that
r~': all the rage ":,atenals including magnets which were :gnetic
de arch as Well H ecause later Mesmer came in with ~ Jncan·
scence" Which proi:~~er~ed to the magnetic ligh~ as. "OdiC
Y is the best way to describe 1t.
After .
that diffe a great deal
red
discove t
colour ofre~t angles to ~ experimentation Reichenba~ a diJfert'!!
tinder scie~rfic light Whiche poles of a magnet produ 'th'e persD
1 c conditio can be seen by suitable sens• belo"'·
ns and these are given in the chart

12
pure grey
(ill the lin~ or lhc dip)
?~
1\l
er
l toward the north)
a narrow red streak
45° (asccn ing
"
67° .. . "
.. violet blue

in ra~l dark blue


he \~r,· ., 90° .. ,,
" "
or treat light blue
vc lx-~n ,, 110° .. " •• "
Ys ~en
. 127° .. " " "
dark green

~\Cr\dav 145° . light green


. their
i pccuh- 163° .. .. .. ,. greenish-yellow
)nsiuera-
!r b not 180° "
.. .. light yellow
lrated b~
the mo~1 ~00° .. .. ,, ,, golden yellow

1 personal
225° .. ,,
"
orange

inc\itably .. 247°
" " "
flame-red
it as time
impro\~
' us.
.. 270° .. .. .. . red
.. 29QO .. .. deep, intense red
.. 325° .. . ,, .. greyish-red
.. 360° . . reddish light-grey
"

