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Frieder Kempe

From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki


Frieder Kempe is a German scientist. He designed a metallic fabric called Farabloc that shields the human body from sudden shifts in the Earth's electromagnetic field.

Published studies show Farabloc relieves pain.[1] This is based upon the concepts found in the Faraday cage, which protects sensitive MRI machines from these shifts.

Early life[edit]

Kempe was born in Erlangen, Bavaria. His father, Rudolf Kempe, a successful businessman, suffered excruciating phantom pain. He had lost a leg in 1916 in battle of Somme. Frieder, an engineering and science student, became intrigued by the Faraday Cage, the 19th-century work of British scientist Michael Faraday.

He had noted that his father's pain often seemed to be weather-related - "Whenever the pain came, my father would predict rain. I realized that his scar had no healthy skin covering, hence no protection from electromagnetic fields."

Frieder wondered if a "second skin" - the principle of a Faraday Cage - might shield sensitive tissue, calm damaged nerve ends and stimulate blood circulation.[2]

References[edit]

  1. PMID 10695845, PMID 17216399 and PMID 11882771
  2. PMID 26295593
  • Bach GL, Clement DB. "The efficacy of Farabloc as an analgesic in primary fibromyalgia." Clin Rheumatol. 2007 Mar;26(3):405-10.

PMID 17216399

External links[edit]



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