The most daring concepts of cancer were developed by Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957), a highly controversial Austrian physician who discovered "T-bacilli" in cancer in 1937. This discovery was an outgrowth of his original "bion experiments" conducted in Europe during the 1930s. According to Reich's bion research, all life contains "orgone energy." When orgone energy in the cells diminishes, either through aging or injury, the cells undergo a death process that he called "bionous degeneration." As a consequence of orgone energy loss and bionous degeneration, deadly T-bacilli begin to form within the cells.
The famous psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957) spent years studying "orgone energy" and its effects on the body. His cancer research showed that cancerous cells have less orgone energy that normal, healthy cells. When cancer cells broke down and degenerated, he always observed toxic microbes arising out of the cancerous tissue. He called them "T-bacilli," after the German word, "Tod," which means death.
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