1 The chart which follows shows it is also remarkable that the


~~~u~s standing diametrically opposite to each other are not properly
velJ P en~entary colours; for red here stands opposite blue instead of
liu.t~:ct 0'1tbdl flame-re~. instead of green, opposite violet-blue; grey
ue oppos1te yellow, etc.
The circle is
rnu~t be r
· d' 'd
LV1 ed into sections of 90°
h. h
the zero of w lC
each side ix~ 1at the dip. Opposite this, at 180° stands yeJJow; at
PPosile to ~! at the distance of 900, red and blue are situated
0 1

Were beneath eh other, so that these again are 180° apart. If we


the dip of th th~ magnetic equator where the polar direction and
Co\ e needl · · ' f h
ours Would b d' e comc1de. the direction and arrangement o t e
e 1fferent.

13
Above
Light yellow of 11
180 saP
Greenish yellow a re
Light green aPr1
re~''
in t1
the
arc
arnl
0
jnCf1
forci
phy:
is n1
not
a p~
Deep red nen

~ and
0 Grey Neg
thin
Reddish light grey
Below
Fig. 1 Colours of odic light as shO\\n to the poles of a magnet pan.
bod·
We may then see that just in the magnet itself there !s a great with
deal of variation of colour and force fields. Later experiments b; cffec
the author showed that in fact not only magnets produced this ~heno· Kil n
mena, in fact non-magnetic substances such as silk and materials of
all kinds produced the various phenomena according to the shaii:e
.
pr0>.
anu
and it is the shape that is important and in this type of research ~e10
will di~cover that shape is the continuaJly predominant factor rnes
producing the phenomena of Negative Green. neti1
. We m.ay ~ext refer to a book called 'Vitic' published !~J~~ don1
Diego. Califorrna, about 1950 which shows some research und~ ·ork ducc
· h t h~ effects of carbons and
wit. ' a permanent magnet. In this \\ any
which discusses ancient Egypt we find the following paragraph. . (I
that
. Yea rs of expenment
· · ·er someth
followed in the effort to d1scov
111
r'ol).)~
w!~ 1 ch whe.n held. in the hand would beneficially affect th~dn~arbl1"
system.. FmaJly. 1t was found, by accident, in car~on. Hat of force
suc.h as IS used Jn arc ]amps will give out a certain amour rJ1 ner'e
thich, experience has taught us is not to be distinguished r~o cause
a0 ~.e. . But. i.f the carbon is tr~ated in such a mann~r ashard\!ned:
th 1 ~le.1t dislurbance of its molecules and then special!~ becoo;:J
a ~ea?rce evolved by it is greatly augmented, and the r and st0 'oS
by th sou r~e of power, a power that is so readily absor~ge re111a1
cffect'e ufn1polar ganglion cells that a five minutes' c a
ive or at least 12 hours.

14
In his studies
. in
h Electro-Pathology,
1 t . Dr.
.
White
.
Rohl.!i hem wr ·11 111
. •

U
nf n1Y hypothcs1::> t at an e ec n.c w~ vc 1s nol .simple ! ut coHipouncl,
1
~ays: "Tha~. the second al~ernattv~ is no~ f ar-,t~~<:hcd 1s Sl.tggcstccl hy
a recent d1scov.ery of Baines, th~tt ?Y d spcl.1,tl harden mg pi occss
applied to ordinary arc-carbon,. a new force' ha'\ b~cn found 10
r~side in the altered ~arbon, which can be C(~nveycd to and stnr1.: d
in the body for a penod of several hours by simply holding these in
the hand, with the result that subnormal ga lvanomclric deflection
arc enormously enhanced~ and already we ha vc been able to obsc1 vc
gratifying changes in cases of nervous breakdown apparently hy
increasing the nerve charge through these new carbon s. What this
force is we do not as yet know, nor is it known to the eminent
physicists and physiologists to whom we have demonstrated it It
is not magnetic. And it differs from an electric charge in that 1l 1,
not readily diffused, but is, as registered by the galvanometer ov r
;e a period or 12 hours, stored probably in the unipolar ga nglia of th
nervous s}:slcm."
lt will be appreciated that the terms and researches into carb n
~ak and magneti:sm might appear to be misleading as far as the tcnn
Negative Green is concerned, but in fact, we arc discussing the same
lhing under a different name.
We abo see a rderence by Dr. J. Horne Wilson in the following
paragraph: He asserts that "magnetism applied to the left side of the
b~d). stimulates the heart action but only so long as the body rc~ains
\\1th111 the magnetic field". Is this an accepted fact? If so, 1s the
cl~cct produced via the aura and/ or the etheric body? Recall, that
Kilner's experiments showed that the aura wa'> d istortcd by the
pro.ximity of an electro-magnet Here seems to be a link between
anunal magnetism' and an ordinary magnetic field.
A great deal of confusion arose al one time, in the history of
me~mcrism, from a virtual identification of these two types of mag-
~et15ni (~o lo ~peak), but the use of the magnet was practically aban-
do~ed when tt w~s found that its supposed effects coul.d be repro-
. uced by suggestion. But the fact that these effects (like those of
'l°1 ordinary medication) could be so reproduced, does not prove
l 1laL the actual effects of the magnet a re nil.

It could thus be assumed a priori that there is an emanation


. carbon, but I have found no rderen~c ~o t J1c a~cmg
rum lhc
fcmc.m· •
~> f th1· ~
ation toward a magnet or of ·1 magnetic held toward carbon.
r bc"twee
0ALL d. ~ car?on and any other substance.
' If t I1c cn~ana L.ion s of
~<.tm im<tgnet1c substances are themselves paramagncltc, docs the
tionc ~~vcr~al hold for paramaonetic subsLanccs, so that their emana-
mo~~ ~ic dimagnctic? We ha:e here some slight hints of the cnor-
advant h. d' I · c ·tnd to the
!lcicncc f ages w 1ch might accrue Lo me 1ca sc1cnc '
of visio 0 p~ysics. Certain human beings possess in latency powe~~
n which exceed that of the electron-microscope and the greates

15
J copes yet constructed, and .the day will pe~haps come when even A
~eh~~icists will recognise the importance of lnstruments 'invented' bad tl
by Nature and not by themselves. disco¥
are de
According to certain observati?ns, the natural emanation of the rncre
carbon js increased in size and brightness when the magnet is held bOJ11~~
in the other hand; it is thus apparent that some kind of influence or poJan~
'magne:ic current' uses the body as a cond ucto r. Whether this is of ene
a one-way directional 'current'-and if so, from which direction- is the
is not known. Experiments with the galvanometer indicate that some bodies
kind of energy is stored in the body; i.e., there is a n increased differ-
ence of potential a nd an increased deflection of the galvanometer "I
pointer. Presumably this 'stored' e nergy (which persists for seven ing th
to ten hours) is the sa me in nature as that which produ ces the normal amplif
deflection when neither carbon nor magnet is used. of the
of the
The field covered by the phrase 'odic force' a nd by radia~t admitt1
energy a nd radiesthcsia, is so vast, so su btle and complicated, that it being 1
will be easy for those of us in terested in the therape utic use of the
theses:
carbon-magnet combination to become side-tracked and hopelessly
involve~ i~ other-though related- pro blem s. The first problem, no "l
doubt, is Slillpl~ to prove (all over aga in) the existence of the phe_no· means
menon; and this can be done by instrumental means. I ts pbys1c~J each It
or psycho-phys!cal effects can be demonstra ted by controlled e~pen:
ments and chmcal ex perience, just as in the case of any other new Tr
trea.1 ment or medication. AU forms of suggestion wiJJ have to be unusua
avoided-although suggestion wilJ be as valuable here as in any other Onics.
form of healing, when or if the experimental stage of the carbon·
magnet treatment is passed .
. A great deal of more remotely relevant ma teria l is to be not~
m the ~ema rkable development of Radiesthesia, particularly 10
Europe. m the exp a nding studies of the nature of the a ura and the
ethen c bod y, and m the whole fie ld of medica l electronics.
In using Radiesthesia as a guide and aid to detecting Negative
Green, we may refer . to .a few words about R adiesthesia by J. .A
~ont~n~~? at the Scientifi~ Congress in 1956 at Locamo. in whic~
~·said . ~e ~ust take mto account radiesthesic sensitiveness, it
. mg. an onentat1on of life and fa voured b t . A beginner
m this studv should t . Y coun erpo1se. . ost
ada pted to his tastes :~d to ~ ~~? ~~r the specialisation which.
1
1 •tm
ledge in this special branc possi 1 llies. He should increase bis n~es­
w-
th~~i~ sensitiveness consist~ ~nd sele~t. a very simple method. ~ad'me
~x 1stm~ in and amon the in pcrccivmg the harmony or lack o sa an
is sensitive by nature gand . components of a ll human ma tters. Mas
he is sensitive to balance ~s apt to be penetra ted by this pressure at
the fa rthest extreme of feel!"d i on-balance. Such perceptions afirefor
.
aoprcciation and with the r~~T ut ~onsta nt work makes them t ed
by development of the subc cs.thcsist such perceptions are increas •
ment to the pendulum." onscious au tomation of transmitted move

16
And Colonel Stevelinc~ giving h~s con~n1e?.ts at the ~ongr~ss
ad this to say on the Unity of R~d~esthesia: If the rad1esthes 1st
~iscovers the energy in e\er~ body 1t 1~ the !?roof that those bodies
n. of the mposed in energy; 1f not Rad1esthesm would not exi l any
areeredeco
than the formula of E.rnstern,· or any more than t11c atomic ·
IS held
uence or ~~mbs. Radiesthesia proves that every body. when it formed is
..r this is polarised, and as such it is a magnet receiver. accumulator and emitter
rection-. of energy special for every body. That Jaw of general magnetbation
hat some is the only law in nature. I define it thus; directed energy produces
' d differ. bodies, an energy not directed will dissolve them.
anometer "Radiesthesia which discovers the different energies only by find-
for seven ing the interferences is only ONE; the pendulum or the rod will
he normal amplify only the energies accumulated in the human body by the help
of the interferences. If the energies sent forth by the different parts
>y radiant of t~e human body do not give any interference with an energy not
ed, that it ad~1tte~ by them that energy will cross the human body without
use of the bemg discovered by any means; thus it cannot exist several radies-
hopelessly theses as there is but only one possible search.
oblem, no 'The ~nity of Radiesthesia is thus positively declared. All the
the pheno· means to discover energies are good, each of them has its manner but
ts physic~I each manner of working cannot be a reason to create a new school.,.
led expert:
other 'new Thus we continually find different opinions and relations with
ave to be un~sual force fields which always refer back to detection by Radi-
onics.
n anY other
he carbon·
THE NATURE OF LIVING RADIATION
be noted enftt~diatio.n
1
is the process by which electromagnetic energy is
to Jy in or e or given off from something. Trus energy is in vibrations
ticuiar d the rad~ave:. 1t is always due to atomic disturbances. They include all
ura an gadi 0
\\aves, heat, infra-red light, white light, ultra-violet, ~-rays. the
al'k ma rays of radium and cosmic energy. These energies are aJJ
ativ·e
0 / v~bexcept for their frequencies, or wave lengths. Not all waves
'ng rJ~gJ. A· Water ratory motions are, or produce. electro-.mag~etic energy. Sound,
sia ~) wbic~ th' • and many mechanical waves and v1brat1ons never produce
o. 1n SS· 1t ti~s e~ergy. Sound waves are alternate compressions and rarefica-
~itivene inner thens in the air, but the air does not move away from th~ source of
A ~g J11ost su sound waves. Waves in water are up and down motions of the
. It JS ){•
)1JC . J(rtO' wa~ace parts of the water, but ~he lat.ter does not !11ove along as the
e b•s dies· k' des appear to do. Mechamcal vibratory mot1<?ns are of many
s Jlll o1e s, but these motions do not disturb the aton11c structures and
od·,r of 5!.4311 hin
ence prod uce no electromagnetic energy.
JaC~ 1~· .

at t erS·sslJre •3l:-
1
the ?n~ of t~e things which does. prod~~e e~~ctrom~gn~tic .energy is
is ~~s are,..,,. an .ad~o-active substances. Rad10-acllv1ty ·~ of l\\~~ kinds, natural
u d artificial. ln the natural kind, the nuclei of ~~1c~r .atoms are s_o
P~f11 ~seO nnstabte that they explode and throw. out or rad1alt.: so~1e of their
s re i~'~o~· Uclear and electron particles. This disturbance abo radiates energy
8 .,,~
111• 17
called garnnla rays. This reduces the sizes of the atoms. Th· rv(;·e'-
. es until the atoms are reduced to lead atoms. The expJo . is aa5 c·i
P
cont mu d' . M s1ons :; bSlil
then cease and no more ra iat10~s .occur. an cannot increase or su
decrease these actions. These radiat10ns are composed of alpha, beta reser
and gamma rays. · We c<J
Artificial radio-activity is always man made. They always
we bl
r11en
include gamma rays. They a re produced by. directing s.ome of the a crY~
high speed particles fr.om a cyclotron •. or kindred ?ev1ce, against into [
desired elements. In this process these high speed particles sometimes binati
lodge in the clement being charged and som etimes some of the atomic oases.
0
particles of the nuclei of the m aterial being charged are removed.
It is something like shooting a taw into a ring of marbles which boys \
play in the spring. Sometimes the taw knocks out one or more Talcin
marbles and sometimes the taw remains in the circle with the marbles. vibra1
cause
The atoms being charged with the high speed particles are heavier
if they take up particles and lighter if they lose one or more particles. 1
These heavier or lighter atoms are called isotopes. These isotopes A wi1
are not stable, but grad uaJly return to normal atoms. This returning heard
to normal produces the radiated energies emitted from them. Some it res1
kinds of isotopes return to normal quickly and others more slowly. give ~
visibli
is felt
Life as Energy and i
The new physics is attempting to explain energy as the bombard· defini
ment of electrical particles which float in space, and to deny any
kno~ledge as t.o their origin, or that they have any origin except I
relatively speaking, namely, that the ethers are filled with them. When a lod
we feel ~nything, they say, it is the bumping into electrical parti~J.es; actin!
all physical phenomena can be explained from the relative position and~
of an imagined observer. "the
glow~
f'he .inte~estin~ thing is that there is always the necessary use of
the imagmatton of the observer, or a theory that if such and s~ch
were tru~, then so a.nd so would of necessity have to be true, followi~g
someone s law which has been accepted by science for a certain
number of years as. a means of measurin or deducino results. All
~hese laws are admitted to be relative an~ not immut~ble. No one
ares to declare a fact unless the · . . d · truth
very few know facts so tl II ma1onty. accepts it; an ·~ t to
change. ' iat a assumptions must be subJeC
If they are changeable th . true
laws. They must belon t~ ey an~ .not, or cannot be. facts or for
another condition. Thu; we ~ condition, a nd can be exchanged Ja·
tivity .. whic~ allows for chang~~e ~ceptcd Einstein's theory of renal
~xpenenc~s m chemistry, which · e ~lso .have many phenom~ .
mg that 1f certain things are l~lose using it explain only by a~r~
one can get certain results Jipu lo~cther under certain conditJOfl.11•
cond .Lt1ons
· · · ence . 1f gas 1·s formed under certai
1t can be reduced int 0 )' ..n. ··
iquid, and the liquid solidified. 1 ,,is
18
be fCVCfSdCd. by prop?~ metsods, pro~indg ~hat an Unseen
rroCCSS l'Ull
11
ias can be condense into 1q u1 , an crysla 1zc mlo matter or
g b.st·tnc\!. We may or may not smell the gas- we may know its
SU • ' . I• 11
prcscm:e by its actJon on somcl l.mg we see, sme , t~1ste, feel or hear.
We causl! an energy lo act upon 1t- u~ually heat or 1ts opposite, cold.
ays We bring it into visibi lity in what we know as water, or a liquid state.
the ·1hen by the action of energy aga in (either heat or cold). we produce
~inst a crystallization, which is actually the above-mentioned gas brought
nne~ into a more substantial form , or brought into form. Known com-
omic binations of liquids always create the same crystals and lhe same
OVed, gases.
bo)s We have the action of sound both in and out of a vacuum.
more Taking the 5imple example o f the two tuning forks, we start them
rbles. vibrating~ the one ou tside the vacuu m will r uJe the one inside, and
eavier cause it to raise or lower to its own ]eve].
rticles. ·.rhe~ we have Ligh t: T his js produced by vi brating a substance.
otopes A Wife is usually used ; it js started vibra ting; a h umming sound is
urning ~eard. We vibrate it a little faste r a nd ma ke heat; still faster, and
Some 1t. results in colou r in reddish degree; increasing the speed will then
wly. g~v~ yellow; and so on thro ugh the visible spectrum until no light is
~ 1 s 1 ble., It is fou nd tha t energy passes a long the wire unseen, but
~s felt 1f touched; or if prope rly resisted, it produces light, heat, power
~nd ~ore energy. Everything so far ac ts and reacts along a very
efinitc course when the same things are d one to cause it.
. Energy, ~eat, light a nd powe r a re usually produced by rota ting
a 1?dc-stone m a n a rma ture; thus there is a magnetic field of force
~c~ng. But the huma n body is also composed of magnetic qualities,
~n h~ been known to emit light even as some fish do; and we say
~he h.sh has a n over-amount of wha t is ca lled phosphorus, which
g ows tn the night".
fi h This does not be little nor enhance the fact that the body of the
es. glows, nor does it prove tha t in the human body there does no t
s~ ist .the same substance, or o ne having a great degree of vibration
t ormg a different aspect of the same phenomenon. We are prone
0
et .our termino logy confuse a point witho ut realizing that if the
;~,~~ lt 1s. the same •. the same law must be fulfiJled, even as in chemistry.
fu n sc laws function on ma ny planes, and the f.a ct th:1t we do n ot
Y understand them d oes no t detract from their reahty. It should
~vea l ou r lack o f knowledge to the degree tha t wouJd force us to
w!k ~arder than ever to find the cause of a l1 the phenomena, tha t
might be tru ly wise.
ra s W~ may n ow com e to the interesting face ts ?f Micro-gene tic
in~j~· Called M-rays by certa in researchers, and the ir effects o n the
of 1.~ua l. In fact it was discovered some yea rs ~go tha t ~e result
0 lhis type of rad iation can however have a decided bea lmg effect
n the ind ividua l. It wou ld appear that certain vegetables produce

1<)
this type of radiation, not~bly oni?ns. Of course onions have b
known for years as a healing nledia, but the detection of M- ~n
about 1934 places them alongside the other mystifications /aY~.in 0
tional patterns which we now know to be forms of Negative Gra ia.
. · ff reen
lt has been known t hat m1cro-organ1sn1s are a ected greatly by th ·
types of radiation. The types of radiation we are dealina with ~e
deciding which is, or is not Negat1ve Green, fails into a n~mber ~~
patterns which stem purely fron1 the magnetic, electrical, odic and
then on to the living tissue itself in order to produce the same 'types a lil1
of radiation that keep it alive. Thus we may see that the in teresting the s
facets of Negative Green are yet to come. I ha·
Negative Green is not always related to the unknown pheno· jazz
menon around us. It can be associa ted with the magnetic meridian abou
of the earth and one of the best researchers into the magnetic meri·
dian was Dr. George Starr-White, who in his historical resume that
described it as-the energy that turns the compass needle and unerr· anti-
ingly directs the navigator th ro ugh perilous seas of air and water- was
used in diagnosing. preventing and curing i11-healtb. indi'
In one of his earlier works Dr. George Starr-WhHe writes:- ferec
"lt was in 1876 that an old hunter and wild-pigeon trapper told .me worl
that such birds as the migratory wild pigeons (ectopistes migrato~1us) with
now extinct had a 'compass' in their heads. To 'prove it', he h~r· twis
ated a wild pigeon from his net and I watched it soar high in the air, no rt
then make a turn and dart off in the direction of its birth place.
though very many miles away. I realized that the trapper did no! thei
mean a compass in the ordinary sense, but that he meant a 'ment~I Wor
or a 'psychic' compass, or what might now be termed a 'M~gnetrc
Sense' or 'Sense of Direction'. His hidden meaning did not interest
me. I saw the pigeon do certain things that seemed mysteriou;, ~~ slep
~ began to ask questions of every hunter and trapper I kne~. reear thei
mg the power of birds to take an unerring direction to thelf homes. Pet:
even though they might be thousands of miles away. Cer1
tho
"As years went by I experimented and investigated and Iearn~d
that this power of orientation. as it is called, was possessed by vena
many other animals as well as by birds. I proved that frogs irne
toads had the faculty, as weJJ as cats and dogs. I also f<?und s ree·
humans who possessed the power of orientation to an amazing deg
"I learned that lightning storms. or 'electrical storms' as/~t:;.~
c~lled them, would make birds lose their way. I later prove birds
high-tension currents and the radio broadcasting currents make
of passage temporarily lose their power of orientation.
"For many years I have been mterested
. . the breed 1·ng of rnanY
m corn·
varieties of birds. The year before 'radio broadcasting' becamf birds
mon. I advised a large bird dealer to Jay in an extra stock 0 as l
from foreign lands as well as from domestic sources becad~~t~rbing
explained to him. radio broadcasting would have such a is
20
ons h upon the delicate nervous organism of birds that they would
l. of ~Ve been
lions ·rays . i~ftue~c\ young out of the nests and that, for several years. certain
Of In
egat·lVe G rad··1a. k1c~ t' 1~1 of birds would become very scarce. This dealer did not
vane 1~ uch dependence upon my prophecy. In due time he went
reauy b reen 1
plar~ad as usual to buy up birds. W~en he ret~rned, h~ told ~~ that
ealing Y. lhes~ ~~wished he had listened to my ad.vie~ regarding certain vanet1es of
) a W1th ·
nurnb in birds, for he said there was a scarcity m all parts of the world.
Cal • od·IC er of
he sa01 , <Uld ''Since then, year by year, some varieties of birds have become
the int e types a little more accustomed to certain radio broadcasting waves, but
eresting the so-called 'jazz broadcasting' has a very bad effect upon them and
I have noticed some varieties of birds will become so uneasy when
~nt~wn pheno. jazz noise is 'on the air' that they cannot remain jn their nests, but fly
.ie lC meridian about as if there were a mouse in their cages.
1agnetic
.
me.fl· "Another peculiar phenomenon in Nature that I observed was
oncal resume that lima beans trained around poles aways twisted around the pole
11e and unerr- anti-cockwise. 1 mentioned this to different people. and my attention
r and water- was called to the fact that each species of vine always had its own
individu.al ~lethod of twisting around trees or poles, if nothing inter-
hite writes:- fered with its natural bent. One man, who had travelled all over the
w?rld .. told me that he had noticed the same phenomenon especially
ipper told me
w1~h hma beans and he said that south of 1he Equator lilna beans
s migratorius) twisted around the pole clockwise- just opposite to the way they did
~ it', he liber·
north of the Equator.
1
igh in the air,
s birth place, . "1:rus made me conclude that the force which guided birds in
:tpper did no! 1heir fl1~hts, ~used frogs to face in a certain direction, and directed
ant a 'roenta.l worms m their migrations, also had something to do with vegetation."
a ,Magnetic
1 sle I ras. then interested in noticing the directions in which pers~ns
d not interest
. s so th ~t. h did not know whether it was better for persons to sleep with
nystenou , rd· %r eads directed north or south, or east or west; but I met many
knew. rega ~ t 0 !18 "Yho .would say that they slept better with the head in a
. homes.
, tbetr th r aghm ~Irect1on. Some said they thought this was a 'notion' but I
ou 1 it was an in.ft uence other than 'imagination'.
d Jearned gro S~me told me they could not sleep unless they were on the
:i an verY m un · or were connected with the ground in some manner. One
essed bY aild othn told me that if he fastened a wire around his hand and had the
iat fro;sso111e oth~~ ~nf of th~ wire on the floor. he could always sleep better. An-
) f oUJl d (lfef!·
. " e,, there 0 d me if his bed were on a carpet he could n<;>t sl~eJ? and
iaZJfl.:;i e eras· fore ht; al~ays kept it on a bare floor. All these little 1d1.osy~­
s soJ11 the ies, or notions' were interesting to me and I kept wondering if
olls' a d tba~ if ~e Were anything of a fundamental nature to them. I learned that
r pro"ee birds sheetc{i~r. wire were passed across the mattress under the under)
tS rtlaJC and lha at ~s between the mattress or mattress pad and under.-sbeetr 0
radiate/ wire was carried to the ground, gas pipe, water pipe, 0 f
f 111aflY sleepin · n:any persons who could not sleep without s<;>me form
'"'" J1le
:d ti•f:' o c.0p1·
d' arran gd pill, or only in 'cat naps' could sleep well in a bed so
veca f bJ! 1 ge .
cJc 0 iJS
;to ·~vse• virt$
becdisttJ! 21
a
h t some persons, who had been in the hab.
I als.o Jearn~d ~it~ the head directed north or. south. couldit of
sleepi~g Ul a bed were turned so the head was duected to eastnot
sleep 1f t~a~~s not imagination. because the persons sometimes d~~
west. This. h.eh direction they were sleep mg as they were in
not know m wWi hen they n1entioned that they did not sleep we]] al
· c ih M agne t'1c Mend1an
. . had,
stranae
Id0 a1iouse.
t my compass out to see u l e
wou oe , .
anything to do with it.
Later I was able to prove' that a person who had. slept for
4

years with the head directed easl. or west, c~uld not sleep 1f he were
in a room where the head of the bed was dlfect~ J?-Orth ?r south-
be had not observed the points of the com~ass m eit~er msta_nce. I
have often noticed that if children, even babies. sleep m cots duected
east or west and do not do well, if the cot is turned so that the head
is directed either north or south they invaria bly do better.

THE POWER OF NATURE


The idea of "Vis Medicatrix Naturae" certainly goes back to
the time of Hippocrates, that is to 400 B.C. Hippocrates seems to
have been the first to grasp the conception of the great healing powers
of nature and his long and wide experience made him a firm believer
in those powers. Recovery is thus shown to be the work of nature.
whose healing powers alone, or supplemented by medical aid, achieves clop
the aim-Nature is the healer of diseases. be c
the
This, then, is the doctrine so famous in the schools of Physics the
down. through the ages, and this conception has never wholly. been cea
lost sight of for twenty-three centuries. At those times when it has ass1
been largely forgotten, medicine has tended to lose the human touch of
and . to become materialistic and dogmatic. On the other ~and.
I

Pre
earned to the other extreme, as it has been at various times, it has tot
tended to. a fatal laissez-faire, to the scandal of medical science and
the essential neglect of the patient.

f
cures"
th
The greatest of the medieval surgeons, Ambrose Pare, when h.e
r?ke. away from the dogmas of his age, was content to express bis
aith m the healing powers in the famous statement "I treat, God
· But
. what is · th.is healing power or force of nature inherent in
-I·
wti?rgamsm? Let me give you two quotations. Firstly. Professor
iam McDougal, from his famous book 'Body and Mind'. tl
\
HTh ' notion, which forms the common foundation off
. ~ essential h
all varieties of an1·m1·sm · th
life and . . . · _is _at a11 or some of the manifestatio
• ns od t
from in mm~ wh1c~ d1stmgmsh the living man from the corpse ~n l
which .org:mc bodies ~re due to the operation within of someth¥1g
pr· . is o a nature different from that of the body an animating
i~c~ie~iaY~~~~~!~~af~i~~~rn~~~~~rily or always c~nceived as an
22
Secondly, Profes?o.r Ward has t~.s to say: "The fundamental
·ff nee between hvmg and .non-l1vmg matter is that in living
di e(~ there is always son1ethmg else present (which for want of
n:~e~ understandi~g we 111:ay call th~ 'vital !orce'). i.n addition to the
b erties found ~n n~n-hvmg bodies. \his additional 'something'
~~~~ws living bo~1e~ w1.th a tendency to ~1sturb ex~sting equilibrium,
reverse the d1ss1pat1on processes wluch prevail throughout the
~oanimate world, to store up and build up where they are ever scat-
~~ring and pulling d?w_n; the tendency to conserve individual exist-
>t for ence aaainst antagon1st1c forces, to grow and to progress, not merely
'-''ere 0
taking the easier way, but seemingly striving for the best, reta ining
Ulh-
any advantage secured and working for new ones."
ce. l
·ected The suggestion is that there is a vital power or force in every
head organism which not only sustains life but mainta ins it against aIJ the
innumerable adverse factors seeking to destroy it. It is this posses-
sion of the Life Force which marks the difference between organic
and inorganic life. But it may well be asked whether in postulating
this vital force we are really postulating anything more than the sum
~k to total of the already well-known physical and chemical forces active
as to in the rest of the world. The materialists would certainly answer
)Wers 'No', and I think the scientific wor]d in general would endorse that
iever opinion, though it is not q uite so certain as it was.
ture, For example, the writer of the article on Biology in the Ency-
ieves clopaedia Britannica is qu ite emphatic on this point. He says: "It may
be convenient to use the terms 'vitality' and 'vital force' to denote
the causes of certain great groups of natural operations, as we employ
ysics the names 'electricty' and 'electrical force' to denote others; but it
been ceases t? be proper to do so if such a name implies the absurd
· bas assump.t1on that 'electricity' and 'vitality' are entities playing the part
~uch of efficient causes of electrical or vital phenomena. A mass of living
and. protoplasm is simply a molecular m ach ine of great complexitv. the
baS total results of the working of which, or its vital phenomena, depend
and ilin the one hand-upon its construction, and on the other, upon
e energy supplied."
-th ~u~ my viewp~int is that we a re dealing with 'something more'
J wilt t is my workmg hypothesis-and in the following paragraphs
ry and show what I think that 'something more' is.
this ~osugg~st that the best way to do this is to trace the history of
Vital pf~id nown. ~y so many na1nes, the most intriguing being the
here a trad· ?r D1vme Water of the medieva] a lchem ists. as we h~ve
Potency fitb~n of .a force of more than usual integrating and heahng
that ni~n~ th ~olog1ca! energy, in other words. l think we shall find
~f recognitiomgs which have died will know re-birth and grow out
Whether n. T he Italian philosopher Regnano remarks th at
~:e nature;fe
0
1Ple object
clea~ly recognises it or not, it is just this search ~or
t~e vital principle which properl y constitutes the pnn-
an final goal of all biologic studies in general".

