Effects of exposure to North pole magnetic fields.
Hi, I'm new to all of this, sort of. I didn't know about bio-hacking, or grinders until a few weeks ago, but I've been researching and having similar ideas to the sorts of things being discussed. A while back I found this website with various information about magnets, which I don't see anything in the discussions about the vast amount of beneficial effects of the North pole fields. Or for that matter, any discussion about the difference between North/South pole fields. http://www.teslatech.info/ttstore/report/articles/v3n1art/scope.htm
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"Startling and almost unbelievable results are obtained from application of the correct magnetic field. Among these results are speedier wound healing, pain control without drugs, quicker mending of fractures with the bone being stronger than before the break, dissolving calciums in many types of arthritis, and control of many types of cancer some resulting in total regression."
"The North pole mice became very neat and tidy, cleaning themselves frequently. They also became extremely sensitive to any noise or light variations in the laboratory. Their offspring were smaller than those of the controls. They were mentally superior to the controls and out performed the South pole young by several hundred percent in all phases of natural behavior."
claiming one pole is better than the other is like saying one side of a circle has fewer corners than the other.
what else can i say, they don't even use standard physics units. like CPS (cycles per second) instead of Hz.
my guess on that website. some guy put up some website overflowing with "information" full of buzzwords so people fall for it and buy some of the books/magazines. this website is a prime example of esoteric pseudoscience. including everything from scalar waves, alternative energy , HAARP etc. pretty much everything you'd be interested in if you are some conspirative perpetuum mobile constructing person who doesn't feel like going through all the trouble of actuall learning science/engineering. worst of all, they use nicola tesla's name for their fishy purpose. they should go and die in a fire for insulting a genius like that.
Read more: Magnets & Back Pain | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/about_5465888_magnets-back-pain.html#ixzz2M8Cq6JwQ
therapy, available scientific evidence does not support these claims.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) considers these magnets
harmless and of no use for medical purposes."
and the ehow link "there are no conclusive studies to back up its effectiveness"
you say "In the Greek and Asian cultures, magnetic therapy has been utilized for thousands of years." this is an 'Appeal to Tradition', a well known fallacy.
also, ""Great Secrets of Alchemy," dating from approximately 650 AD), discusses
in detail the creation of elixirs for immortality (mercury, sulfur, and
the salts of mercury and arsenic are prominent, and most are ironically
poisonous" - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elixir_of_life
just to prove that just because the Chinese did it for thousands of years, doesn't make it safe or beneficial.
while I don't want to limit your freedom to try whatever treatments you want, please only post content here that is scientifically supportable.
a magnetic field pretty much is a vector field. it has a direction and strength for every given point in space. what you know as "poles" are merely convenience to describe where the field enters or exits objects you'd describe as magnets. if you follow those vectors from a certain point. you'll reach the same point again, effectively making loops, thus the cricle example. pick any point in space, and there'll be a direction and strength of the magnetic field, but no poles.
additionaly, there's only a limited number of ways that magnetic fields infulence objects. and i am not aware of any that work only "one way" as the good-pole bad-pole theory of those guys would suggest.
not saying that magnets themselves have zero influence on objects in general. for example oxygen is paramagnetic, it'll experience a force pulling it towards the area with higher magnetic flux density. which , in a body can lead to increased oxygen levels near the magnet. but you can still flip the magnet around and get the same effect. however, that effect is very very slim and probably won't stand a properly conducted clinical trial.
as i said. don't fall for them. they mix in whatever source they can find to make their ideas look more legit. however, what they do is not science. what they do is hoax.
there is no anti-magnet-doctor conspiracy, no good-pole bad-pole magnet thing.
@AmmonRa i couldn't have said it any better. in fact i didn't. so.. cheers for science.
meanwhile i suggest you read through this nice article https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_method
it might help you to distinguish between people who claim to do science, and those who actually do, based on the work they publish.
small entirely unrelated example: that black nanja outfit of yours. my observation with many civil material (especially synthethics) is, they are highly reflective in near infrared range. thus it's my hypothesis that this is the case with your outfit too, and my prediction is that you'll be a pretty sweet and bright target on surveillance cameras. i'll leave the testing, analysation, falsification , interpretation, documentation and the publishing of results to you. and that's how science works. (not some Prof. Dr. X. claiming Y without providing evidence and a repeatable testing procedure to allow others confirming his results)
This sounds fun even if you realize that magnet healing is silly, and that just because the medical industry is lame, it does not mean that they are responsible for 9/11 or covering up the fact that sacrificing goats will cure cancer.
Indeed, biomagnetism itself is a phenomenon that doesn't really seem to have much of an effect on things, to the extent that it even exists in the first place. Having said that, that doesn't mean that certain magnetic fields have no effect on us. As @rdb said, TMS uses strong, pulsed magnetic fields to achieve its effect. I myself recently built a TMS device, because they're totally awesome. I'm almost ready to start applying it to some target parts of the brain. Maybe I should open a discussion of that.
Ugh, I can't believe that that stupid fucking website even dares to call itself "teslatech." Really, how dare they associate the great inventor Nikola Tesla with that crap? That seriously pisses me off.
EDIT: Ah, looks like @ThomasEgi already noticed the use of Tesla's name as well. Oh well, I'm pissed off enough about it that it deserves another mention.
That would be pretty awesome, actually; I can think of a number of applications for monopoles if they exist. Unfortunately, no evidence for them exists now. Too bad.
"Four simultaneous days in a single day?" I've gotta see that website...
Timecube is a fantastic rant by an amazingly crazy person. And while I completely disagree with PsyNinja, it's interesting to watch someone with absolutely no proof of something create an argument for it!
@psyninja nearIR and thermal (far IR) radiation are not to be confused. using a weather blanket will change you from a bright target, to a twinkeling one (on regular IR cameras).