Carol- Admin
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Join date : 2010-04-07
Location : Hawaii
Carol Mon Sep 23, 2019 8:44 am
From Oxy:
Sherry Shriner talks a lot about orgone -- which supposedly causes UFO's to crash -- and also supposedly burns and kills aliens. I have never had anything to do with orgone -- and I'm pretty much neutral about the subject. This thread is sort of a rambling shotgun-approach to pseudointellectual-research. This is just intended to get you started -- but with some rather unique components, which you probably won't find elsewhere. I think this thread is quite unique -- as far as I know -- but I have no idea how close to the mark I've gotten. I've frankly tried to NOT be too frank, so as to remain alive and well -- living the dream for at least a few more days in paradise. Here is the continuation of the previous post:
The study of Reich's work has been hampered by the instruction he left that his unpublished papers were to be stored for 50 years after his death, "to secure their safety from destruction and falsification," which meant researchers were not able to access them until 2007.[81]
Nearly all his publications have been reprinted, apart from his research journals, which are available as photocopies from the Wilhelm Reich Museum. The first editions are not available: Reich continuously amended his books throughout his life, and the owners of Reich's copyright only allow the latest revised versions to be reprinted. In the late 1960s, Farrar, Straus & Giroux republished all his major works.[82]
New research journals devoted to his work began to appear in the 1960s. Physicians and natural scientists with an interest in Reich organized small study groups and institutes, and new research efforts were undertaken, though the mainstream scientific community has shown minimal interest in his ideas. The Orgone Biophysical Research Lab, founded in 1978 by Dr. James DeMeo, continues to investigate Reich's orgone research, and hosts international conferences and an occasional research journal.[83] DeMeo undertook studies on Reich's cloudbuster device at the University of Kansas in 1979, and wrote that he had confirmed many of the effects claimed by Reich.[84] A double-blind, controlled study of the effects of the orgone accumulator was carried out by Stefan Müschenich and Rainer Gebauer at the University of Marburg in 1987, and appeared to validate some of Reich's claims.[85] The study was later reproduced by Günter Hebenstreit at the University of Vienna.[86]
DeMeo conducted a number of other studies into Reich's work at the University of Kansas, including a global cross-cultural study, "Saharasia," to test the validity of Reich's sex-economic theory in the origins of human violence.[87] He undertook controlled studies on Reich's controversial thermal anomaly experiment,[88] and in 2011 wrote that orgone-charged water has a higher UV absorption in the 240-280 nm range, as compared to control samples.[89] He has also published studies showing statistically significant increases in plant growth when charged inside orgone accumulators, as compared to controls.[90] He argues that Reich's orgone energy is functionally similar to the older concept of the cosmological ether of space, and bears a similarity to the modern concepts of dark matter and the interstellar medium.[91]
Reich's influence is felt in modern psychotherapy. In 1978, the French philosopher, Michel Foucault, wrote that the impact of Reich's critique of sexual repression was substantial.[92] William Steig, Robert Anton Wilson, Norman Mailer, Jerome D. Salinger and Orson Bean have all undergone Reich's orgone therapy, and there is some use of orgone accumulators by psychotherapists in Europe, particularly in Germany.[93] Reich was a pioneer of body psychotherapy and several emotions-based psychotherapies, influencing Fritz Perls's Gestalt therapy and Arthur Janov's primal therapy. His pupil Alexander Lowen, the founder of bioenergetic analysis, and Charles Kelley, the founder of Radix therapy, ensure that his research receives widespread attention. Many practising psychoanalysts give credence to his theory of character, as outlined in Character Analysis (1933, enlarged 1949). The American College of Orgonomy, founded by Dr. Elsworth Baker, and the Institute for Orgonomic Science, led by Dr. Morton Herskowitz, still use Reich's original therapeutic methods.
In popular culture
The cover of "Cloudbusting" by Kate Bush, released in October 1985. In the video accompanying the single, Donald Sutherland plays Reich.
