January 1995
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25 Reads
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17 Citations
The FASEB Journal
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January 1995
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25 Reads
·
17 Citations
The FASEB Journal
January 1994
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56 Reads
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38 Citations
The FASEB Journal
January 1993
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58 Reads
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27 Citations
The Journal of Immunology
January 1993
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31 Reads
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14 Citations
The FASEB Journal
January 1993
·
24 Reads
·
14 Citations
The FASEB Journal
... Posteriormente se evidenció, como lo mencionan Aïssa et al. (1993), que se pueden introducir señales moleculares, las cuales nombramos como oscilaciones electromagnéticas, esencialmente de moléculas de sustancias que trans ieren mensajes, como es el caso de antígenos, hormonas o algunos fármacos entre otros. Peña (2001, p. 2) comenta que los antecedentes de la biorresonancia se remontan a 1977 en el país de Alemania, cuando los trabajos de Franz Morrell, que fue precursor de la terapia presentó el primer equipo de Biorresonancia utilizando el principio de usar esa información que proviene del paciente o de sustancias relacionadas con el paciente (Alérgenos), invirtiéndola y ampli icándola según sea el caso; el equipo fue denominado MORA ya que fue desarrollado conjuntamente con el Ingeniero electrónico E. Rasche (Morell-Rasche). ...
January 1993
The FASEB Journal
... After high dilutions, Benveniste developed from the year 1992 different devices based on electromagnetism and made of electric coils and electronic amplifiers which were supposed to "transfer the activity" of biologically-active molecules directly to water samples without the dilution process [3,[15][16][17][18][19][20]. The "transmission" experiments were also supposed to avoid contaminations that could be responsible for the observed effects. ...
January 1994
The FASEB Journal
... The theoretical absence of residual molecules of active ingredients in ultramolecular dilutions has led to the development of several theories to explain the transfer and storage of information from the initial ingredient to the water of the solvent: imprint theory [20], clathrates [21], electromagnetic transfer [22], water coherent domains (quantum field theory) [23][24][25]. The hypotheses of electromagnetic transfer by the team of Benveniste et al. [22] (the "Memory of water" controversy), was recently taken up by Montagnier et al. [26,27] and discussed in the framework of the quantum field theory. ...
January 1993
The Journal of Immunology
... After high dilutions, Benveniste developed from the year 1992 different devices based on electromagnetism and made of electric coils and electronic amplifiers which were supposed to "transfer the activity" of biologically-active molecules directly to water samples without the dilution process [3,[15][16][17][18][19][20]. The "transmission" experiments were also supposed to avoid contaminations that could be responsible for the observed effects. ...
January 1995
The FASEB Journal
... In the last version (1997), the coil was directly fixed on the perfusion column of the Langendorff system and therefore the system could be piloted from the computer without injection of the samples of " informed " water into the perfusion circuitry. The results obtained with these successive devices were published as posters and abstracts at congresses (Aïssa et al., 1993; Benveniste et al., 1994; Aïssa et al., 1995; Benveniste et al., 1996; Benveniste et al., 1997; Benveniste et al., 1998). If true, these " discoveries " were ground-breaking, but they received great skepticism (Schiff, 1998; Beauvais, 2007). ...
January 1993
The FASEB Journal