Dr. Robert C. Beck

During his outstanding career as physicist, scientist and inventor, Dr. Beck worked on government projects, ran his own company and was lecturer at universities. He is the only double winner of the “J.G. Gallimore Award for Scientific Achievements” of the U.S. Psychotronics Association (the second time he won it in 1998) and 1990 he won the “John Fetzer Foundation Pioneering Award” for his contributions to brain science. As a young university student he invented the electronic flash with low voltage - he can be considered as father of modern flash photography.
After abandoning his career in 1993 he risked name and fame with his researches on the field of microcurrent technology for health reasons, after he had learned that there had been conducted successful eperiments on Albert Einstein University for Medicine. All public data on the results of the experiments were withdrawn quickly, but Dr. Beck discovered, that there had been a patent application.
He developed a health protocol based on that technology. The health benefits were quickly obvious for him and his associates. He founded a research society and conducted a study. The results of this study were never published, due to political and other reasons. The method he developed would permit everyone with self responsibility for their health to make their own research. Dr. Beck died om 23.06.2002 at age of 77 years by heart attack (the exact circumstances are disputed still).
With 1000 µA output current, the miniZAP LCD is a powerful device (600 µA are already the pain limit, even with conductivity gel).
|