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  Page 9
  EXPOSING PHIL CALLAHAN

PHIL CALLAHAN, THE GURU OF PARAMAGNETISM

The idea of using lava sand to add "paramagnetic energy" to the soil didn’t originate with Howard Garrett, the "Doctor of Dirt," although he has become it’s chief proponent.  Rather, as he wrote in his column in The Dallas Morning News on September 8, 1995:

"I learned about lava sand from Phil Callahan, the scientist who taught me to add lava sand to the soil…To learn more about soil and plant energy, read any of Mr. Callahan’s books."

That seemed fair enough, so I took him up on his suggestion.  I acquired the books and read them from cover to cover.  And, indeed, it was both an education and an eye opener -- a foray into a world I previously believed to exist only in the realm of fable and New Age superstition.

Philip S. Callahan, Ph. D., schooled as an entomologist, was stationed in Ireland as a radio technician during World War II.  He has written two books dealing specifically with his discoveries there of the seemingly magical properties of the ancient Irish round towers and of certain rocks and rock powders.  Titled Nature’s Silent Music and Paramagnetism--Rediscovering Nature's Secret Force of Growth, these books are available from his publisher, Acres U.S.A. (P. O. Box 91299, Austin, TX 78709, telephone 800-355-5313, website www.acresusa.com).

Reading either of these books should be enough for any intelligent person to learn all he or she would ever need to know about Dr. Callahan, lava sand, and paramagnetism.

On the other hand, if you would like to know more about the pursuits and conclusions of Dr. Callahan before purchasing either of these books, I’ll relate for you a sampling of what he has to say.  And I'll include page numbers in case you want to refer to the original texts and confirm that I am not inventing any of this and that I am not, in any manner, distorting his words.

On the other hand, if you’re a devout believer in pyramid power, the magical qualities of quartz crystals, and other New Age phenomena, you may just want to skip the rest of this.

Nature's Silent Music (1992)

In Nature's Silent Music (page 32), Dr. Callahan tells us that the ancient Hebrews and Egyptians understood and utilized the power which is in rocks.    Modern Jews still do this, he says, when they visit the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem.  Furthermore, while traveling around Ireland, Dr. Callahan claims to have located some magical rocks.

Presumably, he says (page 34), since long before the ancient Egyptian civilization, man has attributed mystical and supernatural powers to rocks and rock crystals.  He adds that, according to his own measurements, sea-green slate is the most magical rock of all.   (Curiously, this conflicts with his next statement, below, since slate is not an igneous rock.  Rather, it's a metamorphic rock derived from shale and is, therefore, not of volcanic origin.)

According to Dr. Callahan (page 38), the ancient Celtic and megalithic peoples knew all about the energy emitted by granite and "other igneous and metamorphic stone of volcanic origin."  He says (page 39) that the early Irish Celts also understood the healing forces in their highly paramagnetic granite rocks.  All over Ireland, he continues, there are "standing stones utilized for healing and also as birthing stones for the Celtic lassies."

Where did these stones get this power?  According to Dr. Callahan (page 56), the crushing and grinding forces of the drifting continents caused great quantities of cosmic energy to be trapped within the minerals that make up stone and clay.  And "one of these energies is the little understood force called paramagnetism," which he says the ancients knew how to manipulate.

If you’re not familiar with the terms "paramagnetism" and "diamagnetism," they are the positive and negative aspects of an electromagnetic property described in many books used to teach elementary college physics.  But Dr. Callahan refers to them as forces or energies.  To comprehend what he means, he says (page 63), we must understand them as the ancients did.  Of course, he repeats, modern man doesn't understand them at all, despite the fact that we have scientific names for them.

The Chinese call them yin and yang, he explains.  And, although the ancient Irish had no specific names for them, they "saw them in the abodes of fairies and leprechauns."  He says (page 69) he now knows that what modern science calls paramagnetism and diamagnetism are, in reality, the magical forces the ancient Celtic and megalithic peoples found in rocks and plants.

In later travels in the Far East and around the globe, Dr. Callahan became aware of other mysterious phenomena.  As an example (page 118), he describes the magic of Sai Baba, an Indian mystic.  Apparently, Sai Baba can materialize "sacred dust" from his fingers.  And, according to Dr. Callahan, nobody has ever proved that he is practicing sleight of hand.

[As an aside, one can only wonder if this is the same Sai Baba mentioned in a music review written by Matt Weitz in the February 6, 2001 issue of The Dallas Morning News.  In part, Mr. Weitz reviewed a concert given in Fort Worth by the avant garde jazz trumpeter, Maynard Ferguson, as follows.

"There followed a number of songs, most impressively a sprawling raga-based composition based on what he (Ferguson) has learned about Indian music at the ashron of his spiritual leader, Sai Baba, where he visits and teaches annually."]

Using the "theory of materialization" and Einstein's formula, Dr. Callahan goes on to explain (page 119) that Sai Baba's feat is entirely possible.  Einstein's formula (E=mc²) "demands light having speeds equal to or lower than the energy," he says, and mass wouldn't exist at all "were not light traveling at speeds equal to or slower than the speed of light squared."  (Check it out; I am not making this up.)

