Explains the universal information code connecting every person, plant, animal, and mineral and its applications in science, health care, and cosmic unity • Examines research on consciousness, quantum physics, animal and plant intelligence, emotional fields, Kirlian photography, and the effects of thoughts, emotions, and music on water • Reveals the connections between the work of Ervin Laszlo on the Akashic field, Rupert Sheldrake on morphogenetic fields, Richard Gerber on vibrational medicine, and Masaru Emoto on the memory of water DNA dictates the physical features of an organism. But what dictates how something grows--from the division of cells in a human being to the fractal patterns of a crystal? Massimo Citro reveals that behind the complex world of Nature lies a basic code, a universal information field--also known as the Akashic field, which records all that was, is, and will be--that directs not only physical development and behavior but also energetic communication and interactions among all living and non-living things. The author examines research on consciousness, quantum physics, animal and plant intelligence, the power of intention, emotional fields, Kirlian photography, and the effects of thoughts, emotions, and music on water. Linking the work of Ervin Laszlo on the Akashic field, Rupert Sheldrake on morphogenetic fields, Richard Gerber on vibrational medicine, and Masaru Emoto on the memory of water, Citro shows how the universal information field connects every person, plant, animal, and mineral--a concept long known by shamans and expounded by perennial wisdom. Putting this science of the invisible to practical use, he explains his revolutionary system of vibrational medicine, known as TFF, which uses the information field to obtain the benefits of natural substances and medications in their “pure” informational form, offering side-effect-free remedies for health and well-being.
This is a very provocative book that is bound to create controversy, discussion and to polarize opinions. Massimo Citro, a medical doctor and researcher in healing through the use of electromagnetic radiation (here begins the controversy), presents an overview of the latest studies, experiments and ideas of how science may explain diverse phenomena such as homeopathy, the structure of water, morphogenetic fields (as in Sheldrake), human fields, and the placebo effect. I was familiar with many of the same ideas developed by researchers back in the 1950s-60s, and was pleased to see that those same ideas are being discussed, now in terms of newer discoveries in quantum physics. I have no doubt that phenomena such as homeopathy and the structure of water are real. If so, how on Earth do you explain them?
Citro is not a physicist, and his explanations are qualitative rather than quantitative. However he refers to physicists who have published reasonable theories, such as Giuliano Preparata, Luc Montagnier and Ervin Laszlo to explain for example how water might have a “structure”. He devotes much of the book to describing TFF (Transfer Pharmacological Frequency), a healing technique he developed that involves amplifying the natural electromagnetic waves created by a substance dissolved in water, and either applying those waves to a patient, or imprinting them homeopathically on a water sample. He presents many case histories that suggest that there is a phenomenon there to explain. That molecules dissolved in water behave like harmonic oscillators and generate electromagnetic radiation, is not controversial. How coherent that radiation is, is another matter.
As well as presenting some of the latest research, Citro refers to early twentieth century work on the human fields, research by Yale biologist Harold Burr and Alexander Gurswitch. Back then, a field explanation for the development of biological forms seemed to many biologists a reasonable theory. It fell into disfavour mostly as a result of discoveries of DNA coding. In the tug of war between biologists and biochemists, biochemistry gained the upper hand.
On the negative side, Citro presents a smorgasbord of many theories, often too uncritically. All of them cannot be equally valid and some, such as the work and ideas of Pier Ighina stretch one’s credulity. The reader must make up his/her opinion on which theory merits attention, with little guidance from the author.
This book is unlikely to interest or satisfy the skeptic who is more at home in a positivistic approach. Citro is not out to convince anyone, least of all the skeptic. He does however give an interesting account of what ideas are being discussed on the edges of accepted science, the evidence and the possibilities.
A collection of many speculative ideas near science (some would say pseudo-science) which in truth sound no less implausible than many theory of cosmology or particle physics or especially climate science which are purported as truths today. It's up to each reader to indulge in this speculation But I do know of real, serious, science study in morphology of cellular organisms and their collective cognition. To me, a degree of speculation about those systems which are beyond our abilities to understand their complexities is warranted.
Read if you dare! If you believe, as I do, that all things are interconnected, and that everything is meaningful, right down to the cosmological ground, then this is a book you must read. Truly transformative!