Reich continues to influence popular culture, with references to orgone and cloudbusting found in songs by Clutch, Hawkwind, Pop Will Eat Itself, Turbonegro, Bob Dylan, and Patti Smith ("Birdland" on Horses).
He is a character in the opera Marilyn (1979) by Italian composer Lorenzo Ferrero.
Kate Bush's song "Cloudbusting" describes Reich's arrest and incarceration through the eyes of Reich's son, Peter, who wrote his father's story in A Book of Dreams, published in 1973. The video for the song was directed by Julian Doyle, conceived by Terry Gilliam and Bush, and has Donald Sutherland as Reich, and Bush as Peter.[94]
An article about the female orgasm by Reich provided the inspiration for "Little Man Within" by Welsh singer/songwriter Karl Wallinger of World Party.
Author Robert Anton Wilson wrote a play, Wilhelm Reich in Hell, partly based on Reich's life; it was also published as a book in 1987. Wilson frequently referred to Reich and Reich's works in both his fiction and non-fiction. Notably, one character in Wilson's Schrödinger's Cat Trilogy is a witness to the 1957 book-burning.
Reich's work is described in Italian writer Valerio Evangelisti's novel Il mistero dell'inquisitore Eymerich ("The mystery of Inquisitor Eymerich"), in which Reich is described as a visionary whose ideas were ahead of his time.
A film about his teachings called W.R.: Mysteries of the Organism was made in 1971 by Yugoslavian director Dušan Makavejev, and was listed by film critic Roger Ebert in his "Great Movie" series in 2007.
A short drama film about Reich by Jon East, called "It can be done," was nominated for a Silver Lion at the 1999 Venice Film Festival.
The superhero "Orgone Lad", a member of the League of Infinity is Wilhelm Reich, Supreme by Alan Moore(2000).
"He did ten years in Attica, reading Nietzsche and Wilhelm Reich"—from the song "Joey" on the album Desire by Bob Dylan.
In Jack Kerouac's autobiographical novel On the Road, written in 1951, Old Bull Lee (modelled on William Burroughs) extols the benefits of the orgone accumulator he owns and considers how it may be improved by building it from "more organic" wood. Burroughs makes several references to Orgone energy in his own novels and essays.
The final episode of series 5 of British TV series Peep Show featured two main characters becoming enamoured of a religious cult that expounded Reich's orgone theory.
Reich is the subject, along with real estate developer Del Webb, of the 2008 documentary Wasteland Utopias by filmmaker David Sherman.
The Australian product designer Marc Newson has produced several 'Orgone' items of furniture, most famously his 'Orgone Chair.'
The post punk band Devo credited Mayan technology and Reich as the sources of inspiration for their 'energy dome' hats in an interview with Stephen Colbert on June 16, 2010.