In a provocative footnote on page 120, Dr. Callahan explains that a particle moving faster than the speed of light is called a tachyon, and a message sent by such a particle would actually arrive before it was sent.  He also states that he published, in 1986, the first experimental proof that tachyon particles actually exist.  (One of the world's great unsolved mysteries is why Dr. Callahan has never been honored with the Nobel Prize in physics for such an amazing and historic achievement.)

On page 179, he reminds us again that the ancient Egyptians knew about both human auras and silent forces in the rocks.  Therefore, he says, they had two separate hieroglyphs for stone.  One represented "limestone types of rocks that are diamagnetic, or very weakly paramagnetic."  The other represented "granite, porphyry, basalt and other highly paramagnetic stone."

In his own experiments (page 180), Dr. Callahan found that good fertile soil is highly paramagnetic and that viable soil always comes from volcanic rock, which he says is much more likely to be paramagnetic than sedimentary rocks, such as limestone (and, I presume, shale, which is converted into his "most magical of all rocks," sea-green slate.)

He then says (page 185) that construction engineers ought to be interested in these two forces "since concrete (limestone) and clay (adobe) are highly paramagnetic," and water is diamagnetic.  (Personally, I found this statement to be a bit confusing, since he had previously described limestone, on pages 179 and 180, as being diamagnetic or weakly paramagnetic.)

In any case, he claims that both the growing of crops and the hardening of cement depend on the joining together of these "opposite yin and yang forces."

In an epilogue, Dr. Callahan says (page 194) that the most important principle he wants to impart is that we must "treat rocks, stone and even the soil as antenna collectors of magnetic energy waves."  He points out that, in his opinion, the ancient Celtic round towers of Ireland are conical antennas, that rocks are antennas, and that even soil is a flat ground antenna if it contains enough volcanic, paramagnetic rock.

The other side is the diamagnetic force of the organic matter, which, he assures us, is just as important.  It stores the water, but the paramagnetic forces control its evaporation.

So, how does one accomplish a balance?  Dr. Callahan admits (page 195) that filling the soil with magnets wouldn't be very practical, even though, he says, magnetic energy controls root growth.  On the other hand, he believes that restoring "this paramagnetic energy collector…with truck loads of volcanic gravel or ash plowed into the soil is a much more practical idea."

And Dr. Callahan believes this same approach is extremely practical for small gardeners, "as is the building of six foot miniature round towers in a garden."   (I’ll swear it once more; I’m not making any of this up.)

Finally, he sums up his approach by saying, "It is much better to do all things as God intended by capturing the magnetic frequencies from the sun with the paramagnetic soil or round tower antenna. In one sentence, make your soil susceptible (resonate) to the sun, do not, with magnets, try to bring the sun to earth."

On the other hand, Dr. Callahan has recently joined forces with Nature's Alternatives to tout the mineral magnetite as a soil amendment because it is "the most paramagnetic of all rocks."  This is, in effect, adding magnets to the soil, since magnetite is a permanently magnetic form of iron ore, commonly known as lodestone.  As such, it is ferromagnetic and not paramagnetic at all.  So maybe he has changed his mind since writing this book.  But he still doesn't understand what paramagnetism is.

Paramagnetism (1995)

Much of this same information is repeated or summarized in his second book, Paramagnetism, but Dr. Callahan introduces an additional aspect when he describes (pages 80 and 81) the need for an inexpensive, hand-held meter for measuring the paramagnetism of soil samples.   It turns out that he, working with others, has developed just such a device. (Surprise! Surprise!)

Dr. Callahan's meter is named the P. C. Soil Meter (PCSM), which, he explains, can be interpreted as either the "Paramagnetic Count Soil Meter" or the "Phil Callahan Soil Meter," whichever you choose.  The wonderful thing, he says, is that this meter can be bought for only $400, instead of the $4,000 to $5,000 cost of other meters of this type.

If you want to buy a PCSM for your own use, or if you’re interested in the plans for building miniature round towers for your garden, I feel sure you could contact Dr. Callahan through his publisher, Acres U.S.A.  Or maybe the "Doctor of Dirt" can help you.

As a final thought to ponder, on page 270 of the 1996 revision of Eco-Farm—An Acres U.S.A. Primer, written and published by Dr. Callahan’s own publisher, there is a curious, but revealing statement.  "Phil Callahan," it says, "is a bug man and a generalist of sorts.  We wish he were also a soils man."  ‘Nuff said.

Addendum

It turns out that Phil Callahan wrote a book in 1984, which preceded the two discussed here.  That book, Ancient Mysteries, Modern Visions, was previously out of print, but Acres U.S.A. reissued it in the latter part of 2000, so it's once again available.

In this earlier work, Dr. Callahan explains, with considerable "scientific" detail, his theories of paramagnetism and the round towers of Ireland, the "real" meanings of Egyptian hieroglyphics and of the pyramids, the relationship between cathedral towers and the antennae of insects, and how he "proved" that particles moving faster than the speed of light (tachyons) actually exist, using only an "electrometer" and a Benjamin ficus tree.  Furthermore, he explains how ancient Egyptian priests levitated people, lists the requirements for levitation and for levitating a person or object, and explains how levitation is directly related to paramagnetism.

This book is quite entertaining and, at a cost of only $16.00, is certainly worth what amounts to the price of a couple of movie tickets.
 

 
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                     Jim Rediker - Nurseryman -  Arborist  - TDA Certified
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