23
We come to the next great. name1 h in . the
. cha
I in of trad't·
i ion th
d
of Paracelsus the f amous me 1eva p ys1c1an, 490-154 I a fi · at
controversy f~om his own day to this. R egarded for centuriesgure of
arch-charlatan of history. his cont~ibution is at last being a a~ th.e
ated and understood and he provides another example of RPef1•
renascentur, quae iam cecidere". Pa~acelsus heJd that there ar~~wta
kinds of doc~o~s: those who h~~l m1raculously and those who hea~
through med1cme5. The phys1c1an has to accomplish that which
nature would ha ,.e done n1iracu lously had there been enough faith in
the sick man. This seems to n1e to be a valuable clue: 'Those who
h~al ~hrough med i~ines' we ~now- the whole body of modern medi-
cine is an expression of this aspect, and it has not got us much use
further to an understanding of the fo rce. But what about the miracu-
lous here, apparently, \\ have the power raised to an 'nth' degree
apI
int1
- under these conditions we may lea rn \Omcthing which in its ordin-
fro
ary state we miss. I am On\ in~cd that even in miracles there is this bei
physical basis, whatc\er else thcrL' may be in addition. Indeed, I am lhi:
coming to think that the truth in these ma tte rs can be stated thus
It is equa lly true. ie .. thcs~ sta tements are co-equal and inter-change·
able:- All matter i · spirit . .. AH spirit is matter ... you cannot WO
have spirit without matter of some sort and vice versa. he
The E nC)clopaedia Britannica slates that '" Paracclsus founded des
the ~S) mpathe tic S) tern' of n1edicine, according to which the stars an'
and o ther bodies, especially magnets, influence man by means of a "ai
subtle emana tio n o r fluid which pervades a11 space" and Osler says tio1
tha t ··Paracelsus expresses the healing process of nature by the word rne
·munia· which he regarded as a sort of magnetic influence or for~e arn
and he believed that anyone possessing it could arrest or heal di: · bic
eases in others. As the lily breaks forth in invisible perfumes. so cor
healing influences may pass from an invisible body.'• 'or:
car
In Paracelsus· own words .. the vital force is not enclosed in ma~ Cof
but radiates within and around him like a luminous sphere 8 (~·(; Wh
may be made to act at a distance. It may poison the essence ~ Jt~ .. Or~
(blood) and cause disease, or it may purify it and restore the hea ·
J . B. van Helmont. 1577-1644. a disciple of Paracelsus: exter!~
this doctrine by teaching that a similar magnetic field radi.ateslv the
man and that it can be guided by their wills to influence di~t · uote
minds and bodies of others. According to van Helmont, and ~bleS
his own words, "The means by which this secret proM,rty :~ ...
one person to affect another mutually is the ~ag~ale ag~ sure or
but this is not a physical substance which we msp1s~ te. mea des all
weigh. but it is an ethereal spirit. pure living. which pef'~rchetJS
things, and moves the mass of the universe." His !ht:ory ~ its rcgu·
postulated an extra corporeal force prdctically unhm1ted an
lative powers_..cl vital inherent formative force. . peJd
There are of course other researchers into this inleresun~n his
such as the French engineer. Georges Lakhovsky for example.
24
k "The Secret of Life'', holds th~tt ~hilc. tl~c mcch.a ni-
wcll·kn0wn ~o~ lanation is insunicient to explain life. !l 1s explained
cal chemica exp a of auto-electrification in human bcmgs- thal the
by the ph~non~~~n all living beings is nothing but an electro-magnetic
ctll~~~~~1c~~~ble of emitting and absorbi ng radiation _of ~ very
~ r ~ency And then we have Professor Tromp, who in !us pub-
~fi,/~onum~ntal .and erudite "~hysical PhY,sics", states t~at his
• ·n obJ·ect " is to owe an explanation of d o wsing, rad1csthcsia, etc.,
ma1 , Id I. , d
by an analysis of cxter~al .e~ectro-ma~net!~ he s o n psyc 11c a n
::> •

physiological phenomena m ltvmg o rganisms .