German-language books Der triebhafte Charakter : Eine psychoanalytische Studie zur Pathologie des Ich, 1925
Die Funktion des Orgasmus : Zur Psychopathologie und zur Soziologie des Geschlechtslebens, 1927
Dialektischer Materialismus und Psychoanalyse, 1929
Geschlechtsreife, Enthaltsamkeit, Ehemoral : Eine Kritik der bürgerlichen Sexualreform, 1930
Der Einbruch der Sexualmoral : Zur Geschichte der sexuellen Ökonomie, 1932
Charakteranalyse : Technik und Grundlagen für studierende und praktizierende Analytiker, 1933
Massenpsychologie des Faschismus, 1933 (original Marxist edition, banned by the Nazis and the Communists)
Was ist Klassenbewußtsein? : Über die Neuformierung der Arbeiterbewegung, 1934
Psychischer Kontakt und vegetative Strömung, 1935
Die Sexualität im Kulturkampf : Zur sozialistischen Umstrukturierung des Menschen, 1936
Die Bione : Zur Entstehung des vegetativen Lebens, 1938
Rede an den kleinen Mann, 1945
English-language books American Odyssey: Letters and Journals 1940-1947 (posthumous)
Beyond Psychology: Letters and Journals 1934-1939 (posthumous)
The Bioelectrical Investigation of Sexuality and Anxiety
The Bion Experiments: On the Origins of Life
The Function of the Orgasm, 1942, translated by Theodore P. Wolfe
The Cancer Biopathy (1948)
Character Analysis (translation of the enlarged version of Charakteranalyse from 1933, translated by Theodore P. Wolfe)
Children of the Future: On the Prevention of Sexual Pathology
Contact With Space: Oranur Second Report (1957)
Cosmic Superimposition: Man's Orgonotic Roots in Nature (1951)
"Concerning Specific Forms of Masturbation" (essay)
Ether, God and Devil (1949)
Genitality in the Theory and Therapy of Neuroses (translation of the original, unrevised version of Die Funktion des Orgasmus from 1927)
The Invasion of Compulsory Sex-Morality (translation of the revised and enlarged version of Der Einbruch der Sexualmoral from 1932)
Listen, Little Man! (1948, translated by Theodore P. Wolfe)
The Mass Psychology of Fascism (translation of the revised and enlarged version of Massenpsychologie des Faschismus from 1933, translated by Theodore P. Wolfe)
The Murder of Christ (1953)
The Oranur Experiment
The Orgone Energy Accumulator, Its Scientific and Medical Use (1948)
Passion of Youth: An Autobiography, 1897-1922 (posthumous)
People in Trouble (1953)
Record of a Friendship: The Correspondence of Wilhelm Reich and A.S. Neill (1936–1957)
Reich Speaks of Freud (Interview by Kurt R. Eissler, letters, documents)
Selected Writings: An Introduction to Orgonomy
Sexpol. Essays 1929-1934 (ed. Lee Baxandall)
The Sexual Revolution (translation of Die Sexualität im Kulturkampf from 1936, translated by Theodore P. Wolfe)
The Einstein Affair (1953)
See also
Ernst Simmel
Phallic narcissism
Notes
1.^ For the view that he was one of the most radical figures in psychiatry, see Sheppard, R.Z. "A family affair", Time, May 14, 1973.
2.^ a b c "Wilhelm Reich," Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved July 26, 2009.
3.^ Sharaf, Myron (1994). Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm Reich. Da Capo Press, pp. 4–5.
4.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 4, 8. Also see Obituary notice for Wilhelm Reich, Time Magazine, November 18, 1957.
5.^ a b Sharaf 1994, p. 170.
6.^ For the articles, see Wertham, Fredric. Calling all Couriers, The New Republic, Dec 2, 1946.
Brady, Mildred Edie. The Strange Case of Wilhelm Reich, The New Republic, May 26, 1947.
Brady, Mildred Edie. The New Cult of Sex and Anarchy, Harper's, April 1947.
"The New Coast of Bohemia" (editorial), Saturday Review of Literature, August 16, 1947, and
Henderson, Harry and Shaw, Sam. "Greenwich Village: Tourist Trap," Collier's, December 6, 1947.
7.^ a b c Sharaf 1994, p. 477.
8.^ a b Sharaf 1994, p. 39.
9.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 463.
10.^ Reich, Wilhelm. "Background and scientific development of Wilhelm Reich," Orgone Energy Bulletin V, 1953, p. 6, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 40 and p. 488, footnote 10.
11.^ Reich , Wilhelm. Passion of Youth, Paragon House, New York, 1990, p. 25; also see Sharaf, p. 49.
12.^ Reich, Wilhelm. "Über einen Fall von Durchbruch der Inzestschranke in der Pubertät," Zeitschrift für Sexualwissenschaft, VII, 1920, 222-223, cited in and translated by Sharaf 1994, p. 43 and p. 448, footnote 12.
13.^ a b Sharaf 1994, pp. 42–46.
