T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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570.1 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Nov 17 1987 13:18 | 5 |
|
sorry; misspelled "cloudbuster" in the .0 note. (just in case
you were wondering what a "couldbuster" was...)
A.
|
570.2 | | BUMBLE::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Tue Nov 17 1987 14:28 | 2 |
| Anyone who's books the government burns is of immediate interest
to me. Any more information about him Alan?
|
570.3 | more on Reich | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Nov 17 1987 16:15 | 79 |
| His medical practice;
Many types of therapy that can be classed as "body work" are
based on Reich's ideas. When he broke with Freud he turned
the couch around and started interacting with the patients.
There were some accusations that he slept with some of his
women patients.
He felt that healthy sex (with orgasm) is necessary for
true psychic health. He taught that *most* if not all
mental illness begins with sexual repression.
He discovered that repressed thoughts and emotions get
locked into muscle tensions. He grouped these tensions
into what he called "the seven muscular armor rings", that
have a surprizing correspondence with the "chakras" of Hindu
lore. The tensions stopped the orgone energy from flowing
through the body, and stagnating energies would cause disease
such as cancer, in the same body location where the chronic
tension resided.
On the wilder side of His unusual theories;
He said he could *see* the orgone energy in the atmosphere,
as little blue dots. He said that the blue dots were
attracted to each other, and would spiral in toward each other
to condense into material atoms. (Here he ran afoul of the
conventional scientific theories on "conservation of matter".)
In "Cosmic Superimposition" he said that the spiral form of the
galaxy was caused by two intesecting cosmic orgone streams.
He also used this theory to try and explain the Aurora Borealis.
He also came up with an interesting reinterpretation of the
Michalson-Morely experiment. He felt that the orgone field
was the medium within which light waves travel; the "ether".
The Michalson-Morely experiment was said to disprove the existence
of the ether, but Reich said the results had been misinterpreted.
The experiment involved measuring the speed of light, at the
surface of the Earth, so that the velocity of the planet would
be added or subracted from the measured velocity. (measuring
the light from the sun at sunrise, and again at sunset might
have been predicted to get two different numbers, different by
the velocity of Earth's daily rotation. When the experiment
was performed, the velocities were the same in both directions.
Similarly the experiment could use starlight measurements taken
six months apart, to use the Earth's orbital velocity as a factor.)
The original interpretation was that the speed of light is a
constant, and that the direction and speed of the body from
which the measurement is taken is irrelevant. This theory
was integral to Einstein's development of the theory of Relativity,
which does deal with the speed of light as a constant.
Reich took the position that the Earth is rotating in a
pool of orgone that is rotating at the same speed as the surface.
The movement of the Earth did not add or subract from the speed
of the light, since the media was moving at the same speed.
He also said the "red shift" of light from distant stars was
caused by friction in the medium rather than from an expanding
universe. I suppose this aspect of his ideas could be
conclusivly proven/disproven by repeating the experiment from
satellites rotating around the Earth in opposite directions.
He also claimed that gravity was the natural attraction
between orgone charged objects. He said the Earth stays in
it's orbit because it follows the orgone whirlpool from which
it originally condensed. (Do all those satellites up there
travel in the same direction as the Earth's daily rotation?
If a satellite will stay aloft as long when travelling against
the rotation it disproves this aspect of his theories.)
In his final years, when he was experimenting with the cloudbuster,
he believed that his experiments were being observed and interfered
with by UFOs. As he descended into the paranoia of his old
age he said the UFO's were bombarding Organon with "DOR" (which
he believed was a dangerous poisonous form of orgone energy;
"deadly orgone"). In the end he saw himself as waging a cosmic
battle alone against the forces of evil.
Alan.
|
570.4 | Cloudbusting, daddy | GNUVAX::LIBRARIAN | just guessing | Tue Nov 17 1987 17:09 | 39 |
|
Cloudbusting - Kate Bush
------------
I still dream of Organon.
I wake up crying.
You're making rain
And you're just in reach
When you and sleep escape me
You're like my yo-yo
That glowed in the dark
What made it special
Made it dangerous
So I bury it and forget.
Everytime it rains,
you're here in my head
Like the sun coming out -
Ooh I just know that something good is going to happen
And I don't know when
But just saying it could even make it happen.
On top of the world
Looking over the edge
You could see them coming
You looked too small
In their big black car
To be a threat to the men in power.