We have the researches of D r. R e ich, who ha s studied the un -
usual phenomena which we now call Nega tive G reen and ma~ be
applied to all kinds of na tural pheno mena. His wo rk is es pecially
interesting as, unlike any other worke r in this field, he started o ut
from an entirely different stand point, na mely from psycho-analysis,
being a disciple of F reud . As his work seems to be little known in
this country, I will give a brief survey.
Betwee~ 1936 and 1939 R e ich did a grea t dea l of experimenta l
work and discovered and observed what he called the Bion. Bions,
~e found, were invaria bly prod uced w hen ma tter is heated to incan·
a~scence and .~ade to swell~ they a lso fo rmed , but more slowly. when
"a~ ma.Lter d1s1~tegrates a nd brea ks down ...Bio ns." to quo te Reich,
t' e Ffcroscop1cally visible vesicles of fun ctio ning energy a nd transi-
~~n~ orms f~om non-living to living matter. T he Bio n is the e le-
n ary functional unit of all living matter. It carries a certain
:?~~t ~ orgoi:ie energy, which makes it function in a specific way
contegi~a y. It 1s a unit of energy, consisting of a membrane, liq uid
'or n and an amount of orgone energy- it can be caJled a n
ea: 0;e eneq~y vesicle'. Bions are consta ntly being produced a nd
colou~v~l06 mto prot ozoa o r degenerate into cocci a nd bacilli; the ir
1
which 18 ~e. ~v~ry living o rganfam is a membra neous structure
orgonot~ontams m its body fluids an amo unt of orgone; it is an
ic system".
true Two observations can be made:- (i) That if what he claims is
gen~r ~~ are f a~ed with the startling pro position of the sponta neous
th
was ionhof life- a staggerihg fact if so, and a question which it
is prob0~f t L~uis P asteur had settled once and fo r all. (Note: this
a Ya misreading of Reich's cla ims.)
conc~ii) .That we ~eem to have here a satisfactory explanation of the
Pllons of Vis Medicatrix as it a pplies to the individual ce ll.
tionsUpf to. this point, a lthough Reich bad observed the a bove reac-
With to b1ons. and bion-cultures, he was not aware he was .d ea ling
he w he manifestations of a specific biological energy. But m 1939
spec· as wor~ing with ocean sand and fo und that from it, by hjs
sweJ~~l technique of bionous disintegration by in~andesccn~ heat and
ng, he could obtain a pure culture of special blue b1ons. what
25
tiOI
,~h
he subsequently called Sai:;>a bio_ns, wh~c~ exhibited an energy With
an extraordinarily intense b10log1cal activity. ,~t.
01
In a Jong series of experiments ~e identified this with sun energ ~.
t) I
which is present everywhe~e, and µ u s he f 0~1nd to be the same ener'l,y Jl'll
as that in the living organism which takes it u.p fr2m the atmosphere
and directly from the sun, or, as he puts it, the energy which A
o-ovems the living is of necessity identical with the a tmospheric
~nergy". H e then argued that if energy is in the atmosphere every- '· ditt
where it should be possible to demonstrate and concentrate it. 0
This he did by means of what he called his orgone accumulator ll
using two properties of orgone, and this has been used therapeuti~
cally, firstly, for the treatment of cancer, in which he claims it has I
been successful, and later, for a11 sorts of other diseases, again it is Fluid
said with impressive results. natur
now
From this, via sex-t!conomy, the organism theory, character subm
analysis, vegeto-therapy. the biological basis of neurosis, he has come Natu
finally to what he calls medical orgone therapy- a therapy which of tr
uses the same fundamental energy, whether dealing with a neurosis Odic
or a cancer. In this he is nearer to the medieval physicians such as
fore~
Paracelsus or van Helmont, or even 18th century Mesmer. who arrived
at the conception of the Vita l F luid from philosophical considera- of F
tions. and believed in the universal remedy~the Divine Water. Indi
lhe
Reich outlines his hypothesis in the following manner and giv~s
a summary of some of the characterjstics or functions of Cosmic
Orgone Energy:- sur~
Uni·
1. Orgone Energy is present everywhere and it forms an unint.er· for<
rupted continuum. It penetrates everything, though at vary~g lha
rates of speed. It is basically different from electro-magnetic ain
radiation. anc
As far as life is concerned, the living organism is an . ~rgan·
ised part of the cosmic orgone and possesses special quabues we
call 'living'. It has an orgonomic potential brought about by no-
the fact that orgone energy flows from a weaker or lower to. a
stronger or higher system. Each type or species possesses its
specific energy level, that is, it has orgonotic capacity. All sur· \\ll
plus energy is discharged, hence there is an orgone energy meta· fe·
bolism. CJ
Sc
2. Orgone energy is always and everywhere in motion. ~oveme~:~ a1
dynamics, functionalism. changeability constitute spec1fic qt~ s:
ties. Within the framework of this mobility there are ast I.I
motions: (a) wavy motions. (b) pulsations, and (c) a west-e
movement of the atmospheric-orgone envelope. l
3. It transmits orgonotic excitation with the 'speed of ligh~';_sb~;
light itself is an appearance of orgonotic illumination ~ll ~a­ a
local character. It has also the property of autogenous 1 u \

26
't . This can be observed in a room of complete darkness.

1
~~~~~ it appears. a bdluish-~reyt, orb in a pressure vacuum tube,
gJ \\'ith
1
when the colour is a ~ep v 10 ~ or u~ ..
nene Or•one energy exists in .varymg ~on~1t1ons and forms. but eve.ry
4 t p~ is mobi\e-d~ nam1c. ddienng m speed, and never stat1c-
le en rgy,
t11os er~, ·
:}\, Phete y . 1
mechanica.
:iJ \\'h'
tlosphe1r~h S. A concentration of orgone. enedrgy il~d~n orgfonhotic systedmc1ontraf-
·~ . everv.tc
·re dicts the genera 1 unrestncte va i ity o t e secon aw o
., ll. . thermo-dynamics. There exists not only a process of dissipation
of energy in heat but also the reverse process of the building
umulator
ierapeuu: up of energy.
ms. it has It seems a far cry from the Cosmjc Orgone Energy to the Vital
.gam it is Fluid with which we started, and yet to my mind, the search for the
nature of that 'something 111ore' I postulated at the beginning has
now an answer, even though it be only a tentative one. We are, I
character submit, dealing with one a nd the same force. It is the Vis Medicatrix
has come Naturae of medical science, the Mumia of Paracelsus. the Vital Fluid
.py which of the medieval alchemists the Animal Ma<rnetism of Mesmer, the
1 neurosis Odic force of Reichenbach: the Nervous Eth~r of Richardson, the X
is such as force ~f Eeman, the Bio-cosmic energy of Brunler. the Orgone energy
[lo arrived of ~etch, and to incorporate an Eastern conception, the Prana of
considera· lndia~ ~etap~ysics, and the physical embodiment of the belief of
ater. the V1talists-m one word, it is the Life Force itself.
and giv~s If it should prove that this is the same as the Ether of space,
>f Cosmic su~ely this would be a stupendous fact! For it would mean that the
~nIVerse is not simply a concatenation of blind chemico-physical
~rces m which life exists as a forlorn and precarious stranger, but
n uninter· t at the universe is a livina universe in which to be alive, whether as
amoeba or man, is to be ::>at home~ and that in literal fact, we live
• r1
at vaf)JJlp
..,,,auneUC
)-i... 0
and move and have our being in an ocean of living energy.
This has always been the mystic tradition, why should it not
now be scientific truth?
We may ao on throuahout nature to find various r~sea.rcheifrs
who h d' 0 e k. d of thinu m d -
arent forms and although the identity of what we now term N?au~~
f ave iscovered or re-discovered the same in ° .
s reen. bas been applied for many centuries by Jcnowledgea? ~f'd,e
on~. it was not until it was rea11y discovered frof 0a stu1\s 0 wn.

~~cient pyramids that it was identified as a naftural ~~ g~nerated


0

mce that time it has been discovered that the orce ea


under certain conditions and through certain shapes.

THE MYSTERY OF SHAPES h t certain shapes


a It h as been discovered d unng· this century t a
.1nd unknown forces of t he
n~ colours can manipulate the know~ ' . nianY researchers have
Untverse. ln studying these various s apes
27
f 0 ce Negative Green may be suitably manipulated
found th~t the \hough it is a n unseen fo rce, but nevertheless its
and studJehd, evteund1.ed in scientific proportions, are nothing short of
effects, w en s
dramatic.
Possibly one of the most dran~atic methods of researching is to
'-.se a model of the original pyram1dh ? f Cheop hs. Suffice to say that
there is enough literature on th~ istory, t e i;neasurements, the
reasons for existence of the pyram1~,. a]ready ~u~hshed by a number
of Authors. lt has mystical a nd rehg10us assoc1at1ons, many of which
are so exact tha t they cannot be ignored.
A little of the history of the pyramid by Adam Rutherford
might be in order at this point:
"Shaw thought tha t the Pyramid's interior passage and chamber
system was not adapted fo r a sepulchre and believed it to be intended
for the mystical worship of Osiris in other words, a temple. This
beJjef is akin to that of the R osicrucian people (AMORC) today who
hold tha t the Great Pyramid was a temple of initiation into the
Mysteries.
The Dane, Frederick Lewis Norden, examined the Great Pyra-
mid in 1737. He was a marine officer and a talen ted draughtsman,
whom King Christian VI of Denmark sent to E gypt to make draw-
ings of the ancient monuments. Besides giving the general outline
of the ground passages a nd cham bers, he mentioned especially the
massive stones over the present E ntrance to the Great Pyramid-
'An a rchitrave over it showed that it had had a portal and several
s~ones had been removed in search of it, but common square work,
like that .of the rest of the building, was found behind the great
stones which composed it."
1
In the same year 1737 an ecclesiastic Richard Pococke, L.L.D., I
F. R.~ ., landed in Egypt and quite unkno'w ingly passed Nor~en, the s
Danish traveller, on the Nile during the night. It seems a pity that d
two celebrated travelJers should be within a stone's throw of each n
oth~r a.nd yet never meet. Pococke's Travels were published in 1743·
which mcluded an account of the Pyramids of Giza and others.
He correctly allocated the Great Pyr amid to Cheops' reig~. th~
Second Pyram id to Chephren's and the Third P yra mid to MycerUlU~ '
~II of th~ IVth Dynasty of Egypt. H e a lso a ppears to have ?e~n th:
/~t to giv~n an account of the Step P yramid at Saqqara bmlt 10 tri·
~~~~affpD1ose~ or ~o~r (IIIrd D ynasty), this being the first e~at
Pyram·d yr~~id built m prepara tion for the build~ng .of
fi
None ~f ~h 1 regar~ed as the oldest existing building m t;t\vorJd.
areat
Pyramid we ~e . cas1.ng stones which origina lly cover~d. t eones at
the base were v1~1ble m Dr. Pococke's day, as the remainingbeJieved
that the p ere l~dmg deep below many feet of debris, but h7g stones
yrami had been ca sed in finer stone. The caslll

28
now cx~ose<l on the first course of masonry, that resting on the
Fo undatio~ Platf o.rm, have proved Dr. Pococ.:ke to be right. Dr.
Pococke ~1ves a list of measurements of the interio r passages and
chambers m the masonry of the Great Pyram id.
T~e ~yramid is oriented to the fo ur card inal poi nts and the rock
on which 1t was built js visible at the corners.
It is of intere~t to the student of Negative Green to read a great
d~al. about Pyram1dology. One or two publications arc listed in the
B1bl1?graphy at the end of this work. But historical reJigious and
mystical aspects of the pyramid as jde, in itself. the pyramidal shape
has the so-called magical power of preserving flesh or prod ucing
what we term mummitication or dehydration.
. Lt will be noted that the pyramid of Cheops is the only pyramid
m the world of its particular dimensions a nd the only pyramid in
the world not used as a burial chamber for roya lty.
So this Jeaves the reader with a grea t deal of work in research
if he wants to know more a bout the pyra mid as a historical subject
in itself- and believe me the study of the Great Pyramid alone has
been written a bo ut in ma ny d ozens of books, some of which are
truly fantastic and rewarding to read . T he info rma tion contained
in such books is not only the result of ma ny years of patient research
by those who d o not look upon the Pyramid as a media for Negative
Green or the mummificati on force. but as a historical subject and
that alone gives the Pyra mid a n unusua l place m the history of the
world.
However. we are more concerned with the phenomenon
connected with the Pyramid. We have already seen that the four
cardinal points of the pyramid as situa ted in Egypt at the time when
it was made or built was with one face at magnetic North. Now
many readers will know tha t mag~etic. North. aJt~rnates each ¥ear
slightly by as much as 11 degrees m either d irect10n, over a given
decade, so the fact that the pyra mid is placed in this pa rticular way
must have had some bearing on its use.
At the time when the pyramid was built the cham~er leading
right into the inside--that is t~e P'1:ssage way- had . th~ light of the
North Star going into the very mteno~ of the pyramid 1ts~lf ..It d ?es
not do this now of course because this star has altered m dlfection
over the centuries. but we can make model pyra mids by which. to
test our theories and many have already done so .. Some pyra mids
are commercially available but they are no~ so relia ble as the. ones
made by yourself. The instructions for ma km~ .a mo~el pyramid a re
based on the direct scaling down from t.h~ ong.mal size of the Great
Pyramid, you will note that 1 say the ong1_nal s1ze, because toda y ~be
Great Pyramid is much smaIJer, because its bas~ plates a nd o~tside
covering have been removed over the centunes. But a simple
cardboard pyramid can be made in the following manner.