14.^ In his book Passion of Youth (p. 36-37) Reich says that his mother died by the end of September 1910. She took an unknown poison on a Monday, which corresponds to September 26. Based on his further comments one easily concludes that she died three days later, on September 29, 1910, at 2.00 AM Her first suicide attempt, with ingestion of Lysol (the afore mentioned household cleaner) had occurred in January 1910, the same evening Leon Reich came to know about the adultery (Reich, idem, p. 31).
15.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Über einen Fall von Durchbruch der Inzestschranke in der Pubertät, op cit, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 47 and p. 489, footnote 21.
16.^ a b Sharaf 1994, p. 48.
17.^ a b Blumenfeld, Robert. Tools and techniques for character interpretation. Hal Leonard Corporation, 2006, p. 135.
18.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 58.
19.^ a b c d e f g h Biography, The Wilhelm Reich Museum. Retrieved August 14, 2006.
20.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 108–109.
21.^ Biographical notes on his family: Annie Pink, born April 2, 1902, Vienna, died January 5, 1971, New York. Eva Reich became a doctor and applied orgonomical techniques to the care of newborns. Lore Reich Rubin became a doctor and psychoanalyst.
22.^ According to his daughter Lore Reich, Anna Freud and Ernest Jones were behind the expulsion.
23.^ a b c d e f g Brady, Mildred. The Strange case of Wilhelm Reich", The New Republic, May 26, 1947, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 360. "In this state of outer rigidity (expressed in muscular tensions) and inner anxiety he becomes “sadistic, “ “masochistic,” “anti-Semitic, “ “fascistic, “ “reactionary,” “hateful,” “submissive,” “authoritarian,” “greedy,” “power-motivated” and “perverse.”"
24.^ a b c Cantwell, Alan. Dr. Wilhelm Reich", New Dawn Magazine, 2004. Retrieved December 3, 2007.
25.^ D'Aloia, Alessandro. "Marxism and Psychoanalysis: Notes on Wilhelm Reich’s Life and Works", Marxist.com. Retrieved August 14, 2006.
26.^ a b c Sharaf 1994, p. 228.
27.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Beyond Psychology: Letters and Journals 1934-1939. Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1994, p. 66
28.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 234–235, 242.
29.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 242.
30.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 234–235.
31.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 238–241, 243.
32.^ a b Sharaf 1994, pp. 230–233.
33.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 245–246.
34.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 253.
35.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 255.
36.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 254.
37.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 257–259.
38.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 263.
39.^ Sharaf 1944, pp. 264–265.
40.^ Elkind, David. "Wilhelm Reich -- The Psychoanalyst as Revolutionary; Wilhelm Reich", The New York Times, April 18, 1971. Retrieved June 17, 2009.
41.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 274.
42.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 8.
43.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 352.
44.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Murder of Christ. Orgone Institute Press 1953, p. 41.
45.^ Klee, Gerald D. "What ever happened to orgone therapy?", The Maryland Psychiatric Society, Summer 2001; Vol. 28, No. 1; Pg 13-15, retrieved January 7, 2011; Grossinger, Richard. Planet Medicine: From Stone Age Shamanism to Post-industrial Healing, Taylor & Francis, 1982, p. 293.
46.^ Reich, Wilhelm. The Cancer Biopathy, chapter II, section 6. Farrar, Straus and Giroux (January 1, 1974).
47.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Ether, God & Devil & Cosmic Superimposition, Farrar, Straus and Giroux (January 1, 1972)
48.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 379–380.
49.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 285.
50.^ Brian, Denis (1996). Einstein: A Life. John Wiley & Sons, p. 326.
51.^ "I have now investigated your apparatus ... In the beginning I made enough readings without any changes in your arrangements. The box-thermometer showed regularly a temperature of about 0.3-0.4 higher than the one suspended freely," Einstein's letter to Reich, February 7, 1941, English translation, in The Einstein Affair, Orgone Institute Press, 1953
52.^ a b Sharaf 1994, p. 286.
