
Radiesthesia is an ancient scientific technique of measurement and research used in Ancient Egypt as well as medieval Jesuit missions to search for herbal medicines or water sources abroad (Dowsing). Furthermore, Radiesthesia offers unique capabilities of resonance with objects either physically (physical Radiesthesia) or remotely via “tele-Radiesthesia“, making this an incredibly versatile technique.
Origins
Madame Maury was a nurse and studied physics in Vienna; as its author she strongly held to the physical origins of radiesthetic phenomena and claims she made over 70,000 diagnoses as well as numerous locations for water and minerals both locally as well as remotely (teleradiesthesia).
Radioaesthesia dates back to ancient Egypt where it was practiced as an art. Pharaonic surgeons utilized it for delicate brain operations that modern surgeons can only attempt to duplicate with sophisticated machinery; every gold mine found by modern satellites in Sinai desert was discovered through this science of radiesthesia by ancient geologists using this ancient Egyptian practice of tracing using pendulums or hands.
Medieval Jesuit missionaries employed this science to locate herbal remedies in foreign lands. Dowsing was also employed to trace underground water sources (dowsing), detect mines and bombs by Abbe Bouly of France around World War One and serve as one of Wilhelm Reich’s stepping-stones towards his work on Orgone energy that later developed into Radionics.
Methods
Radiesthesia combines vibrational scales of music and color together. A range of instruments sensitive to vibrational qualities have been developed – from simple calibrated pendulums to sophisticated electronic devices – that detect vibrational qualities. Radiesthesia has been utilized extensively for dowsing underground water sources both locally and remotely (Tele-radiesthesia), by Jesuit missionaries searching for herbal remedies and minerals in foreign lands, as well as Wilhelm Reich’s discovery of Orgone energy as a springboard to develop psychotronics technology.
As in traditional laboratory tests, radioesthesis requires taking a sample from an object or person being measured; vibrational samples offer unique insight into energy status over time and distance.
Techniques
Radiesthesia, as an energetic science, uses resonance to establish contact between objects or people for purposes such as gathering information, searching, healing or any combination thereof. A “sample” must first be collected; similar to blood or tissue samples used for traditional medical lab tests. Instruments sensitive to vibrational qualities ranging from simple pendulums all the way through electronic devices with more complex features are employed for deeper analysis or broadcasting healing energies.
Radesthesia and Radionics[1] help restore wellbeing by rebalancing energy flows that support our bodies’ self-healing processes. Based on the principle that imbalance or illness begins in the energetic field before manifesting physically, practitioners can utilize subtle patterns within this energetic field to facilitate its rebalance – often before physical symptoms emerge. Radiesthesia and Radionics may also be used to address chronic or unexplained ailments.
Applications
Many radiesthesia instruments have been invented throughout history, from simple calibrated pendulums to sophisticated electronic devices. Radiesthesia has long been recognized as an invaluable scientific tool. From gathering information about someone or something on site (Radiesthesia) or remotely (Tele-Radiesthesia), to exploring herbal remedies and underground water sources in Egypt pharaonic geologists’ mining gold in Sinai desert for Pharaonic Egyptian geologists’ use in mining gold on Sinai, to Wilhelm Reich’s discovery of Orgone energy and ultimately Radionics today in Western science.
Radiesthesia requires a sample that represents all the vibrational properties of its subject matter, be it physical such as blood or tissues, or mental. This sample could either be transmitted physically to an instrument of measurement, or simply imagined on paper before being sent through mentally to another instrument for measurement.