29
Draw a straight line 8 inches long ABC. divided .as shown 0 0
the diagram. At D. two inches from A. draw a vert1.cal l~e DE,
3i inches long. At E, two inches from C, draw. a vertical hne EG.
also 3-! inches long. Draw a line FGH, a lso four mches long, parallel
to ABC.
Draw heavy lines connecting A to F, F to B, B to G, G to c
and c to H. Also draw heavy lines indicating the base Jines: AB,
BC, FG. GH.
You will then have fo ur triangles: AFB, BGC, FBG and GCH.
Cut these out carefully and fasten the rising edges together with
gummed tape. The result is a four sided pyramid s ufficiently large
to be placed over a fragment of food. Three-sided pyramids do not
produce the same results.
The material used may be thick paper or cardboard; paper-
coated with metal foil on one side has also been used. Wood and
certain metals have been employed with success in pyram.id building.
One face of the pyramid should be turned nlagnetic North. It
is suggested that this be marked for identification.
Experiments should be made with a ny suitable material both
fo r construction and for testing. The dimensions of the pyramid are
not critical, only approximate.

F 4" G 4" H

A D 8 E c
Fig. 2. Making a simple cardboard pyramid

Once you have made the pyramid you can manufactu re another
to
b any p roporllon
· ·
you wish. The one shown is rather a smaU one.
ut you can multiply the size indefinitely and some researchers have
made very large pyram1·d s f or expenmental
. purposes.
and ~ ~me~ber some years ago, 1 had a small pyramid on rny desk
slight!/ :~i~eda cube of. meat underneath it. This cube of me~t wad
the pyramid . solf that it ?ecame in the centre of the pyranud fted
piece of
away Th
mea:
1se was onentated to magnetic North. A controfoot
of the same size was placed alongside-about a ned
· e experiment took several weeks; in fact the contro

30
pic~e ofmeal had to be thrown away after one wc~k. but al'tc1 a
penod of three weeks, on removal of the pyramid the pic~c ol mc.i t
underneath it was dry and solid and showed no sign of dct1.: 1ioratio n.
Radicsthesic tests thereafter proved that there was in l'at:L .1
force lo be reckoned with.
It is interesting to note that should two pyramids be placed
side .by side the force is cancelled. U three pyramids an; pla1.·cd sid~
by side the force is resumed~ so on every odd pyramid atta c hed to a
series the (orce is renewed and is cancelled on an even nu m her ol
pyramids. It does not matter in which direction the series goes. hut
the pyramids must touch each other to nullify each olhcr's cfkc: l.
This peculiar phenomenon was accidently discovered when doing
some experiments some 20 years ago: Other researchers ha ve
discovered the same thing.
I know of no books that are available either in any Egyptology
museum, or any book on Egyptology that deals with the mummifica
Lion through the shape of the pyramid. Some time ago l approached
the British Museum and similar bodies only to be told tha t it is a
fallacy- I am making it up! The fact remains that you, anybody,
can produce this phenomenon with no technical experience, no
outside knowledge- just make your pyramid put your piece of meat
or anything of a similar nature underneaU1 and the pyram id will do
the rest. It requires only a second or two to do each expcrjment and
to leave it for a few weeks. Should the experiment be only partially
successful it will probably be that you have made the pyramid the
wrong size in proportion to the one shown in the diagram.
Some years ago a number of articles appeared in a publication
called "The Pendulum", now extinct, in which the sharpening of
razor blades by the action of a pyramid was a common occurrence.
It would seem that the razor blade should be placed on edge under-
neath the pyramid for about ten days with the edges facing North and
South: It is best to slightly raise any item placed under a pyramid so
that it is situated about ha lf-way up the inside of the pyramid.
It may be of interest to the reader to know what Lt. Col. Steve-
linck has to say about razor blades and pyramids in his article in
"The Pendulum" (1952):- "The fact that razor blades become
sharpened when placed under a pyramidal shape is a physical pheno-
menon. When a blade is sharp it is because of the thinning of the
steel edge. Under a microscope the steel molecules can be seen to be
joined and orientated in one direction, that of the line of the blade.
A:fter tempering with oi1, the secret is in orientating the blade in the
direction of magnetic North; any other direction would produce
bluntness.
After using a blade several times it becomes blunt and under
~he microscope small dents and unevenness are s~en. To re-sh.a~en
t must be reset, by returning the molecules to thetr correct pos1t1ons.

31
Under a pyramidal form is fo~nd a geomet.ric spo.t where are
Jines of force in the pyramid. This geometric
d 11 the
s ot is thus a point of energy w hose power h as ~o t .as yet been
concentrate a
P d by any known instrument except the rad1omc computer
nor is it known just what that poweifir m~y bef. Th
measure . . e st~ength of the·
1
power can be proved by the mumm cat10n o. ivmg t~s~es and by
the disastrous effect it has on the human bram when 1t is exposed
fo r a certa in time in this zone.
This power can be seen al~o :Vh~n i.ts energy i~ concentrated on
any form of matter placed w1thm it~ mfluence; it becomes trans-
formed into an accumulator of a parllcular energy. As soon as this
energy arrives at saturation point. that is to say, a t the moment that v\'h
the pull of this energy beCOJ?eS str?nger than the surrounding pull, cat
then the matter gives out a discharging ray. As soon as all the mole- be
cules contained in the matter reach the same degree of saturation of sh<
this energy they repel each other and lose their cohesion.
If at this moment the matter shou 1d be exposed to a flow of
sal
energy in the proper direction, tba" is wO say. in a magnetic field
'North-South', then the steel molecules aa become orientated in the exi
North-South direction. Thus the blade which was blunted by use
fol
becomes sharp again because all the molecules are in alignment. The
thinner the blade the less time is needed: Gramophone needles may da
be treated in the same way. The same applies to the hardening of Tt
blades and is explained by the fact that the magnetising of the mass in
has increased cohesion.

of
di

Fig. J. The "Force Field"


Further test odel pyra·
mid and it 8 were made with razor blades under a n:i
sharpest
was proved that after shaving the blade with t e
edge was- t~al which gave the highest pendulum r d.
ine. conclus1ons were reached:- ea mg. The follow-
....
(i) that the pyramid has a hardening and th . ·
effect on the razor. us a s11arpenmg
(ii) that the blade turned to the South is harder th
turned to the North. an t11e one
(iii) that this phe,nomenon. is due to the pyramid and not only
to the Earth s ~agnetism, because when placing the blade
Nort~-South without the pyramid there is no sharpening
reaction.
The series obtained are of course subject to small variations but
when examined they do produce a certain regularity in result which
cannot be due entirely to chance. But the fact that one blade can
be used 26 times instead of four times over a year's experimentation
shows, without any doubt, that it is fact.
Another experiment was made to see whether ordinary kitchen
salt could be made more healthful, in the same way as water, by
exposing it to a pyramid. The salt was placed in a pyramid and the
following results were observed:
On the first day 17 oscillations of great strength, on the second
day three slight oscillations. on the third day they stopped altogether.
The fourth day, two weak negative gyrations which increased to 28
in ten days and became stronger and stronger.
Other experiments show another form of energy which obeys .no
known physical laws and in consequence produces phenomena which
are not exp1ainable by laws.
All applications of experiments made in Radiesthesia in the field
o~ energy prove the Unity in Creation which is energy in the form of
directed rays which is the basis of every experiment.
Official science wishes to give mathematical classificati?n ~or
bich phenomena, but their instruments are limited. All our sc1ent1fic
owledge is kept within a limit of enero-y reactions whose wave
1e~gth~ vary from a few angstroms to se:eral kilo~etres, and. f~e­
q encies from hundreds to billions a second. Outside these limits
we know nothing and our instruments are now emerging.
the ~a~iesthesia has passed the stage of arithmetical measuring, and
be rbarary classification though these are both useful as they may
the U~derstood by the ordinary man. Radiesthesists would commit
The g eatest mistake should they create a new langu~ge .of ter1!1s.
Ymust use the language of physics, because everythmg is physics.
tnen;hef terms already in use to differentiate betwee~ the pheno-
applica~i energy are sufficient. Let us as Radiesthes1sts fi~d ~e~
0
ons and make new hypotheses wjthout the pretcntions

33
We shal1 get nearer to the truth if we keep t
imposing new Ja~~· o
the path of simpl1c1ty. .
. a shown slightly that the pyra.m1d. generates the force
Havino . Green later on we wi ll discuss how you ma
known as ~ega~~: Green but further than this it is not only th~
<let:ct .:~h te~~duces this phenomenon. Verl. Cameron discovered
pyram1 . a ones or cone.shaped forms made m metal or any OLher
that certaincan
substance · ·1 ar an d most pow~r f ul form of
c produce a very sm11
Neaative Green. In fact be demonstrated that by mak1~& the cones
aJ~ost any shape, some of them can be ver~ large, sens1t1ve persons
were subjected to the energy therefrom with most uncomfortable
results. It would appear that th~ energy from such shapes is pro-
duced by the magnetic force~ bemg generate~ ?Y the sh.apes going
upwards, thus forming a kmd of vortex inside the instrument.
Cameron also discovered that the energy fr?m cones passes through
walls of concrete; it can be reflected by nurrors, and can be trans-
mitted from one cone or pyramid to another.
It is a remarkable thing to note that very little has been gone
into further of this phenomenon which may be applied in many
ways, either as an experimental force or as a healing fo rce, but in
whichever way it is applied the results can be truly remarkable.
Some years ago l was fortunate enough to obtain a .few grains
of wheat termed 'Osirus' wheat which came directly from beneath
the floor of the Great Pyramid. This was loaned to me by a museum
and the Negative Green concentrate in such an ear of wheat was
truly amazing and I was able to use one of the ears of wheat to try
<l:nd grow it. It did in fact grow very fast but unfortunately at that
time I was unable to carry the experiment further due to lack ~f
space. But I am sure that seeds could be energised by using tl11s
method.
Havin~ discussed this Negative Green force, the reader will
naturally like to find out how he may discover it for hi~self. Th.e
only known way that we can analyse and manipulate this force is
through the action of the Pendulum and the Radionic Instrument.
~nd I had better give a brief outline here of the Pendulum and hoW
1t works.

THE PENDULUM and WHAT IT DOES .


A p d . d TblS
. en ulum is merely a weight suspended on a tbrea · Id
sl!kmple statement can indeed become quite complicated if one wouof
1 e to go · t
1 ~ o ~ he techmcahties
. .. d colours
pendulu of shapes. forms a~ duluJllS.
non-ma ms ? which there are many. There are magnetic pe~duluJllS.
long gnetJc pendulums, clear plastic pendulums. square pe y colour
0
ou 1·knes, round ones. white. black. purple. green ones-an
Y 1 e- any shape.

