Book description
Radionics is defined as a method of diagnosis and therapy which is
primarily concerned with the utilization of subtle force fields and
energies, for the purpose of investigating and combating the causes of
disease which ravage humanity and the other kingdoms of nature. But in
examining the history and development of radionics from the pioneering
work of Dr Albert Abrams and Ruth Drown to the latest experimental
work at the de la Warr Laboratories, David Tansley discovered a
curious paradox. In literature on the subject, and in the rate books
which provide the very core of radionic therapeutic measures, there
are plenty of references to man's physical organic systems, but little
regarding the probability of underlying force fields which might
govern and determine the health of the physical form.
This book represents an informed endeavour to redress the balance by
providing a simple yet practical outline of the subtle anatomy of man.
The theory is not new: Abrams diagnosed at a distance, and Drown
treated absent patients. David Tansley believes that the time is ripe
for radionics to bear witness to an energy field of a more subtle
nature: that is, in fact, its innate purpose.