I hid my yo-yo in the garden
I can't hide you from the government
Oh God, daddy - I won't forget
Your son's coming out
|
570.5 | | DECWET::MITCHELL | CRTs: Live long and phosphor! | Tue Nov 17 1987 19:47 | 18 |
| RE: .3
How could anyone take any of that seriously? It reminds me of a fake
article OMNI printed one time called "Static Gravity," where the
author claimed that particals called gravatons existed. Gravitons,
(as I recall) make things lighter and can be picked up by friction
as with electrons. Liquid moves up the rim of a glass when the
liquid is stirred because the molecules on the outside of the vortex
created by stirring move faster than those near the center. Hence
they pick up gravitons which makes them lighter. For the same reason,
the article said, "a man who is running moves faster than a man
who is walking, and a man who is walking moves faster than a man
who is standing still."
Shades of organon!
John M.
|
570.6 | yeah... | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Tue Nov 17 1987 22:37 | 21 |
|
RE: .5 (John)
Well, yes he was kind of nuts in his later years,
but still he occasionally made some surprizing sense.
He certainly didn't do well outside his medical specialty.
However, there may still be some value in his
ideas about sex, muscular tension, and orgone energy.
This "orgone" seems quite similar in aspects to prana,
and kundalini, or aka (mentioned in the Huna material),
or perhaps even the "vital magnetism" of Mesmer. I think
these similar concepts keep being reinvented because there
is something to them...
I remember you didn't think too much of it when
I mentioned Carl Von Reichenbach's "Odic force" a few weeks
ago in another Dejavu topic, so I don't suppose you'll be at
all impressed with this orgone stuff either.
Alan.
|
570.7 | Who would take him seriously? THE GOVERNMENT!! | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Nov 18 1987 09:43 | 6 |
| The US GOVERNMENT took him seriously John. They burned his lab
and his books and banned his writings for 20 YEARS!! Unless you
believe the US government to be a mindless bunch of idiots (:-),
then they must have had *some* reason to freak out over this man,
right? Being silly or incorrect doesn't warrant that kind of
treatment.
|
570.8 | "To whom it may concern ..." | ERASER::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Wed Nov 18 1987 09:57 | 16 |
| Re .last_several:
There's at least one company that sells Reichian stuff, Hieronymous
machines, and the like. (L'ord Company.) I've gotten (and discarded)
mtheir catalogues from time to time [one problem: some of their
stuff is obviously renaming of old stuff. Their "Chakra charger"
is in description _exactly_ like the Relaxaciser that was marketed
about a decade ago, and banned when it reportedly caused a few
fatalities through electrocution].
However, they can sell their stuff as long as the buyer fills in
and returns to them a statement that he or she is buying the stuff
with the clear understanding that as far as can be determined, the
stuff's worthless.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
570.9 | Aether vorticies | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Nov 18 1987 10:46 | 25 |
| RE: .3
(Reich's explanation of the Michaelson-Morely experiments in terms
of the aether/Orgone-field moving with the Earth). Actually that
was one of the theories that was generally considered until Einstein
came up with the theory of relativity. The problem is that the
aether would then cause a measurable "drag" unless it had vanishingly small
viscosity and frictional coefficients. But the speed of propogation
of a wave in a medium is proportional to the mediums elasticity
which is related to its viscosity. Lack of drag implies high fluidity,
while the high speed of light implies a very, very rigid substance
-- compare the speed of sound in a bar of iron with the speed of
light, then multiply the rigidity of the iron by the same factor;
that would give you a rough estimate of how rigid the aether would
have to be.
And yes, satellites orbit in all directions (there is a very, very
small correction depending on the direction of rotation of the
body. This is a consequence of the General Theory of Relativity,
which predicts that space/time will be "dragged" [believe it or
not, that's the technical term] around a little with a massive rotating
body. This effect was just measured for the first time earlier
this year by some very delicate instruments mounted in satellites).
Topher
|
570.10 | Why they took him seriously. | PBSVAX::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Wed Nov 18 1987 10:59 | 28 |
| RE: .7
Well, some individuals who were part of the US Gov't took him
seriously. This had almost nothing to do with his physical theories
which I doubt that they understood (much less why they were nonesense).
Reich was "taken seriously" for three reasons.