34
For the beginner to obtain
the best results. ho1d the pendu-
lum in the manner shown. about
3~ inches from the tips of the
fingers. It is a good idea. when
ho ld ing a pendulum for the firs t
time, not to grip it too tightly,
otherwise it will tire you out, and
to try and sit so that you a re
slightly above the table so that
your hand is, in effect, at right
a ngles to the body-this wiJl save
fatigue.
To the professional Radies-
Fig. 4. Hand holding the pendulum thesist each colour and shape of
a pendulum means a great deal
because it can spell results or non-results as the case may be, but the
pendulum shown in Fig. 4 shows not only the correct way to hold
a pendulum but also the most common type available, being a clear
special plastic pendulum with a thin suspension thread.
Some operators of the pendulum may find that an instrument
of heavier or lighter material in weight may be prefe rable to what is
generally termed the average weight of a pendulum which is about
35 grams. Weights of 50, 100 and even 150 grams are sometimes
preferred. If you find you are obtaining results which are too fast o r
the pendu lum begins to spin then you need a heavier pendulum of
a darker colour such as black. If you find that your pendulum is
going too slow, then you need a slightly lighter pendulum of prob-
ably a different shape.
Once you have established the type of pendulum suitable for
you-either one that you have made yourself or b ought-you should
keep .it with you at a ll times. Some people I know keep their pendu-
lum m a little cloth bag; ladies use a special little purse. If you
carry your pendulum with you, you will find as time goes on the
many uses and diversity of opinions on pendulum work will interest
you more and take you into more enlightening fields of this subject.
Having obtained your pendulum, you are now curious as to
what to do with it.
m Ho.wever, before we go into actual practical experiments we
pe~~ 1•scover :vhat sort of relationship you expect to have with a
hav· u um. T~1s may at first seem a little strange when we talk. of
of ;hg a ~elat!onship with an inanimate object, but when we thmk
an o~t ?dbJect m terms that it is an extension of ourself and not as
81 e tool then we become more understanding towards it.

fromT~eclpendul~1m will do. nothing of _its own .acc<?rd: Sus.Pei:ided


othes lme or any inanimate ob1ect and it will remam mert

35
d will not move other than by movement ?f the air, or .i f you
:cided to move it by the. ba~d. WSol wt~ havead111sco~d
eredt that I~ does
'thout us holdmcr it. 1a is usu y sa1 a once is that \
nfot move won1e can hold a pcendulum and make it move-of course
o course · ·
can but this is not the intention · the pend ulum. The
of usmg
lntentio~ is to get the pendulum to sho.w you the way. You do not
00

think in terms of whether xou are movmg the pendulum or whether


the pendulum is moving of its own acco.rd .throu!?h the ene1~gy pattern
given out by the fingers. R~member 1t is an interpretation of the
pendulum movements much m the same way that y~u ~sea delicate
piece of measuring apparatus or yo~ t~ne your ra~10 mto a certain
station. If you do not tune your rad.10 mto the s~t10n you want you
will not get the station itself. you will get somethmg else.
You should feel at ease and not under strain. It is often better
to use a pendulum when .you a~e least tired-.this is ~ostly in the
morning. Of course there IS noth~ng to stop yo~ fro1:11 usmg a pendu-
lum at any time of the day or mght. but at rnght-time yo u may get
slightly different results due to the fact that the earth reverses its
polarity at night.
Having ascertained that the pendulum a nd yourself are a team
you must then begin to understand that you have a mutual relation-
ship with this inanimate object which is going to tell you things that
you could never find by a ny other method-things that will work
for you on a slightly different plane t o what we are normally used to.
So in turn we have in a sense to have some control over the
pendulum, but not enough to inhibit it. We have to think of our
r~lationship with the pendulum as something which will interpret our
higher thoughts. When I say our higher thoughts this may be inter-
pr~ted ~s intuition or what you like; there is a sound reasoning for
this which has been mentioned in other works of mine; but if y~u
rely 100% on the _pendulum and not to reasoning you will obtain
better results than if you reason something for yourself.
Th~oughout the world many thousands of persons use the pen-
dulum m a great many different ways for a great many different
purposes. therefore your relationship with the pendulum at the outset
is one of the most unportant things you have to understand.
Having thus outlined the pendulum and what it does we can
now go a step further and describe the basic movements of the
pendulum and what they mean.
~bhere are dozens of complicated movements the pendulum maY
descn e but in th's f d l in the
three b . 1
par 1~u 1ar work we are intereste on Y J- a
force th~~ic i:novments which are Positive, Negative or Neutra ·nu
these b . exists throughout nature in one form or another. Know1 t~
future as1c i:novements of the pendulum will show you the way
experiments.

36
Before we indicate . such t~ings as polarit~. and positive and
neoativeness, a small pomt I w1sh to make, which may Jatcr avoid
0 .
con[us10n.
Generally speaking a male is right-h anded positive and Jcft-
handed negative- a female is the reverse, that is, right-handed nega-
tive and left-handed positive. Therefore the movements described
as positive and negative will refer to the male and should be reversed
for the female. There a re however, certain exceptional circumstances
when these movements may vary a little depending on the individual
polarity of the operator.
The illustrations that follow show the directions of the pendu-
lum and are described as positive, negative and neutral; that is to
sav. positive is clockwise (sometimes referred to as goodness, power.
helpful, etc.), negative is anticlockwise (sometimes indicating oppo-
sition, badness, etc.).

Fig. 5. Directions of the pendulum

. In the above diagram we see that the direction of the left hand
circle is a nti-clockwise (negative), the right hand circle shows the
direction as clockwise (positive).
In order to establish your particular type of movements a simple
t experiment may be undertaken. As will be seen by the illustrations
:t the pe!1dulum will rotate in a complete circle when suspended over
an ob)ect that is termed positive; the pendulum will rotate in the
oppo~1te direction, that i~ anti-clockwise over an object that is termed
negative. It will swing or oscilJate in any position that is between the
two extremes.

Movements of the Pendulum


d Having given some information about the direction of the pen-
the
1um we. shou!d see how it looks in the hand and this is shown in
usedfollow1~g d_iagrams. In Fig. 6, we see the pendulum as normally
· rotatmg m a clockwise manner. In Fig. 7, we see it rotating

37
---~-- - - "(C .... ,

''
h-
i
,'

After you have seen the diagrams indicating the movement of


the pendulum, you will want to try it for yourself, hence we may do
a simple experiment as follows:-
Place a sheet of clean white paper on the table in front of you.
White paper (not coloured) is important, as this may affect the end
results.

B
8
I1
r
n
n
h
ri
A
Fig. 8
Fig. 9 th
Draw a c1rc· Je (see Fig 9) with a cross in it To give
• the best Of
nd
resu )ts the c·lfCJe sh ould be· about 6 .mches m
. d1ame
·. t Suspe
er. d JuJll
~~gr pendulum over the centre of the cross of itself the pen t~h it
swin %ove. al~ng. one of the lines, a - a. or' b - b. If Y.00 t~~nk (or
g g, it will mcrease its movement, after a short while.

38
111 111i• it1l' ) till' pe nd11l~1n~ ln Sll)P il will: Imagine it to rotate and it
,, di, 11ud ..,n 11n I hts:s a method of contrornng the pend I d
,, , 1-. 111 ~.1 ll'>l'd hv I• mile Couc, the eminent French Ps}ch~l~~:~f

1111 1•1 1 Jl>()ll tt> \Ci, 11nd was referred to as the "Coue Pe ~ I
h'..,t ", II 1-. ... till ll Sl'd 111 psy~holngical tcsling today to show ~o~~~
11 11111111, 1\111\W1.'.lll tah· this further by continuation of the experi-
' Ill 111 ,

Phtl'I.' ,, 1wn lH u pendl on the paper in any direction you wish


1
111d ... 11 ... pl·nd vnm pendulum so that the pendulum bob itself is about
111w 1111.h nlh"1.' the surface of the object. Suspend it approximately
111 t hl' 11\iddk nml it will be observed that instantly the pendulum
,, 111 11.·nd tn 11.1vd lengthwise along the object. a - a or b - b, this
b ll't ll\l'd 1w11tral. M1wc your hand with the still moving pendulum
1l1 111\l' 1.·nd 1if the 1wn. immediately you will obtain either a clockwise
111 ,II\ .1111i dm.· kwisc lll1)v1.•mcnl. llow quickly this will change from
1111.• s\\ lllpi 11g tn rnlttting depends entirely on the degree of your own
st•ns111' 1ty. ln snm1.' pe rsons this will be at once, in others it takes a
lillk nwn.• lllm:.
Move th~ pendulum still rotating towards the further end of the
p~n On its way it wi ll begin to swing again and then rotate in the
1'PJhls1t1.· direction to what it did on the other end.
'\HI huvc established that the pendulum rotates and swings for
wu Now ynu hn vc to discover your polarity.
'l he sunpksl way whereby you can establish this polarity is to
obt,dn a torch ba ucry. A battery bas the ;::>roperty (as does a
mugnct) of having a positive and a negative pole. Some batteries
ur~ marked with a plus sign ( +) which is positive and a minus sign
( ) which is negati ve. Other batteries. particularly the tubular k.imt
urc not marked but the top of the batter} is the positive and the
bntlmn is the negative.
Suspend your pendulum over the positive pole of the battery~
normally in a male this will rotate clockwise, in a female it will
rotate anti-clockwise; in certain circumstances a different mO\ement
may be obtained in which case you then determine the negame
movement you have. In a male this is anti-clockwise if the pendu-
l~1m is held in the right ha nd , in a female clockwise if held in the
right hand.
t , lt is ~ntcresting Lo note that should you hold the. pendul~- in
0
tyour own pola rity.
1 opposmg hand the opposite movement will occur m recogmuon

