La possibilité due diagnostic clinique différentiel, par la mutation de l'énergie électromagnétique
Mirahorian, L. · 1934
Early 1934 research recognized electromagnetic energy's diagnostic potential, highlighting the fundamental bio-electrical nature of human cells.
Plain English Summary
This 1934 conference paper explored the possibility of using electromagnetic energy changes for clinical diagnosis, focusing on the body's bio-electrical nature and cellular vibrations. The research investigated whether electromagnetic energy mutations could serve as a diagnostic tool to differentiate between various health conditions. This represents one of the earliest scientific investigations into the relationship between electromagnetic fields and human biological systems.
Why This Matters
This 1934 research represents a fascinating glimpse into the early recognition of electromagnetic fields' biological significance, decades before our current EMF exposure concerns emerged. The fact that researchers nearly 90 years ago were investigating the body's bio-electrical nature and cellular vibrations for diagnostic purposes underscores how fundamental these electromagnetic interactions are to human physiology. What makes this particularly relevant today is that we're now surrounded by artificial electromagnetic fields at levels millions of times higher than existed in 1934. While this early work explored harnessing EMF for beneficial diagnostic purposes, we now face the challenge of protecting ourselves from chronic, involuntary exposure to these same fundamental forces that govern our cellular function.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{la_possibilit_due_diagnostic_clinique_diff_rentiel_par_la_mutation_de_l_nergie_l_g4224,
author = {Mirahorian and L.},
title = {La possibilité due diagnostic clinique différentiel, par la mutation de l'énergie électromagnétique},
year = {1934},
}