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. This is based upon the concepts found in the Faraday cage, which protects sensitive MRI machines from these shifts. Early life 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.
|