Having established the type of movement you have obtained


~~~r .ll~c positive pole and the negative pole of the battery then the
1
' am mg movement will be the neutral and this is all vou ha' e t.O
r1.:mcmb
er f or your basic experiments. • -

39
f
THE NEGATIVE GREEN PENDULUM ~
Having undertaken the ex- c
periments ~n the previous chapter r
and assuming you may have read t
s imilar books of mine about the }
Pendulum thus you may gain ex-
perience in this field we find then c
we ha ve a special type of pen-
dulum fo r detecting the pheno-
menon of Negative Green. This s
detection can be done in several l
ways You may use an ordinary c
pend,1l um in order to detect nega- c
tive green but then this must be
adjus~ed to the subject under test.
1
Obtain a sheet of dark green
Fig. 10 Adjusting tbe pendulum paper Suspending the pendulum
in your hand between the :fingers ti
wait until the pendulum offers you a clockwise movement which is v
positive. T hen slowly lower the pendulum down as shown in the ~
accompanying d iagram, and having gradually lowered or lengthened t
the string of the pendulum, at some point the bob will rotate in an 0
anti-clockwise manner- the pendulum is now tuned to negative green. s
e
However the difficulty in tuning a pendulum by this method is v
that the exact point of tuning is difficult to obtain because varying v
operators may lengthen the string in different ways thus avoiding an
exact pendulum length so that it may be repetitive. H owever one way to c·~
?vercome this is to ~ie a loose knot in the thread of the pendulum so that
it can be moved slightly up or down and ho1d this loose knot between
p
the fingers until the pendulum gives ~
anti-clockwise rotation which tunes Jt b
to negative green and then ti&hte~ the J1
knot so that each time you pick it up d
you will do so with the knot between \\
the fingers. ti
Another easier way of course ~s to b
Ci
have a pendulum which is spec1a.1ly
designed for detecting only negative b
,green. Such a pendulum h~s a tuned
knot already in the suspension thread
and is so designed to respond only to
negative green each time the operator
uses it.

Fig. 11 S . l
=· .J .
Havmg undertaken t 15 hoW
h" brid
detecti Npeci~ pendulum for experiment we want to find· outgreen
ng egat1ve Green we can detect the negative

40
force. f irst ly.. if you h.avc ahcac.l y made ~he specimen pyramid
rcvinu!-llY oul l.mc<l (sec Fig. 2) then Y.ou can on cnt the pyramjd so that
~nc side is oriented lo face magnetic north. You can find magnetic
north by laying your co mp~ss on the tabl~ and when the needle settles,
this is pointing lo magneti c no rth . H aving set the pyramid in place
~ou then suspend the _Pendulum. over the apex, ? r t~p of the ~yramid
and the pendulum wtll . rot~.lc m a neg~ttve d1rectlon, that is, anti-
dockwisc: for women this will be clockwise.
1 he same kind of reaction occurs over a number of other
shapes, such as a cone when turned upside down with the point
upwards~ this of course does not need orienting. There are a number
of ways in which this unique force field may be utilised and this js
outlined in the following chapter.

THE NEGATIVE GREEN BATTERY


We have alread y mentioned the late Mr. Capes. who was the
firsl lo recognise the existence of Negative Green in the pyramid, and
with his observati on we see that he discovered in the inside of the
pyramid a series of stones which formed , as he put it, a kind of
battery which was very intense with this type of force field. In his
O'v\n words he says:- "To the sensitive person approaching these
stones for the first time a nervous agitation occurs which cannot be
explained, bul to the radiesthesist with his pendulum a definite and
v~ry strong radiation Lo negative green will occur and this is more
y1olent near the top than at the bottom. Since there is no way to
1sola.1e this field it behoves us to study the matter further before
commg to a conclusion as to its origin and its effect on sensitive
people."
b It is n~w possible through our research to make a negative green
at.tery which will produce this force field in a controlled amount.
1
dt is also possible by using a series of these batteries to increase or
~crease the force field. The term 'battery' should not be confused
~ith lhe ordinary electrical type battery, because this type of nega-
b~~ ~reen device is a flat one with a positive and negati~e polari~y,
consit do~s not store electrical energy. It produces, by virtue of its
bott truct10n, the negative green force field around it and top and
om as the diagram shows.
say H . .th·is negative
· green battery is placed over the top of, let us
ba~te~~ fal ~eat ~r milk, or anything that is liable to go bad with
1
ing ~a f action, this d~terioration is arrested for some time depen4-
0
tions inow~~mrse, the climate, humidity, and so on of the lo~al cond1-
take a ich !he experiment is applied. As a simple expenment you
Place ~1ass wi~h a small quantity of milk in it, say about half full.
t~1e top e t~ative green battery with the negative sign upwards, .over
t1on of ~het e. glass and leave it there. This will arrest the detenora-
milk for some time. If two or more batteries are placed

41
on top of each other, each with t~e polarity ~e sar:ne, the force field
will b~ stro~ger and the preservation of t~e .mllk will be longer. The
followmg diagrai:i shows a number of nega.t1ve green batteries on to
of each other which produce a more complicated negative green fo P
. . an d h ea1·mg.
field which is used f or experimentation rce

Fig. 12 The Negative Green battery Fig. 13 Negative Green batteries on


top of each other

;-----..,
:
'
I
N~/-
I
!
'
r--------1
L _____ j
I I
I '
' I
I I

! NC.-/- :
I I
' I
'--------'

Fig. 14 Negative Green batteries carried on the person

. I have had students of mine carry a negative green battery ~


their pockets or handbags and aches and pains which have been pe·s
·
sistent f or some while have vanished in a very short time.
· There J·
no case for auto-suggestion here because the purposes of the expe~d
ments were not ~o produce healing but rather to see if the b.odyac':1t-
create ~he negative green force of its own accord, rath~r like make
generatmg battery and we have found that it is possible 1<? ess
the body generate this negative green force or reduce its effectiven ·

42
Having due regard to what. others have ~aid about the Jife force,
tc no doubt you have bee~ . in a roo'? with a number of elderly
ee~· le. If you are ~t an sens1tl v~ you will know .that the elderly, not
f Png sufficient vital fotce, w11l attract the vital force from the
~~~~ger person, an~ the force ~hey take is the same thing as negative
~reen. Now, weanng a negative . ~reen battery w~ have discovered
eliminates this loss from th~ sens1t1ve perso~. I m 1~ht add here that
the negative green battery 1s a self-generating device and does not
)
need electricity or outside power to generate the force-field we have
been discussing. Over a period of years we have undertaken experi-
ments in a most diverse manner, such as placing a negative green
battery on the head and a headache will vanjsh if of nervous origin.
Or we may place two negative green batteries one each side of a
plant that is ailing and the plant wiII revive. The method to do
this is shown in the accompa nying diagram.

Fig. 15 N · ·
on each .degative Green batteries Fig. 16 Negative Green batteries
si e of a pot plant under a bed

r The effect of a pair of these batteries on the plant is m ost start-


ing so
the la as t o give
· almost instantaneous results and reJ.uvena
· t'on
• to
by p nt. I have known very nervous animals to be quietened down
ex:~rely P~tting a negative green battery in their bed. And s 0 /~~
we h ment~tion goes on to find out the real use of the force e 1
live ;ve discovered. The force-fie1d that is generated by the nef~;
by ve~een b~t~ery, which has already been described. is ofte~ ~n
large Y sen~ th ve persons from a distance of from 3-4 metres. f t
i~ ha~ b::ahve green batteries the force-field is e~en grea~r~nl~it:~r
Side of a n known that two negative green batteries P!aC.T ba tteries
Plaeed 0 pe~son will improve the general vitality an~ simt ~r the case
We have ~: •the.r side of a bed will improve sJeep, 1ust as m
n With the plant experiment. .
l'hose . 1 of radiation
can Still r P<:rsons who are not so sensitive to this YI?LJ not be in a
eceive the benefits of its power, but they wi

43
position to feel it quite so m uch. General~y speaking the m or.e sensi-
tive a person is to extra sensory perceptJ.on (E.S.P.) _the easier it is
to feel and in some rare cases to actually see the negative green force-
field coming from a negative green battery.
THE NEGATIVE GREEN GENERATOR
This 0o-enerator is a Jittle bit different from the negative green
battery we have been discussing and the reason a generator has been
made is to make the force-field in sufficient q uantities to produce
healing on a controlled basis. There a re two different methods of
doing this: One is a battery operated device, the other is electrical
mai ns operated. Both have the same kind of production of the
negative green force and may be used for a ll kinds of experiments in
neutra lising harmful radia tions and calming nervous people, thus
utilizing the force-field rather than just using it as an idle curiosity. )

Try a simple experiment : With the negative green battery


already ment ioned, place this against a va!')e of cut flowers with the
negative side inwards, towards the flowers, or with the generator
switched on nea rby, and drooping flowers wilJ immediately begin
to be revitalised. In past experiments it has been discovered that
even aquarium fish benefit to some extent with the use of the nega-
tive green force.
It will be a ppreciated of course tha t the smaller negative green
generators are limited in their power output, and thus will not pro-
duce the results that the larger instruments will do, but the fact
remains that research work so fa r undertaken has produced most
interesting and rewarding results. T

R
ln
111
14
th
en
he
in~
to
SU]
On
tyr
Fig. 17 N egative Green generator live
See
1 The simplic~ty of operation of the Negative Green Generator
~adsl us to the view that the most ingenious things in nature are the but
s1mp est Of · t r \\>it
the t h · course, m manufacturing the Negative Green Genera 0 Cll)q
ec meal problems have been overcome in the workshop, thus
\VjlJ
44
late
lincr the user of the equipment merely to sw·t h .
en ilb o l ·1· bl . J c it on a d d.
the simple contro s ava1 a e on the instrument. It . n . a JUSt
anufacturc larger and more powerful Neoative G is possible to
~~ enable research and healing work to be undertakeen
0
<;Jenerators
en with greater
benefit ·

Fig. 18 RADIONIC ANALYTICAL COl\IPUTER-:\IK. II

THE RADIONIC COMPUTER and the


NEGATIVE GREEN FORCE
!h?se of my readers who are familiar with Radionics and the
~ad1on1c Computer wi JI wonder if it is possible to utilise this
instrument to produce the neaative green force either as an experi-
~ntal or .healing agent. R~search has shown that the r.ate of
the 837921 is ~he one yo u want to produce this fo~ce: Setting up
e . baforement1oned frequency or rate into a Radwmc Computer
h~\les the subject to be studied in n1ore detail and to be used as a
ins~ mg force along with the o ther frequencies supplied with the
to rument. It is in fact possible to maonify the negative green force
• h
a great sens1·t ·Ive
0
t
sub·e . ex ent where scientific experimentation ·
wit
onl~ ~~s n?t only a possibility but brings reality to its usag~. ~ot
hs
types f eali.ng. but into the unknown properties of this an? s1m1lar
live gr~ radiation .. If we utilize th e Radi onic Computer with nega-
seen th=~ along Wllh the spiritu al rates for treatment. obser~ers have
but it · _very often healing results are nothing short of miraculous,
With ll~~ important that we d o not overdo the amount of treatment
a~d no ~cf0;'erful force since we a re still probing into the unkno~y~
~ 111 Consta~t~ long after this book has been published, new ma~nak 00
ater on. Y come to light and be produced in yet another

45
OTHER SHAPES AND DEVICES THAT PRODUCE THE
FORCE FIELD WE KNOW AS NEGATIVE GREEN
Although we term the force-field negative green, it has in fact
the same pola rity as any other force-!Jeld, magnetic, electrical, or
other device and natural substance m nature. So far we have
touched upon the pyramidal shape because it was a negative green
force that is generated most strongly from this shape bu t it follows
that the pyram idal shape cannot be the only type of form which is a
perfect generator for the negative green force.
It was some yea rs ago, in the 1950's in fact, when a n American,
V. L. Cameron experimented with a num ber of cones, the first of
which was adapted from an old type loud speaker or gramophone
horn. T he experimenter in this case identified a beam of force
stretching for several metres from the tip of the cone and it is
possible by attaching an electric Wlfe to the tip to carry this force-
field along the wire fo r a certain distance. Later experiments over
the years by a number of researchers have shown that the cone
shape although easier to manufacture produces some side effects and
does not produce pure negative green force-field. H aving seen this
the shape was eventua lly discarded and the pyramid reigns supreme.
However, it a ppears that any shape that ends in a point which has
symetrical sides can produce the negative green fo rce-field although
very few researchers really know how it is produced. Some allege
that it is possible to generate the negative green fo rce-field even with
a diagram, but my feelings on the matter and experiments have
shown that this can be erroneous and misleading.
We may refer to D r. Oscar Brunler when he says:-
"Rays and radiations- two simple words-yet they open the
gates into the rea lms of all creation.
Rays and radiations- a vast- a n endless and a fascinating
world whose radiance leads us from the world of matter and death.
to a world of light, understa nding and wisdom. Only comparatively
few men have ever ventured into these fertile fields and have explored
these plains where the eternal light never fades.
. Orthodox science concerns itself up to the present time . only
with those rays and radiations which a re either electric, magnetic. or
electr<?-m~gnetic. E verything which does not fall within thl~ ca.te-
gory is simply put aside a nd considered not worthy of scientific
investigations. Many of the pioneers who do not follow the footstep,s
of the orthodox scientists are considered to be 'slightly off the beaDl ·
We must a lways bear in mind that real advances anq _nearlY
all progress in the world is only made by very few individuals·
~nless we have realized and acknowledged to ourselves 0 ~
ignor~~ce we can never progress or gain greater knowledgd~
Humility- true humility- the realisation of our Jimited understan