53.^ "One of my assistants now drew my attention to the fact that in the room ... the temperature on the floor is always lower than the one on the ceiling," Einstein to Reich, February 7, 1941, op.cit.
54.^ "Through these experiments I regard the matter as completely solved," Einstein to Reich, February 7, 1941, op.cit.
55.^ "Ich hoffe, dass dies ihre Skepsis entwickeln wird, dass Sie sich nicht durch eine an sich verständliche Illusion trügen lassen," ("I hope that this will sharpen your skepticism so that you're not taken in by one of these understandable illusions"), Einstein to Reich, February 7, 1941, op.cit.
56.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 288.
57.^ "FBI adds new subjects to electronic reading room", U.S. State Department, March 2, 2000.
58.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 361.
59.^ FDA file on Reich, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 363 and footnote 6, p. 513.
60.^ FDA file on Reich, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 364 and footnote 11, p. 513.
61.^ Greenfield, Jerome. Wilhelm Reich Vs. the U.S.A.. W.W. Norton, 1974, p. 69, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 364 and footnote 13, p. 513.
62.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Conspiracy. An Emotional Chain Reaction, item 386A, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 367 and footnote 14, p. 513.
63.^ Reich, Wilhelm. Conspiracy. An Emotional Chain Reaction, item 386A, cited in Sharaf 1994, p. 367 and footnote 14, p. 513.
64.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 367.
65.^ a b Sharaf 1994, pp. 410–413.
66.^ Complaint for injunction by FDA, Feb 10, 1954, part1, USA vs WILHELM REICH 1954-1957.
67.^ "Wilhelm Reich's Response to FDA's Complaint for Injunction", February 25, 1954, posted on orgone.org.
68.^ DECREE OF INJUNCTION ORDER (USA vs Wilhelm Reich) by JUDGE CLIFFORD MARCH 19, 1954 - USA vs WILHELM REICH 1954-1957.
69.^ Wilhelm Reich: Man's Right to Know, Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust, retrieved January 15, 2012
70.^ Michael Silvert (1906-1958), born Meyer Silverzweig in Poland. He was arrested with Reich and committed suicide in 1958 when he was released from prison.[1]
71.^ Herskowitz, Morton. The Trial, The Institute for Orgonomic Science. Retrieved July 26, 2009.
72.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 458, 465, 466, 473.
73.^ Sharaf 1994, pp. 458–461.
74.^ Reich, Wilhelm (1897-1957), International Dictionary of Psychoanalysis
75.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 461.
76.^ There is some discrepancy between the sources on this. Myron Sharaf writes that Reich signed his last will on February 10, 1957, naming his daughter Eva as executrix, which meant she controlled the publication and republication of his work. The Wilhelm Reich Museum writes that his last will was on March 8, 1957, naming the Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust Fund as the entity charged with running Orgonon as the Wilhelm Reich Museum, transmitting his legacy, and housing his archives. See Sharaf 1994, p. 465 and Biography, The Wilhelm Reich Museum. Retrieved August 14, 2006.
77.^ a b Sharaf 1994, pp. 469–470.
78.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 476.
79.^ Sharaf 1994. p. 5.
80.^ Obituary notice for Wilhelm Reich, Time Magazine, November 18, 1957.
81.^ Sharaf 1994, p. 6.
82.^ A good overview of Reich's work is Wilhelm Reich: The evolution of his work by David Boadella. A bibliography on orgonomy gives full citations to university dissertations, and to controlled experiments replicating Reich's work on bions, the orgone accumulator, and the cloudbuster.
83.^ Orgone Biophysical Research Lab, Ashland, Oregon.
84.^ DeMeo, James: "Preliminary Analysis of Changes in Kansas Weather Coincidental to Experimental Operations with a Reich Cloudbuster," 1979 University of Kansas Dept. of Geography, republished as a book by the Orgone Biophysical Research Laboratory, 2010.
