Radiesthesia is the name given to ancient science and can be traced as far back as 6,000 BC in many areas of the world to include China, Europe, and Egypt. The knowledge of science in ancient times was limited to special individuals, priests, or the very top leaders because it was known that to acquire this knowledge was to develop the human mind, body, heart, and soul, and thus establish direct connection with the Divine.
The term radiesthesia comes from the Latin word radius, or ray in modern terms, and the Greek word aesthesis or sensitivity. By understanding the root of the word we begin to understand the depth and scope of ancient science. It not only encompasses the visible physical aspects of science but also the invisible or the other side of physical science where subtle energies and other forces such as alchemy operate.
The basic concept of radiesthesia is that all things, living, inert, shapes, etc. emit some type of form waves, or frequencies, and that humans can develop their sensory abilities and mental capacities to detect, measure, and manage these forces or energies. For centuries knowledge of radiesthesia was passed on mostly by word-of-mouth and as the modern world evolved into the more mechanistic and industrial epoch, the concepts of ancient science were lost.
Mankind became more and more focused on material developments and technology and forgot some of the essential scientific precepts that today are re-emerging as if they were a new discovery. The background and history of radiesthesia were rediscovered in the early 1900s by two French colleagues: a physician, Count A. de Belizal and an engineer L. Chaumery while on archeological visits to the Pyramids of Egypt. They dedicated many years researching this invisible science seeking scientific explanations. One of their research findings, for example, enabled them to use and send specific rays at a distance to kill microbes in a test-tube hundreds of miles away.
The dowsing is currently shared between two tendencies, one which proceeds from the mind, the other which seeks to rely on the principles of physics with which it seems to be related. To add to the general confusion, these two tendencies, which at first glance seem to be in rivalry, nevertheless have one point in common: the transformation and amplification of the radiation passing through the body of man through the intermediary of the vital fluid, and whose the mechanism translates into the movement of a detector (pendulum or rod). These two theories, mental and physical, ensure positive results that can be considered equivalent. The authors estimate that the true dowser has every interest in moving in this last way where he will benefit from the recent discoveries of physics which will allow him to bring his art more surely to the level of a science. This book is the fruit of more than thirty years of research which enabled them to discover that any object, according to its specificity and particularity, influences the energetic body of man and that any object emits "waves of forms".
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