The Bioresonance

Review of Scientific Studies by Jean-Marie DANZE

Foreword : The aim of this document spreading is not at all to create any controversy among established scientific sphere, but to bring a new light to subjects correlated to biology and particularly to molecular biology.

From many decades, advanced searchers like Georges Lakhovsky, Ferdinando Cazzamalli, Gustav Stromberg, Harold Saxton Burr, William Ross Adey, Cyril W. Smith, Alexander Gurwitsch, Herbert Fröhlich, Fritz Albert Popp, Philip Callahan,, C.A.L. Bassett, Arthur Pilla, Robert O. Becker, Franz Morell, Michael Galle, have mentioned by the mean of personal semantics, phenomenon related either to molecular resonance essentially of physico-chemical nature, either to the bioresonance concerning living systems. Some among these searchers were Nobel prize winners like Erwin Schrödinger, Albert Von Szent Georgyi, Ilya Prigogine. Others ones have in early times based their assumption about the bioresonance postulate to draw up devices designed to therapeutic purposes, proving by the way of treatments effectiveness, the well grounding of their concept. This was Georges Lakhovsky’s way as early as 1928 with his Multiple Waves Oscillator clinically tested in Paris hospitals (e.g. Pitié-Salpétrière).

Today, at the Massachussets Institute of Technology, a young physicist called Jeremy England
formulates an hypothesis which a research team tries to demonstrate with the help of varied
computer models followed with laboratory experiments, about the makeup of molecules with
complex structures from smaller molecules, as the result among other factors to exposure of
these latter to electromagnetic fields.

Bioresonance has sometimes given rise to violent reactions from biologists and conventional
medical doctors. We think that these reactions result simply from a lack of knowledge and
scientific interdisciplinarity. Uncommon are biologists who understand the physical laws of
electromagnetic waves spreading and of electromagnetic resonances as they are applied in
radio and television transmissions.