85.^ Müschenich, Stefan & Gebauer, Rainer: Der Reich'sche Orgonakkumulator. Naturwissenschaftliche Diskussion, praktische Anwendung, experimentelle Untersuchung. Frankfurt/Main: Nexus-Verlag 1987
86.^ Hebenstreit, Günter: Der Orgonakkumulator nach Wilhelm Reich. Eine experimentelle Untersuchung zur Spannungs-Ladungs-Formel. Univ. Wien, Dipl.-Arbeit, 1995
87.^ DeMeo, James: "Saharasia: The 4000 BCE Origins of Child-Abuse, Sex-Repression, Warfare and Social Violence in the Deserts of the Old World", Natural Energy Works, Ashland, Oregon, 1998.
88.^ DeMeo, James: "Experimental Confirmation of the Reich Orgone Accumulator Thermal Anomaly", Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine 20(3):1-16, 2010.
89.^ DeMeo, James. "Water as a Resonant Medium for Unusual External Environmental Factors", Water: A Multidisciplinary Research Journal, 2011, pp. 1-47.
90.^ DeMeo, James: "Report on Orgone Accumulator Stimulation of Sprouting Mung Beans", Subtle Energies and Energy Medicine, 21(2):51-62, 2011.
91.^ DeMeo, James: "Dayton C. Miller Revisited", in Should the Laws of Gravitation Be Reconsidered? Hector A. Munera, Editor, 2011, pp. 285-315. Also see: "A Dynamic and Substantive Cosmological Ether", Proceedings of the Natural Philosophy Alliance, Cynthia Whitney, Editor, Vol.1, No.1, Spring 2004, pp. 15-20.
92.^ Foucault, Michel. The History of Sexuality, Volume 1: An Introduction. Vintage Books, 1978, p. 131.
93.^ For example: Kavouras, Jorgos: Heilen mit Orgonenergie: Die Medizinische Orgonomie, Turm Verlag, Bietigheim, Germany, 2005; Lassek, Heiko. Orgon-Therapie: Heilen mit der reinen Lebensenergie, Scherz Verlag, 1997, München, Germany; Müschenich, Stefan: Der Gesundheitsbegriff im Werk des Arztes Wilhelm Reich (The Concept of Health in the Works of Wilhelm Reich, MD), med. Diss., Marburg, Görich & Weiershauser, 1995.
94.^ "Cloudbusting", YouTube. Retrieved July 26, 2009.
Further reading
Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust, accessed March 28, 2012.
Reich's FBI file (also see here).
Los Orgones, Argentinian site of Orgonomy
Bibliography on Orgonomy, a full listing of scholarly works on Wilhelm Reich
Orgone Biophysical Research Laboratory
PORE, Public Orgonomic Research Exchange (includes biography and timeline)
The American College of Orgonomy
Wilhelm Reich Gesellschaft
Wilhelm Reich Orgon Institut Deutschland
Wilhelm Reich Akademie
Reichian therapy.
Wilhelm Reich at Find a Grave
Books Baker, Elsworth F., Man In The Trap. Macmillan, 1967.
Bean, Orson, Me And The Orgone/ St. Martin's Press, 1971.
Boadella, David. Wilhelm Reich, The Evolution Of His Work, Henry Regnery, 1973.
Boadella, David (ed.). In The Wake Of Reich, Coventure, 1976.
Corrington, Robert S. Wilhelm Reich: Psychoanalyst and Radical Naturalist. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2003/
Greenfield, Jerome (1974). Wilhelm Reich Vs. The USA, W.W. Norton, NY, 1974.
Guillon, Claude (1978). Pour en finir avec Reich, Alternative diffusion, 1978.
Herskowitz, Morton (1998). Emotional Armoring: An Introduction to Psychiatric Orgone Therapy, Transactions Press.
Mann, Edward (1973). Orgone. Reich And Eros: Wilhelm Reich's Theory Of The Life Energy, Simon & Schuster.