1) He preached sexual freedom, which was a challenge to the
status quo. Though his ideas are no longer shocking some
of them would still be judged rather extreme even by fairly
liberal standards. Few people would recommend essentially
unfettered teen-age sex, even with perfect "protection"
available, as the road to emotional health. He did this
with an aura of "science" which made it particularly hard
to ignore him.
2) He was a direct challenge to the medical establishment, which
was then attempting to be seen as the *only* source of
"scientific" treatment for disease.
3) He had been branded a Communist.
It was not really important whether or not what Reich was doing
was science or not -- the government could not recognize science
if it bit them on the nose. What was important was that he had
the *aura* of science about him.
Topher
|
570.11 | Prejudice and ignorance and fear walk hand in hand | MANTIS::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Nov 18 1987 11:14 | 13 |
| But Toph, it was the government who "branded" him as a communist,
the medical establishment (according to that account) was more
concerned with power than the medical well-being of the populace,
and we are all familiar with the bizarre manner in which established
authority treats sexuality.
I guess it comes down to the fact that if the establishment has
gone out of their way to surpress someone's work, we sort of have
an intellectual obligation to examine his work personally before
dismissing it (or part of it) as bunk. It may be bunk, but so few
scientists (or whatever) have been treated in this manner in this
country that it gives one pause for suspicion.
Mary (paranoia-great distroyer_:-)
|
570.12 | legal release statements | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Wed Nov 18 1987 11:15 | 21 |
|
RE: .8 (Steve)
Six or seven years ago when I bought my first air ionizer,
I had to sign one of those legal release statements, saying
in effect that the air ionizer does nothing. At the same
time hospitals everywhere were installing them in their air
conditoning systems since they were *known* to reduce operating
room deaths.
The legal release statement doesn't necessarily mean that the
item really doesn't do *anything*. It means the watchdogs don't
agree on what it does, or may simply mean that legal battles are still
under way to establish the new technology. We should remember
that it often takes sixty or eighty years to validate new
breakthroughs, to the point where there is general acceptance.
But of course some of those devices really do nothing, and some
may actually be dangerous, like the Relaxaciser you mentioned.
Alan.
|
570.13 | most true ... | INK::KALLIS | Remember how ephemeral is Earth. | Wed Nov 18 1987 13:22 | 8 |
| Re .12 (Alan):
> The legal release statement doesn't necessarily mean that the
item really doesn't do *anything*. ...
But it also means that the devices are no longer banned.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
570.14 | SO WHAT"S A FLAKE?Y | ACOMA::VIATEAM4 | | Wed Nov 18 1987 14:22 | 23 |
|
ALTHOUGH SOMEWHAT PARANOID IN LATER YEARS(WHO COULD BLAME HIM),
IT
IS INTERESTING TO NOTE THAT HE WAS CONSIDERED HEALTHY AND TWENTY
ONE DAYS AFTER BEING INSTITUTIONALIZED HE DIED. MANY OF HIS
STUDENTS SUGGEST THAT THE GOVERNMENT DID MORE THAN BURN HIS BOOKS.
THERE WAS AN INDIVIDUAL IN ARIZONA WHO USED AN ORGAN BOX IN CONJUCTION
WITH TRANSDUCERS THAT DID CREATE AN ENERGY FIELD THAT REVERSED THE
FLOW OF ELECTRONS IN IS ELECTIC METER AND ACCORDING TO THE ELECTRIC
COMPANY THE DEVICE WAS SUPPLYING ELECTRICITY TO THE TOWN.
REPORTS WERE THAT SEVERAL METERS HAD BEEN REPLACED AT THAT LOCATION
AND THE METER STILL RUNS BACKWARDS. HOW VALID I DON'T KNOW.
NO MATTER HOW FLAKY HIS WORK SEEMS. IT DOES SUGGEST AN ADVANCED
THINKER. REMEMBER THE SCIENTIFIC COMMUNITY SAID MAN COULD NEVER
TRAVEL BEYOND 47 MPH OR THEY WOULD EXPLODE.
MURRAY
|
570.15 | not so healthy... | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Aslan | Wed Nov 18 1987 14:55 | 30 |
|
RE: .14
You said "HE WAS CONSIDERED HEALTHY" when institutionalized.
(Please note that when typing in all capitol letters someone may
accuse you of "shouting".)
