
One of the most persistent mistakes made about radionics is the assumption that it is only a form of healing. That misunderstanding has caused trouble for more than a century.
Many people first encounter radionics because of health concerns. That is natural. Human beings look for help when they are uncomfortable, frightened, or dissatisfied with conventional answers. Historically, radionics was often discussed in relation to diagnosis, treatment, and healing. That history cannot be ignored.
But radionics is larger than medicine.
If radionics is understood as an informational operation, then health is only one application. Living systems are informational. So are fields, farms, buildings, families, businesses, organizations, negotiations, habits, and places. They all have patterns. They all have relationships. They all have resistance. They all can become confused, blocked, depleted, or misdirected or conflicted.
This does not mean that radionics should be used irresponsibly. It does not mean that a radionics operator can replace a doctor, lawyer, accountant, engineer, farmer, or business manager. It means that radionics may operate in a different layer of reality than those professions normally address. The sensible approach is not replacement. It is complement.
Consider agriculture. A farmer does not stop planting, watering, testing soil, controlling pests, and managing weather risk because he is interested in radionics. That would be foolish. But the farmer may still ask whether seeds, soil, pests, vitality, timing, and field conditions have informational qualities that can be worked with. Many radionics operators would say yes. Many farmers can control pest problems without chemicals using radionics inverse-phase broadcasts. The same may be true of some soil conditions which may make the ability to not be adversely affected by bad weather. Good soil increases the strength of plants.
Consider land and buildings. People have always sensed that places carry patterns. Some houses feel peaceful. Some fields feel exhausted. Some locations seem to attract repeated trouble. A materialist explanation may look for mold, drainage, electrical problems, bad design, or human conflict. Those should all be investigated. But radionics asks another question: is there an informational pattern here that can be detected, clarified, or corrected? One example from my past involved multiple ley lines and vortexes. Many unexplained things happened on that property. Setting up a multiple layer approach using radionics uncrossed the ley lines, dissolved vortexes and spiritually fenced the property. That resolved the problems.
Consider business. Business people already act as if invisible patterns matter. They speak of momentum, morale, timing, reputation, confidence, resistance, and opportunity. None of those things can be held in the hand like a wrench, yet they affect outcomes. A radionics operator working in business should not abandon ordinary business sense. He should improve it with better attention to pattern, obstruction, and probability. Simply increasing the income of a business may, or may not be easy depending upon many factors using radionics.
This is where radionics becomes most interesting to me. It sits at the boundary between practical life and hidden structure. It asks whether intention, information, symbolic representation, and disciplined operation can influence the pattern behind events. That question is much larger than medicine.
The medical community has often been hostile to radionics, partly because radionics does not fit the assumptions of conventional medicine. But perhaps that is because radionics was never meant to live entirely inside medicine. It may touch health, but it also touches agriculture, property, circumstances, decisions, organizations, and personal development. It even has a role to play in sovereign nations.
This broader view also reduces unnecessary conflict. If radionics is presented only as medical treatment, the argument immediately becomes regulatory and defensive. If radionics is presented as a broader informational discipline, then the conversation becomes more accurate. The health question remains, but it no longer traps the entire field inside one narrow category.
There is also a responsibility that comes with this broader view. The operator must become more thoughtful, not less. Working on a business problem, a piece of land, or a personal habit is not an excuse for vague thinking. The same rules apply: define the target, state the intention, select the method, keep records, observe honestly, and avoid exaggerated claims.
A radionics operator should not promise miracles. Life is complicated. Patterns are complicated. People are complicated. There is resistance and conflict. However, it is reasonable to say that radionics may be useful wherever pattern, information, intention, and resistance are part of the problem.
That is a much larger field than most people imagine.
Radionics may have entered the modern world through the language of healing, but it should not remain imprisoned there. Its natural territory is broader: the study and application of information, intention, and patterns in living systems and lived circumstances.
If we want radionics to mature, we should explain it honestly. It is not merely a medical oddity. It is not merely an antique device. It is not merely a belief system. It is a disciplined way of interacting with the informational side of reality.
That may be controversial. It may take time for people to understand. But it is closer to the truth.
© May 2026 by Peter V. Radatti
