Water divining or nonmedical diagnosis using radiations such as water from sources, which requires some people to become sensitive to radiation of various kinds is known as radionics, also referred to as dowsing, cleidomancy or rhabdomancy.
Physical Radiesthesia has long been employed for locating underground water and metal resources as well as diagnosing illness. It works on the principle that all matter emits vibrations.
It is a form of divination
Radiesthesia is a form of divination based on the belief that all objects emit energy in waves, or frequencies. Humans can develop sensory capacities to sense these waves or frequencies and use them for divination purposes; this ability has been known as “dowsing,” dating back over millennia – it was even practiced widely during ancient Egyptian civilisation as part of scientific practices.
Radiesthesia encompasses many different practices, such as dowsing and austromancy; which involve searching for water or minerals with rods; austromancy using wands; cleidomancy which involves observing viands and cakes; and pyromancy where coins are spun to determine who the guilty party in criminal trials are or answer questions. Another form of radiesthesia known as pattern divination utilizes pendulum swings interpreted to reveal past, present and future events; however the result depends on one’s emotions and intentions when trying to interpret its swings reveals all information.
Radiesthesia has long been used to detect hidden water, metals and minerals; more recently however it has also been applied to finding missing persons, medical diagnoses and prescriptions, prognosticationss as well as accurate prognosticationss. Dowsing was popular practice among miners to locate gold deposits in remote places; yet its science remains poorly understood.
Radiesthetists believe aura detection first emerged in ancient Egypt, as evidenced by artwork depicting figures with godlike status with halos around their heads. Later adopted by Greek philosophers for use in their theories of numbers and sacred geometry theory, many dowsers today claim anyone with the appropriate mindset can learn radiesthesia – the key requirement being emotional interference being absent; otherwise radiesthesia results may become inaccurate; therefore it should always be practiced in an environment without too many stressful variables (ie anger or fear). For this reason radiesthesia must always be practiced within a calm environment if reliable answers can be achieved.
It is a form of dowsing
Dowsing, an ancient practice using pendulums or rods to locate hidden substances and diagnose illnesses, was widely practiced throughout history. Its basis lies in vibrational analysis – where all objects emit vibrations that humans can sense using special tools such as divining rods or pendulums. Although modern science has yet to prove dowsing’s effectiveness in finding underground metals and water sources as well as missing persons or harmful radiation exposure.
Radiesthesia comes from the Latin words “radius” and “aisthesis,” meaning sensing of radiation. A person with radiesthesia can use their fingers to detect energy from sources that remain hidden to human vision; some practitioners claim this can happen without using any tools at all, while most practitioners tend to amplify sensitivity using pendulums or divining rods with small pendulums that augment user sensitivity; Abbe Bouly first coined this term in 1930 in France when replacing divining rod bob with small pendulum that amplified user sensitivity; other devices include dowsing rings or wands or even holographic aurameters which also aid radiesthesia practiced successfully by its practitioners.
At each session, practitioners use either a pendulum or dowsing ring to tune into an individual’s energy field and analyze whether nutrition, emotional issues, stress or any other factor contributes to health problems. Sometimes they sense an imbalance in electromagnetic fields around a person caused by various sources such as buried energies.
Dowsing was an ancient Egyptian and Chinese practice popularly employed by Jesuit missionaries who used it to locate herbal remedies abroad. Today, this technique is employed to find water and minerals, locate graves and detect hidden gold mines; find animals such as birds of prey; detect migration routes for pets hundreds of miles away and reconnect owners and pets once separated; however some consider this practice witchcraft; in many areas during the 17th century it was illegal. Yet today radiesthesia has proven useful by scientists such as Wilhelm Reich who discovered Orgone energy as well as other energy fields.
It is a form of geomancy
Radiesthesia (dowsing or clairvoyance), is an ancient form of divination using pendulums to locate underground water sources, minerals, metals and other natural resources. Radiesthesia can detect harmful radiation exposure; and is sometimes used to help people recover from illness or reconnect with lost loved ones. Radiesthesia requires both intellectual understanding and an intuitive heart in order to be successfully practiced.
Radiesthesia was abandoned for centuries, but is making a comeback today. Practitioners claim that people can learn to become sensitive to vibrations and radiations of all things in existence – animals and plants alike – including health problems, business ventures and even missing persons. Re-establishing and researching this ancient science will enable it to move into its next step with renewed scientific credibility.
Radiesthesia was initially developed to locate sources of water and metals such as gold. Later on, people realized it could also be applied to other elements, as well as lifeforms emitting radiations and vibrations which can be detected with human eyes or pendulums. A subfield within radiesthesia called medical dowsing uses simple “pendular” instruments to measure minute vibrational interactions between energy fields in order to help doctors diagnose illnesses more accurately and recommend treatments.
Advocates of mental radiesthesia believe it has its origins thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt, as evidenced by artwork depicting auras surrounding gods and royalty; further, art from Eastern cultures showing halos around figures believed to be chi-centered; these halos can then be linked with centers of power within our bodies known as chakras.
Though there have been claims regarding radiesthesia‘s efficacy, no concrete proof exists to support its practice. Still, it remains a popular hobby among those looking to deepen their spiritual life; books on the topic have been published while several websites exist where radiesthesia enthusiasts can share knowledge and experiences as well as receive training in this ancient skill.
It is a form of teleradiesthesia
Radiesthesia, which combines Latin radius (ray) with Greek aesthesis (sensitivity), is an ancient technique for finding minerals or natural resources, lost items, or harmful radiation sources.
Radiesthesia uses electromagnetic energy fields to detect vibrations emitted by objects and people, such as vibratory fields emitted by everything that exists with an unchanging positive and negative polarity that determines its physicality. Radiesthesia can be learned by anyone and this skill can be perfected through practice and concentration or enhanced using special tuning forks or pendulums.
Modern dowsers use radiesthesia to help with business decisions, locate missing persons and determine whether a house will be healthy for living in. Their ability is due to electromagnetic energy fields emitted by people and animals – these fields also exist in plants, water and minerals.
Many scientists maintain that human bodies can be scanned using suspended pendulums to detect vibrational imbalances that might signal illness. Medical dowsing is an area within radiesthesia which utilizes simple “pendular” instruments to measure minute vibrational interactions within our energy systems against an established scale of qualitative measures.
Radiesthesia dates back thousands of years to ancient Egypt, where it was widely employed in search of water and metal resources. Also referred to as cleidomancy and coscinomancy during this timeframe, art from Egyptians, Etruscans, Medicis and Romans often depicted figures with auras surrounding their heads.
Radiesthesia is now practiced by millions worldwide as a form of divination. Dowsers often refer to themselves as geomancy practitioners or teleradiesthesia practitioners because they use pendulums or other devices to connect with Earth energy through geomancy practices or teleradiesthesia practices. Some may view dowsing as spiritual practice while others view it as magical – yet all agree radiesthesia can offer useful information and enhance lives.