Well, just prior to gotin to jail, he had been doing
experiments testing for interactions between orgone energy
and radioactivity. He was treating himself for the poisoning
he had inflicted on himself during these experiments (he was
a doctor, after all). He felt other doctors were unfamiliar
with the unususal medical condition, and refused treatment by
the prison doctors, prefering to continue his own treatment regimen.
However, the prison authorities refused to allow him the
equipment or freedom to implement his own prescription. The
prison doctors might have been able to help him some, but since
he refused their help, his own stubborness seems to have contributed
to his medical demise.
They symptoms he displayed, seemed to be quite similar to
the symptoms of positive ion poisoning, or radiation poisoning.
(Although please note, I have no medical qualifications, so this
should be classed as speculation) Such a syndrome was little
known at the time, so the prison doctors may have honestly
believed he was healthy, although that was not actually the case.
Alan.
|
570.16 | WR | ESP::CONNELLY | We Are Spirits \ In The Material World | Thu Nov 19 1987 00:20 | 25 |
| re: .0
In addition to the works you mention, Reich also wrote "The Function of the
Orgasm" and "Invasion of Compulsory Sex-Morality", both of which seemed to
me to have some good insights concerning the origin and consequences of our
irrational heritage of anti-sex prejudices.
I used to know some folks back in the '60s who had built their own Orgone
Boxes, but I was never able to observe any noticeable effect of the boxes
on the health of their users (some of whom had definite health problems).
It seemed also that when the Pyramid Power fad came around, it made some
of the same claims that the Orgone Box proponents had also made.
In terms of lasting legacies of Reich's work, the one key idea that he
promoted that many psychologists could probably buy into now was that various
neuroses become perpetuated in physical symptom constellations, such as
knots in muscles or postural abnormalities, and that treating the symptom (for
instance, by physical manipulation of the affected muscles) can alleviate the
associated psychological problems. Freud, on the other hand, assumed that the
"underlying" psychological problem would simply manifest itself in some other
way, such that only a long-term psychoanalytic treatment would be effective.
I believe that Freud's view has been found to be basically not able to be
substantiated, whereas there has been some substantiation for Reich's view
(some of chiropractic and the "Alexander Technique" seem to derive from a
practical application of Reich's ideas).
|
570.17 | More on Reich | STARCH::MARVIN | Life is process, not a product | Fri Aug 19 1988 14:03 | 28 |
| As I recall, the court order to burn was limited to those pamphlets
that advertised the orgone accumulator as a possible treatment for
cancer. It was an over-zealous group who collected all his
publications and burned over 150,000 copies in New York's City's
incinerator. That was in '57. Years after we, as a nation, were
shocked by the burning of books in NAZI Germany.
There still are orgonomists around and they tend to interpret Reich's
writings as absolutely correct. They claim that Reich was killed
by the US government.
BTW, while Reich was hauled into court for violation of the interstate
commerce laws, Reich, himself, was not the marketer of those products.
However he used the courtroom as a place to share his ideas and
"communications" re: extraterrestial life and plans for the planet
earth. As he refused to address the charges, he was found guilty
of contempt of court and sentence to Lexington accordingly.
Reich's influence is still fundamental in the work of Fritz Perls,
the "finder" of gestalt therapy, and Alexander Lower, the most
outspoken and widely published writer on bioenergetics, which has
been called orgonomy with legs(Reich considered the legs as part
of the pelvic segment). Both Perls and Lowen were trained by Reich.
Orgonon continues as a museum and is an inspirational place to visit
after you have read some of his writings.
Jack
|
570.18 | dor accumulator. i was there. | ASIC::EDECK | disco STILL sucks! | Wed Oct 12 1988 17:41 | 22 |
|
(Back again, for as long as this cluster holds up...)
Back in the early '70s at UMass (Amherst), there were a number of
people who got interested in Reich's work, and circulated copies
of his books, organized discussions on DOR clouds, etc. Then someone
decided to build one of Reich's devices that would concentrate Orgones
in the atmosphere. It looked like a series of pipes; water was pumped
through one pipe and the others pointed at the sky, where the orgones
would accumulate.
1972 had been a dry year, bordering on a drought. Two days after
the accumulator was hooked up, it began to rain. And Rain. And RAIN!
It rained for a solid week, if I remember correctly. Not just a
drizzle--it POURED! EVERY DAY! By the time it stopped, there was
four feet of water in the basement of the (at that time) new Student
Center! I think it set the records for most rain in this area in
a 7 day period.
Coincidence? Maybe...
Ed E.
|