Let’s think about “copper bracelets”, a thing that some think is “healthy” and wear around their wrists.
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- Copper%20Bracelet.jpg (20.18 KiB) Viewed 7157 times
Many “scientists” today either dismiss this as complete rubbish or try to analyze it as if the “objective” is a kind of “Medicinal Transdermal Micronutrition” where copper does have some, say, “healthy” attributes. Pages and pages of drivel around this have been written by eminent “scientists”, doing studies and even thesis.
This I call elaborate scientific gymnastics around an Error. Yes, me, my humble me says so.
For these present day bracelets are eerily similar to Torcs.
- 4th century BC
Bear with to understand where I’m getting at :
1 - A torc, also spelled torq or torque, is a large rigid or at least stiff neck ring in metal, made either as a single piece or from strands twisted together, the great majority of which are open at the front and many seem designed for near-permanent wear and would have been difficult to remove.
2 - One of the earliest known depictions of a torc can be found on the Warrior of Hirschlanden (6th century BC), and a high proportion of the few Celtic statues of human figures, mostly male, show them wearing torcs.
3 - Torcs are found everywhere in Antiquity, and were worn by every culture.
4 - Since then, they can be found as part of the “jewellery styles” of various other cultures and periods.
5 - Torcs were made from single or multiple intertwined metal rods, or "ropes" of twisted wire, usually gold or bronze, less often silver, iron or other metals.
Case is then, Torcs were found everywhere, and in every culture, at the same time, and as so for centuries.Point is …
“jewellery” ? A “fashion” that not only lasted millennia but permeated “every culture” ? Now, I’d like to see
another example of such ancient Widespread, Lasting AND Eclectic nature !
For some painted themselves red, others blue. Some grew beards, other thought that clean shaved faces were a sign of civilization. Some fashioned long hair, others short or none at all. Some tattooed their skins, others thought it abhorrent. Some cut their flesh and wore earrings, others still, again, looked at that with revulsion.
Was it then something else ? Were Torcs used “because” of “something” ?
Were they , for instance, perceived as a “power gatherer” device ?
Was it … like,
an antenna ?
Lakhovsky, remember, started is experiments with …
a copper tube circled around a plant … open at its ends, like, exactly,
a simple Torc. He called it an antenna to “receive” the “cosmic rays that continuously bombard the Earth” because he had discovered – and demonstrated - that “cells were energized by high frequency radio waves”.
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Photo is from his "Te Secret of Life" book and shows the one healthy plant amidst the dead ones, "wearing" the "antenna", used in his early experiments.
Today, a “Biolelectromagnetic” concept has been devised around this idea, and many use it. I will too, on a couple of my trees.
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Makes you wonder about Torcs’ usage, doesn’t it ?
And remember … on the list of the “
most conductive metals”, copper is the second best. First one, is Silver. Third is Annealed copper. Fourth is Gold.
Thing is, silver is rarer than copper and oxidates very fast. Copper is more available but oxidates too. And once oxidated, both irritate and stain the skin. And decay, with time.
Now Gold is Immortal and Untouchable. Very rare, and much more expensive than those two, but also …. very“conductive”.
That is why Torcs that survived are mostly gold. And why we of course don’t use it in antennas but the cheaper and more competent, at that, copper.
Hmm ? Copper bracelet, anyone ?
Creditshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torchttp://www.scientiapress.com/medicinal- ... -braceletshttp://forums.solidsignal.com/showthrea ... an-antennahttp://users.skynet.be/Lakhovsky/OC.htm