46
in2'. and the longing, . the desire and cou raoeous d ,. . . .
explore new fields, will s lo\\ Iv but surely r~ise ~termmat1on h)
greater understanding. All c-reation is the outcu; mtofspheres of
me 0 ravs and
radiations. What do we k now a bo ut ra1s and radiation
· · phenomena?
Let us, first of. all, glance O\ier that vast panorama like a n interested
spectator lookmg down on to the earth from an aeroplane
thousands of feel above the ground.·· ~ man)
True science is organized knowledge and organized obsenation.
Unless we observe, and u~less .we correlate the knowledge of manv
spheres, we can never obtam a picture of the whole. -
It is c urious to n ote that the negat_ e green should be related
to a colour but it would appear that it ,s very allied to the visible
rays of colour of green. Let us refer to the action of green colour
as a light colour.
A great deal of scientific work 1as done in the laboratory with
the aid of a number of medical practitioners by R. Douglas Howat
in listing the therapeutic and scientific effects of some colours. The
following is that for green with the wavelength :n
angstrom units- the
measurement of colour waves .
The Green Filter: (4,861 - 5,317 A.U. ap;:>aox.)
Under the infl. uence of the green filte r physical processes are
retarded, a quietening of movement lS observed and excitement is
allayed (Akopenko). A prolonged exposure to the .green, although
at first pleasant and soothing, later becomes oppressive. 1t has been
observe~ that these chromatic rays of shorter wave-length have .a
depr~ssmg effect. My own observations have led me to regard this
portion of colour spectrum as more or Jess of a neutral zone, but
~he green filter would appear to have a stabilizing effect on the
immediate results produced by exposure to the other colour filters .
. Iredell, using his focal machine in his investigations into the
~tion of C?lour vibrations upon cancerous growths, found that green
bas. 8?0thing when the patient was restless. He recommended
effgmnmg and ending all treatments with green. as h~ found t~at ~he
f ects of exposure to other colours were intensified if an application
0
green was given after they bad been used.
· Doge! and Jeo-orow found that the circulation of the blood. both
in do
gs an.d humans, was very markedly changed by t he ac fwn of
0
gree
n rays irritating the eye.
scat W.here does negative oreen exactly fit in to the electro-magnetic
e tf t 11 o d. to the wave
forrn' a a ? Most researchers agree that accor mg . h t
betw so far discovered it is o-enerall...,y marked in the following 5c ar
Othereenstud
the ·mfra-red rays and
o · ·
the radar and teJev1s1on ays· ome
rat'
1ve areen
ractiatio ents ~owever have discovered that t~e ~eg delong
electric~ coi:-ies m point marked 'B' between radio ~aves an
a oscillations.
47
Cosmic rays
I 0 _,,

J0 -1 l X-unit
Gamma rays
l0 -:I

10 •2
0
X-rays 10 -l I Angstrom Unit (a)

1 J millimicron (mµ.)

Ultra-violet rays 10 1

Visible rays i= 10 2

Infra-red rays
l- 10

10 ·1
3 1 micron (p,)
r
c
II

l= 10

10
ts

° 1 m iJiimetre
a
pJ
k(
Negative-green 'A'
131
Radar and television 10 i 1 centimetre ra1
an
10 8 exi
Prt
10 9 1 metre T'h
UnJ
10 10
Radio waves neg
10 ll. aJJ
di~c
10 12 1 kilometre to 0 ~
lhe
Negative-green 'B' 10 .ta \\.tith
Long electrical lls C·
10 Ancic
oscillations
l.J.
rlltllr
10 l~ been
wolJ le
Fig. 19 The Elcclro-magnclic Scale
{!"Pe 1
48 rJ
!'Ill' ~ttl::l t •st n11111h1..·1 ol' 1\.:S\.:ctrch••r . I' .
· I 1 II 11.· Iu I ll-1. IHit we ll'lvc"'los <t· iscovcnng tl1e former do
11111 ,1 'll'l'
.
wit
I' . I'll ' "
k .11
pm;s 1h1 I1ly n rnw1g. l 1 1.·n·111 materials in ex 'lcri • c llo con.s1'd cration
· the
tlll:Sl' 1l·~111ls
1 mcntattcm lo achieve
Tlil· R:1dio11i1. <'011 1pt1t1,;1 11..mls lo agree will1
1accs it hl'tWl'l'tl I he ;d'or1.·s;i id 1nfr·i-r•·<t , 1artheandformer
' ... •'tncl ret<. and
1t1·ul 111 I t1 lll I his ·is IHI t " Vl' l y loosi..: IYIJC of sc·1
t l ··
.e ~v151on
• . . · • I""' l1eCLLuse
.. . 1s
1t unpos
sihk IP g1vl! :1 pn·l.:1:-oc :t rrn11~1 1..'111cnl on ~ 1 type of radi· · .-
uniq\IC. in 11al urc ctllon that 1s
1lavmg· IDl'<1lcd
· · ou r Inegative
1· . l'orce we inay the n continue
green ·
c\pl..'11111cnlalmn 11llo t 1c uturc w ith most remarkable results no
doll bi.
INTO THE FUTURE
l'hl..'rc is no doubt a great deal of research inlo the negative
gr~l..'ll ror1.·c-licld remains lo be und ertaken. and the information
wntamcd 1n this hook mcrdy "il'tatches the surface, but it is some-
lhinp of a subject that needs some i:arcfuJ handling by the competent
rad1nn 1c 1.·nm pu tcr operator in order that the true beneficial results
can acnuc from its use. No doubt as time passes much more
interesting information wi ll be forthcoming an<l will be published.
One must not look upon this relatively new-found energy force
as a miradc worker o r someth ing from the ''occult". It is a purely
physicul force ex isting throughout nature which may offer us _the
key to unlock some of the secrets of the uni verse in which we hve.
But if the reader is interested in research into radiesthesia and
radionics along the lines of negative green, a gre~t deal of f~scinating
and :cwarding information will come to light. Havmg been
experimenting in this field for over a quarter of a century I am
prcpa~cc.I to repeal my research over the next quarter .of a century.
rlrn; is how confident I am that we are on the right track to
unlocking some of these secrets.
Remember that we are not making a new discovery, the
~egativc. green force, li ke electricjty and m.agn~tism. i~ around ~!
~~l the lime. rt only comes at a certain pomt 1~ our .hves that .
iscovcr the existence of it. Electricity existed since time begar· ~
1t~ok a few men, wi th a lifetimes research behind them, l? _un ~~r
w~ benefits that we now use-in fact demand-of electncity, of
;thout it our world wou ld be quite different and, in fact. mafnoyrm
ll ., Ctinn · . · · · shape or ·
l\nct s 0 .t 1~1ag~ne a world without electricity m on~ h find that in
future 0 1 ~ 1~ .with the negative gre~n force. W,e mig ~hat we have
been Yea_rs its potency as a heal mg force nMY be . 1 think it
Would1ook_mg for for man y years, and in the meantunelines
be interesting to note further researches along these ·
1 he b . . n apart from
exPerin est way to learn more about negati ve greef · ·ne dealing
1cntation, is to read some of the other books 0 mi

49
with Radiesthesia. Radionics, and similar subjects; to know the
pattern is forming whereby ~he ~cy ~o unloc~ all. these secrets is now
being turned and the combmat10n 1s U?foldmg itself before us, and
perhaps who knows. by the end of th1s century we may have the
answer to a potent force that may be used to help humanity, animals
and agriculture, and like the crystal ball we gaze into the future to
find the answer to some of the problems we are unaware of at this
time.
Meanwhile this book, I hope, will start you thinlcing and
probing, and if you think and probe and use existing knowledge the
combination will complete itself and the door to universal knowledge
will be yours to open.

so
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The following works were consulted in the .
book. Those marked with an asterisk (*) are o!tre1ara~1on
0
of this
aenerally available. prmt and not
C'

Brunler, Dr. Oscar: Rays and Radiation Phenomena (1950*)


Colson, Thomas, Ph.D.: Molecular Radiations (1953*)
Drown. Dr. Ruth: Theory and Techniques of Drown Radio-Therapy
(1939*)
Howart, R. Douglas: The Green Filter (1942*)
L1h\..msky, Georges: : The Secret of Life (1 939*)
~1c0ougal. William: Body and /Vlind (l 966*)
\11ntandon. J. A.: Reports: from the Scientij rr Congress. Locarno*
Reich. Dr.: Congress of Radionics*
Reichenbach, Baron Charles von: The "Od" Force*
Robertson, Dr. White: Studies in Electro-Pathology*
Rutherford. Adam: Pyramidology (Book IV)
Starr-White. Dr. George: Finer Forces of Nature (1929*)
Ste\.eEnck, Colonel: The Pendulum (1952*)
Ste\elinck, Colonel: Reports: from the Scientific Congress, Locarno*
Tromp, Professor: Psychical Physics (1955*)
Ward, Professor: The Human Chain (1921*)
Wilson, Dr. J. Horne: Reference to the magnetic field*
Encyclopaedia Britannica: Article on ''Biology''*
''\'it' .. .
ic published in San Diego l 950*

51
BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR-All currently available
''What Radiesthesia Is and What It Can Do" (3 editions)
" A Guide to Medical Radiesthesia" (4 editions)
" How Radiesthesia Can Help Y ou" (2 editions)
"Facts about the Box Treatment (Radionics for Healing)" (4 editions)
" Diagnostic Instrument Handbook" (5 editions)
" The Modern Prospector" (4 editions)
"Der Prospekt Handbuch" (trans Prof. W. Kowa, Ph.D.)
"Der Strahlen-computer Buch'' (trans Prof. W. Kowa, Ph.D.)
" Biogranzs-Tlze Secret of Success/ul Living" (2 editions)
"Simplified Botanic Medicine" (3 editions)
" The Rainbow of Health": Volumes 1 and 2 (1974) (2 editions)
"Magic of the Aura" (1974) (2 editions)
" Radiesthesia for Home and Garden" (1974)
"The R adionic Computer" (1974) (3 editions)
" Radiesthesia and Ecology" (1974)
" Radio-Biology Therapy" (1974)
" Radionics" : volumes 1 and 2 (1975)
" Dowsi.ng For Y ou" (1975)
" Pendulum Diagnosis" (trans. from German) (1975) (2 editions)
" The Practical Pendulum" (1975) (2 editions)
" The Technical Pendulum" (1 975)
Also many others, some of which are out of print.

Books or Apparatus mentioned in this publication may be obt7;:~


from the Author's Laboratories through the publishers at the ad
as shown.

ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS
"Highfield", Church Lane,
Dane Hill, Haywards Heath,
Sussex, RH17 7EX. England.

52
About
the
Author

~RU~E COPEN commenced his writing career a t an early age and by


e time he was 21 .bad. ~rilten 15 stage plays, nwnerous books ~f poetry,
fnd Belles Lettres. His ongLnal method of writing was discovered and cultivated
or the more popular style of works, of which this book is one.
He h~ studied a great deal and researched many diverse subjects, and his
versa tile talents have been recognised all over the world-awards have been
besto~ed upon him during the past 20 years, some of which include Doctor
of Philosophy, ~octor of Literature, et?., etc: H!s outstanding contribution
to adLI;lt education was rewarded by him being mstalled as Knight of the
Sovereign Order of St. J ohn of Jerusalem (Danish Sector) in 1970.
During W orld W a r JI, he was serving in ENSA, as Stage Manager, and ulti-
mately Stage Director whilst serving in Germany. On returning to England
after the War began his most prolific writing career, but always in the vein
of the Teacher. To date 52 books, 9 study courses and hundreds of articles
have been published, some of which have been translated into French, German
and Swedish . The book you are about to read is yet another of his essentially
practical works, which are timeless in their content.
Past President / Founder of the British Radiesthesia Association 1953 / 69. Editor
"British Journal of R adiesthesia" 1954/ 60. Ed~tor "Natural Therape~tics
Journal" 1965- 71. Editor of the Seeker Mag_azme for .11 years. He 1s .a
member of the Society of Authors a nd other literary bodies. Currently he 1s
President / Founder of '"International College of Radionics''.
Hobbies include organ playing, reading, motor cars and anything inventive and
scientific. . . .
Consultant to a number of Overseas Universities and Educational bodies m
Adult Education. . . . .
. th · Radionics and Adult Education m Natural Therapeutics his
In Ra.d iek esia, all over the world as a J.eading a!-lth~rity. Inventions include
name 15 nRowd~ thesi·a and Rad ionic Devices, Rad1001c Computers, and Thera-
numerous a 1es
peutic aids. . f · dustry pouring forth knowledge o f th 1s · 11se
. very spec1a · d
1ve o m
H e 1·s still a hhich his advice is· constantly sought.
nature, for w . . - offerin simple, non-technical knowledge and
THIS e90K ~s a P~ftl~ad~~s who h:ve _only a minimal knowledge of the
style which will etnaunederstand and utilise its contents.
English Language o ,
Published by: Academic Publicadons
Dane Hill, Suaex, Enaland, RH17 7EX

h m by SH Tel. 5221.
rlnt, Dolphin Roed, ShOre • • • ·

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