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Human Energy Fields: A New Science and Medicine

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In Human Energy Fields, Dr. Ross describes a hard science and medicine with applications, testable hypotheses, and instrumentation. The core proposition of the science the human energy field, called chi, the human aura, the life force, or the human spirit in different philosophical systems, and the electromagnetic field of the body are the same thing. Dr. Ross outlines practical applications of the science in many different fields including anthropology, medicine, agriculture, weapons development, security systems, physiology, and psychotherapy. He describes three specific devices that can be used in the study of human energy fields, and proves scientifically that, in one specific instance, western science is wrong about what is scientific and what is paranormal (contrary to western science, the human eyebeam is real).

119 pages, Paperback

First published March 10, 2009

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Colin A. Ross

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
118 reviews20 followers
July 11, 2013
I'm a big fan of Colin Ross's work. The thing that strikes me about him is that he isn't afraid to think outside the box, speculate, and come up with ideas that are unconventional but rooted in totally rational thinking. He kind of reminds me of Rupert Sheldrake in that regard. Whether it is his work in psychiatry on the nature of dissociative illnesses and trauma, including work on schizophrenia and dissociative identity disorder, or his willingness to seriously look at reports of ritual abuse or mind control (his book on MKULTRA and mind control in general, The CIA Doctors, is so fact-based it's almost boring, and I mean that as a compliment!), his writing is always clear and his thoughts well-developed. This book is no exception.

Human Energy Fields (****) collects and distills Ross's four decades of work on the subject. He argues that what other cultures and religions have called the soul, aura, spirit, chi, etc. is actually the human electromagnetic field. He acknowledges that it's almost impossible to think about such things using a Western, scientific framework or language. In order to see the parallels and develop his theory, he had to do a type of philosophical cognitive therapy on himself, rooting out the cognitive errors he had taken for granted. So in the first chapters, Ross shows the deep inner contradictions of materialism, reductionism, and the Cartesian dualism out of which they were born. In short, dualism posits an interaction between two substances that cannot interact. And reductionism posits a worldview in which consciousness and sentience do not exist. (If there is no distinction on the chemical level between animate and inanimate matter, and reductionism is true, there is no distinction between 'living' and 'dead.' By speaking of 'living' processes or even life in general, reductionism introduces a kind of back-door dualism that contradicts its own philosophical implications.) To smooth out the logic, only two possibilities remain: either everything is dead, and there is no difference between you and a corpse, or all things are alive or sentient in some way. To say that life 'emerged' is similarly to introduce dualism. If 'life' or 'mind' does not exist among physics at a basic level, saying that it emerges from physics is unintelligible. Ross thus concludes that some form of animism must be true (i.e., panpsychism). As he puts it, mind is a general property of matter.

He identifies this property as the electromagnetic field. (EEG when alive, no EEG when dead.) Just as organizations of matter become more complex, so do types of mind. So-called inanimate objects will have a certain EM signature, as will humans. Ross then gets into the scientific background, e.g., known instances of biological systems being affected by sources of electromagnetism (e.g., bird migration, honeybee dances), hypothesizing that similar processes may apply to humans.The implication, of course, is that any source of EM might affect human minds and/or bodies, including the earth's field, the solar wind, atmospheric wind, EM radiation, etc. He then describes his first empirical test: that the brain's EM field, measurable by EEG, is stronger in front of the eyes and may be able to be directed. This might account for the 'sense of being stared at', and Ross has developed technology to show that such a process is scientifically sound. He shows a similar process may be involved in 'gut feelings,' again sharing results from his own research and tests.

Next he makes a series of predictions, relating his ideas to medical problems like heart attacks, seizures, migraines, cancer, CFS, Parkinson's, phantom limbs, mental disorders, as well as 'fringe' practices like acupuncture, meditation, OBEs, aura reading, 'energy work', massage, chiropractic, and yoga. As he points out, there are therapeutic potentials in this practices, and it's possible that they are all pre-scientific ways of describing a real phenomenon, the EM field and the ways it interacts with the world to promote health or disease. Some practices and practitioners may be exposed as having no real effect, but others may not. Such an idea may also be able to account for 'pre-scientific' beliefs in such things as telepathy, fertility rituals, prayer, etc. Lastly, Ross looks at the potential future research possibilities in fields such as agriculture, medicine (diagnosis and treatment) and technology. I'm not sure if Ross's theory can account for all the things he proposes (e.g., I don't think an EM-based theory can account for all the phenomena in the psi literature), but it will be interesting to see how his research progresses and what comes out of it.
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44 reviews
February 21, 2020
I had a hard time deciding between 3 and 4 stars for this book. It was an easy read and the information was good. Often, informative books suffer from repetition and having too many extraneous details that I consider unnecessary. I felt that Human Energy Fields actually erred a bit in the other direction and could have benefited from additional details regarding the process and experiences of Colin Ross. I was impressed enough by the book that I plan on picking up some of his other materials though.
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