RADIATION AND WAVES – Sources of Our Life

by GEORGES LAKHOVSKY

PREFACE
WHEN GEORGES LAKHOVSKY showed me the translation of his work Radiations et Ondes, I realized that here was a veritable revolution in scientific thought of which my American colleagues were as yet utterly uninformed. The magnitude of Lakhovsky’s work, although well-known among European biologists
and physicists, had not yet been presented to scientific circles in this country. Many eminent scholars, among them Dr. Caligaris, Professor of Neurology at the University of Rome, Professor Attilj, Chief Radiologist at San Spirito in Sassia Hospital in Rome, Dr. Postma, prominent Dutch physician have published
volumes explaining Lakhovsky’s theories and inventions in Europe. It was the reading of Michel Adam and Givelet’s (French scientists) remarkable volumes on the work of Lakhovsky, La Vie et les Ondes, that inspired me to write these few inadequate remarks. Professor Lakhovsky’s modesty and repeated protests could not deter me in my determination to open to American science a new world of substantiated knowledge which is, I feel sure, destined to revolutionize modern biology and physics.

My own experiences with Lakhovsky’s multiple wave-length oscillator apparatus have been such as to leave no doubt in my mind of his invaluable contribution to our unending search for the primary causes of life and death. To Professor Lakhovsky I brought a patient suffering from an advanced stage of stomach malignancy, very painful, and symptomatized by rapid loss of weight, general lack of vitality, etc. I had previously subjected this patient to various blood examinations, radiographs, and other treatments. After several exposures to Lakhovsky’s multiple wave-length oscillator machine, a gradual amelioration of the condition was noted. This is only one of countless cases that have been miraculously restored by Lakhovsky’s invention. Thousands of enthusiastic testimonials from all parts of the world have expressed the gratitude of patients suffering from many varied diseases, often incurables, completely cured by this
remarkable apparatus. When you have read this volume, you will understand the obligation I feel to make known to my American confreres the tremendous scope and importance of Lakhovsky’s work.

Similar Studies