All matter vibrates at a specific and
unique frequency as a result of changes of the electric particles at the atomic
level. These vibrating, electrically charged particles emit electromagnetic
waves. This means that every medicine (or any other substance) produces its own
unique electromagnetic signature. This fact can be demonstrated through the
science of spectroscopy, which can identify substances by the energy field they
produce.
At the same time, cellular biology explains that all cells have two types of
antenna-like receptors on their surface. While the fist type of receptors is
designed to detect biochemical substances such as nutrients or hormones in the
body, the second type of receptor is designed specifically to receive
electromagnetic signals from the surrounding environment. Leading cell biology
researcher Bruce Lipton, Ph.D., who lectures extensively on the electronic
nature of the cell, cites experiments that show cells are actually a hundred
times more sensitive to electromagnetic signals than chemical signals.
Conventional medicine is still based on the outdated mechanistic physics of the
19th century, as if the body works like a machine. It still holds the
foundational belief that life processes can be described and understood on a
chemical level. While quantum theory in the 1920s represented a revolution in
science, its biological implications have yet to be integrated into biological
science, although undercurrents have been recognized by important scientists.
For example, a famous Nobel Laureate in physics, Dr. Werner Heisenberg, Said
“The opinion that living processes can be explained only by the methods of
physics and chemistry and that there are no biological forces is not in
congruence with quantum theory.”
These ideas suggest not only that living systems can recognize electromagnetic
fields, but that they also play an essential role in the body’s survival.
It makes sense that intelligent living systems would include a way for every
cell to receive information on the activities taking in every other part of the
body. Although the movement of chemicals from place to place in the body is one
important means of communication, it is too slow to account for the rapid
transfer of information that takes place. Research that proves organized
electromagnetic fields (or “biofields”) extend from our body and intelligently
interact with the environment has been performed worldwide by distinguished
scientists such as German biophysicist Fritz Popp, Ph.D., Stanford professor
William Tiller, Ph.D., UCLA professor Valerie Hunt, Ph.D., and former NIH
adviser and founder of Temple University’s Center for Frontier Sciences, Beverly
Rubik, Ph.D. Each of these researchers has written books or articles about the
nature of the human biofield and how it reacts to energy and information in its
environment.
Every function of the body depends on the correct energy. All disease initially
begins as a functional disturbance that only becomes a clinically recognizable
disease over time. This is one reason why so many patients have symptoms that
cannot be diagnosed using conventional methods. If there are not telltale
morphological findings, conventional medicine is often a loss to explain the
problem. This primacy of energy over the material has been known since ancient
times. For example, traditional Chinese medicine clearly states this important
principle as “blood follows qi” This means that the material aspect of the body
is subordinate to the energetic, not the reverse. Nobel Laureate in Medicine
Albert Szent-Gyogyi noted over 40 years ago that "in every culture and medical
tradition before ours, healing was accomplished by moving energy”.