Wilhelm Helm, a psychoanalyst and a follower of Sigmund Freud, developed the Orgone Theory in the 1930s. He believed that this “orgone energy,” a life force or cosmic energy, was an extension of Freud’s idea of the libido, and he called the study of it, Orgonomy. In 1940, he decided to concentrate the orgone in Faraday cages called “orgone accumulators” as a means to cure cancer and for plant growth.
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Not surprisingly his ridiculous claims were never proven and even landed him in jail when he tried smuggling his “orgone devices” across state lines. Charles Claude Guthrie, an American physiologist, made significant contributions in his field and even collaborated with Alexis Carrel, a French physician who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology for Medicine in 1912 for their work on vascular surgery. Guthrie, although he should have been included, was denied the prize probably due to his head transplant experiments where he would sew the head of one dog onto another. Surprisingly, his experiments actually showed some success with the severed heads being kept artificially alive during the transplant. Stubbins Ffirth was an American doctor known for his unusual research on the cause of Yellow Fever. He was so convinced that it was not an infectious disease that he tested his hypothesis on himself.
His ‘experiments’ included living in the most diseased conditions in order to subject himself to infection in every conceivable manner. Though some of his conclusions proved to be correct, his explanations were off and a Cuban scientist named Carlos Finlay discovered the link to mosquitoes not long after his death. Lawrence LeShan, a researcher from Virginia, conducted a test to see whether subliminal messaging could break bad habits like nail-biting. For his research, he stood in a cabin where a group of boys were sleeping and repeated these words over and over ‘my nails taste terribly bitter,’ to see if he could stop the boy’s chronic nail-biting habit. The experiment appeared to work as 40% of the youngsters had broken the habit, but questions were raised concerning several issues such as whether or not the boys were actually sleeping throughout the experiment. Cornish, a child prodigy from the University of California, Berkeley who graduated with honors at the age of 18 and received his doctorate at 22, was interested in the idea that he could bring the dead back to life. In 1930, he attempted to bring dead animals back using a group of fox terriers all known as ‘Lazarus’.
He placed them on a see-saw to get their blood flowing and while he was rocking their corpses back and forth he injected them with epinephrine and anticoagulants. A few that momentarily stirred back to life suffered blindness and brain damage but they were quickly declared clinically dead once again and he could never replicate the success on a human. Skiing The Horrors Rarity. Werner Theodor Otto Forssmann, a German surgical trainee in 1929, is famous for an experiment he performed on himself.
Without any direction, he put himself under local anesthetic, incised a hole in his arm and pushed a catheter all the way up his limb and shoved it into his heart. He performed the procedure himself with two feet of cable after which he walked to the X-ray room. He was fired after this stunt, but was awarded the 1956 Nobel Prize for Medicine for developing a procedure that allowed for cardiac catheterization. Nikola Tesla, the man who made mad scientists look cool, was a brilliant scientist credited for the Tesla coil, a giant lightning-shooting transformer made famous in sci-fi games and movies with its light and sounds buzzing in the background.
However, he is also famous for his many quirks including his intense fear of dirt and germs, dislike for anything round, and disgust for pearl earrings. He had a curious obsession with pigeons, hated fat people, and would not speak at meetings without any of his inventions.
Robin Warren and Barry Marshall were able to isolate the bacteria, Helicobacter pylori (H.pylori), that are responsible for stomach ulcers although the medical community immediately countered that stress, lifestyle, and diet are the main culprits. To prove their point, however, Dr. Marshal drank a dose of the bacteria that they had collected from stomach ulcer sufferers and immediately developed gastritis with achlorhydria, nausea, vomiting, and halitosis. They were given the Nobel Prize in 2005.
Ewen Cameron believed that he had come up with a cure for schizophrenia by re-programming the brain with new thought patterns. Free Download Lagu Coldplay Yellow more. With this method, patients were asked to wear headphones and listen to positive message repeatedly for days or weeks. Between the 1950s and 1960s, some patients with minor problems found themselves sedated with barbiturates, strapped in beds, and forced to listen to non-ending messages played over and over again. Even the CIA fell for this experiment, though they eventually concluded that the technique was a failure and withdrew their funding.
Clarence Leuba, a professor of Psychology conducted an experiment in 1933 to find out whether laughter is a natural response to being tickled, or it is learned from the responses of others. During his experiment, he ordered that no one laugh as he tickled his newborn son and even donned a mask to hide his reactions during these sessions. Seven months later, the baby was shrieking with laughter when being tickled, while his younger sister reacted in the same way three years later. His conclusion: laughter is an innate reaction to being tickled. Phillip Zimbardo had long been curious as to why prisons were such violent places and he wanted to find out whether it is due to the character of its inhabitants or due to the corrosive effect of the power structure within the prison walls.
He created a mock experiment at the Stanford psychology department by recruiting young men with no criminal records and assigned half of them to play as guards while the other half played as prisoners. Social conditions deteriorated instantly with the prisoners staging a revolt on the first night already, causing the guards to resort to ‘creative’ methods to discipline the prisoners. Prisoners began to crack because of these and even Zimbardo was drawn to the corrosive psychology of the situation when he began to have paranoid fears that the prisoners were planning to attack him, prompting him to call the police for help. In six days, he turned happy college kids into brooding prisoners and brutal guards and was forced to call off the experiment. John Paul Stapp was not only known for his work as a flight surgeon in World War II, but he also performed critical research on the effects of sudden acceleration and deceleration of the human body.
Using his own body, his works saved the lives of countless jet fighter pilots. Employing a rocket armed with four engines and a total thrust of 6,000 pounds, he hit 35 Gs of deceleration, where humans were thought to only be able to survive at 18 Gs. Therefore, at 632-miles per hour, he became the most “quickly accelerated man alive”.
Nice one De5EBticon! You want it, you've worked hard for it, you treat yourself and get it. Why it bothers others how much YOU pay for something I don't know?! I always wanted the One Love 3' too but kept forgetting to look for it, doh!
Thanks i figured Tinaja was after this one as well and i bid pretty high because i wasnt sure if anyone was as crazy as me to go up that hight, i didnt expect the final bid would be that hight but you only live once so i decided to splurge on myself one last time, i might actually have to sell my collection off if things go bad as im having some serious health problems but it always makes you feel good when you have a rare items in your collection ~De5. Thankx Guys!!!, i got my Poison Black Edition Anthroprodigy print from K Guy today, it looks great but one of the corners of the print is bent its # 16, do you guys think that if i put that part of the print between 2 peices of paper and used an iron that i would be able to take the creases out? Or should i just leave it creased, i know i can always put a picture mat with a cutout to cover up that part, but its just the principle of having a damaged poster thats killing me:/ ~De5 i did that on one of mine, worked fine on very low heat to start. Test it out on similar paper first.. Display posts from previous: Sort.