I have recently finished _Secrets of Antigravity Propulsion_ by Paul Laviolette. Here he chronicles the work of Thomas Townsend Brown and further developments along that line of research within the US aerospace industry. He puts forth plenty of experimental results, many of which were new to me, and a theoretical explanation using 'Subquantum Mechanics'. He quotes heavily from Vassilatos concerning Telsa's work with highly non-linear 'disruptive discharge' experiments and claims that the combination of high-K dielectrics, non-linear pulses, and non-linear electrical field shapes are all prerequisites for successful results. While I certainly think this work is interested, I'll leave the megavolt experiments to others. Interestingly, he also brings up Faraday's Homoplanar generator which plays an important theoretical role in Meyl's work.
Also, I just finished up _New Worlds Beyond the Atom_ by Langston Day and George De La Warr. Following the line of Ruth Drown's work, De La Warr devised a set of radionic instruments which were capable of making diagnosis, treatment, and photographs of internal organs (and thought-forms) through a combination of radionic tuning (below), operator mental focusing, a static magnetic field (described as a double vortex lying along a particular orientation), and some sort of specimen linked to the subject (blood sample, photograph, etc.). In spite of the complete absense of a workable theory, the photographs are enough to give one serious pause. There is a real phenomena here worthy of further emperical exploration. The various radionic tuners I have come across so far appear to be simply a set of 10+ adjustable capacitors or resistors (rheostats) with one end of each connected to a common metal plate. Although these instruments contain electrical components, their operation is clearly non-electrical in nature. I have another high level overview on radionics coming in a few days, and hopefully that will have some more schematics to look over.
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