Mann, Edward & Hoffman (ed.) (1980). The Man Who Dreamed Of Tomorrow: A Conceptual Biography Of Wilhelm Reich, J.P. Tarcher, 1980.
Martin, Jim (2000). Wilhelm Reich and the Cold War, Flatland Books.
Meyerowitz, Jacob (1994). Before the Beginning of Time, rRp Publishers.
Ollendorff, Ilse. (1969). Wilhelm Reich: A Personal Biography, St. Martin's Press.
Raknes, Ola (1970). Wilhelm Reich And Orgonomy, St. Martin's Press.
Reich, Peter (1973). A Book Of Dreams, Harper & Row.
Ritter, Paul (ed.) (1958). Wilhelm Reich Memorial Volume, Ritter Press.
Senf, Bernd (1996). Die Wiederentdeckung des Lebendigen (The Rediscovery of the Living), Zweitausendeins Verlag.
Wilson, Robert Anton (1998). Wilhelm Reich in Hell, Aires Press.
Wyckoff, James (1973). Wilhelm Reich: Life Force Explorer, Fawcett.
Articles D'Aloia, Alessandro. Marxism and Psychoanalysis: Notes on Wilhelm Reich's life and work, first published in FalceMartello, International Marxist Tendency, October 15, 2004.
DeMeo, James. The Orgone Accumulator Handbook: Construction Plans, Experimental Use and Protection Against Toxic Energy, Natural Energy Works, 1989.
DeMeo, James. Response to Martin Gardner's Attack on Reich and Orgone Research in the Skeptical Inquirer, 1989.
DeMeo, James (ed). "On Wilhelm Reich And Orgonomy", Pulse of the Planet, No. 4, Natural Energy Works, 1993.
DeMeo, James & Senf, Bernd (eds). Nach Reich: Neue Forschungen zur Orgonomie: Sexualokonomie, Die Entdeckung Der Orgonenergie (After Reich: New Research in Orgonomy: Sex-Economy, Discovery of the Orgone Energy), Zweitausendeins Verlag, Frankfurt, 1998.
Kendrick, William (1983). “The Analyst as Outsider”, a review of Myron Sharaf's Fury on Earth: A Biography of Wilhelm Reich, The New York Times, April 3, 1983.
Laska, Bernd A. (1981). "Sigmund Freud contra Wilhelm Reich", Wilhelm Reich. Bildmonographie. Rowohlt, Reinbek 1981, 1999.
The Einstein experiments The Einstein Affair, Orgone Institute Press, 1953.
Aspden, H. "Gravity and its thermal anomaly: was the Reich-Einstein experiment evidence of energy inflow from the aether?," Infinite Energy, 2011, 41:61.
Bearden, T. "Energy from the vacuum," Cheniere Press, 2002, pp. 333–337.
Brian, Denis. Einstein: A Life, John Wiley & Sons, 1996. Reich is discussed on pp. 325–327, 382, 399.
Clark, Ronald W. Einstein: The Life and Times, Avon, 1971. Reich is on pp. 689–690 of the paperback edition.
Correa, P and Correa, A. "The thermal anomaly in ORACs and the Reich-Einstein experiment: implications for blackbody theory," Akronos Publishing, 1998.
Correa P and Correa A. "The reproducible thermal anomaly of the Reich-Einstein experiment under limit conditions," Infinite Energy, 2001, 37:12.
Mallove, E. "Breaking Through: A Bombshell in Science," Infinite Energy, 2001, 37:6.
Mallove, E. "Breaking Through: Aether Science and Technology," Infinite Energy, 2001, 39:6.[
Last edited by Carol on Mon Sep 23, 2019 9:35 am; edited 1 time in total
_________________
What is life?
It is the flash of a firefly in the night, the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime. It is the little shadow which runs across the grass and loses itself in the sunset.
With deepest respect ~ Aloha & Mahalo, Carol