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{{Short description|American inventor (1888–1971)}}
]
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'''Royal Raymond Rife''' (May 16, 1888 – August 5, 1971) was an ] inventor and early exponent of high-magnification time-lapse cine-micrography.<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=San Diego Union|date=November 3, 1929|title=Local Man Bares Wonders of Germ Life: Making Moving Pictures of Microbe Drama}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|newspaper=Popular Science|author=H. H. Dunn|title=Movie New Eye of Microscope in War on Germs|date=June 1931|pages=27,141}}</ref> In the 1930s, he claimed that by using a specially designed ], he could observe a number of microbes which were too small to visualize with previously existing technology.<ref>{{cite news
{{Infobox person
| url=http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F30811F93A55147A93C0AB178AD95F458385F9&scp=2&sq=royal+rife&st=p
| name = Royal Raymond Rife
| title=BACILLI REVEALED BY NEW MICROSCOPE; Dr. Rife's Apparatus, Magnifying 17,000 Times, Shows Germs Never Before Seen.
| image = ]
| newspaper = The New York Times
| alt =
| date = November 22, 1931
| caption =
| page = 19
| birth_name = <!-- only use if different from name -->
}}</ref> Rife also reported that a "beam ray" device of his invention could weaken or destroy the pathogens by energetically exciting destructive resonances in their constituent chemicals.<ref name=NewsPapers>{{cite web
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1888|05|16}}
| last =Jones
| birth_place = ], U.S.
| first =Newell
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1971|08|05|1888|05|16}}
| authorlink =
| death_place = ] U.S.
| coauthors =
| nationality = American
| title =Cancer Blow Seen After 18-year Toil by Rife
| other_names =
| work =
| occupation = ]
| publisher=San Diego Evening Tribune - Search for "5/6/38" near "Evening Tribune San Diego, Calif, Cancer Blown Seen"
| known_for = Microscopes and Rife’s device
|date=1938-05-06
}}
| url =http://www.rife.org/newspaper.html
{{Alternative medicine sidebar}}
| doi =
| accessdate = 2007-08-22}}</ref>


'''Royal Raymond Rife''' (May 16, 1888 – August 5, 1971)<!--Using this primary source for an uncontroversial claim per Misplaced Pages:Fringe theories#Parity of sources --><ref name="Find a Grave Memorial 1971">{{cite web | title=Dr Royal Raymond Rife (1888-1971) | website=Find a Grave Memorial | date=August 5, 1971 | url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/74163580/royal-raymond-rife | access-date=October 5, 2022}}</ref> was an American inventor and early exponent of high-magnification ].<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=San Diego Union|date=November 3, 1929|title=Local Man Bares Wonders of Germ Life: Making Moving Pictures of Microbe Drama}}</ref><ref name="PopSci_June1931">{{cite journal|journal=Popular Science|author=H. H. Dunn|title=Movie New Eye of Microscope in War on Germs|date=June 1931|pages=27, 141|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9CcDAAAAMBAJ&q=Germs|volume=118|issue=6|issn=0161-7370}}</ref>
Rife's claims could not be ]<ref name="acs"/>, and were ultimately discredited by the medical profession in the 1950s. Rife blamed the scientific rejection of his claims on a ] involving the ], the Department of Public Health, and other elements of "organized medicine", which had "brainwashed" potential supporters of his devices.<ref name="daily-californian">{{cite news | title = Scientific Genius Dies: Saw Work Discredited | work = ] | date = August 11, 1971}}</ref>


Rife is known for his microscopes, which he claimed could observe live microorganisms with a magnification considered impossible for his time, and for an "oscillating beam ray" invention, which he thought could treat various ailments by "devitalizing disease organisms" using radio waves. Although he came to collaborate with scientists, doctors and inventors of the epoch, and his findings were published in newspapers and scientific journals like the ] annual report of 1944, they were later rejected by the ] (AMA), the ] (ACS) and ].
Interest in Rife's claims was revived in some ] circles by the 1987 book ''The Cancer Cure That Worked'', which claimed that Rife had succeeded in curing cancer, but that his work was suppressed by a powerful conspiracy headed by the AMA.<ref>{{cite book | last = Lynes | first = Barry | title = The Cancer Cure That Worked - Fifty Years of Suppression | publisher = Marcus Books | year = 1987 | isbn = 0-919951-30-9}}</ref><ref name="acs">{{cite journal |author= |title=Questionable methods of cancer management: electronic devices |journal=CA Cancer J Clin |volume=44 |issue=2 |pages=115–27 |year=1994 | url =http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3322/canjclin.44.2.115/pdf |pmid=8124604 |doi=10.3322/canjclin.44.2.115|format=PDF}}</ref> After this book's publication, a variety of devices bearing Rife's name were marketed as cures for diverse diseases such as cancer and ]. An analysis by '']'' found that a typical "Rife device" consisted of a ], wiring, a switch, a timer and two short lengths of copper tubing, which delivered an "almost undetectable" current unlikely to penetrate the skin.<ref name="SMH">{{cite news | url = http://healthwatcher.net/Quackerywatch/Cancer/Cancer-news/smh001230rife-aus.html | title = Cheating Death | first = Ben | last = Hills | work= ] | date = 2000-12-30 | accessdate = 2009-01-11}}</ref> Several marketers of other "Rife devices" have been convicted for ], and in some cases cancer patients who used these devices as a replacement for medical therapy have died.<ref name="stimes">{{cite news | url = http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=20071221&slug=indictment21m | title = Pair indicted on fraud charges in medical-device probe | first = Christine | last = Willmsen | coauthors = Michael J. Berens | publisher = '']'' | date = 2007-12-21 | accessdate = 2008-04-24}}</ref> Rife devices are currently classified as a subset of ] devices, which are generally viewed as pseudomedicine by mainstream experts.<ref name="acs"/>

Rife's supporters continue to claim that impulses of electromagnetic frequencies can disable cancerous cells and other microorganisms responsible for diseases. Most of these claims have no scientific research to back them up, and Rife machines are not approved for treatment by any health regulator. Multiple promoters have been convicted of health fraud and sent to prison.


== Life and work == == Life and work ==
]
Little reliable published information exists describing Rife's life. In 1929, he was granted a patent for a high-intensity microscope lamp.<ref name=RifePatent>{{cite web | title =Patent 1727618 - Microscope lamp | publisher =US Patent Office / Google Patent Search | year=1927 | url =http://www.google.com/patents?id=YcNNAAAAEBAJ&printsec=abstract&zoom=4&dq=1727618
| accessdate = 2007-12-03 }}</ref> On November 20, 1931, forty-four doctors attended a dinner advertised as "The End To All Diseases" at the Pasadena estate of ], honoring Arthur I. Kendall of ] and Rife, the developer of the "Rife microscope." Moving microorganisms from prepared, diseased human tissue were reportedly seen, still-photographed and also filmed with motion-picture equipment.<ref name=CaWest>{{cite journal | last = Kendall | first = Arthur Isaac, MD., PhD.| authorlink = | coauthors = Rife, Royal, PhD. | title = OBSERVATIONS ON BACILLUS TYPHOSUS IN ITS FILTERABLE STATE: A PRELIMINARY COMMUNICATION | journal = California and Western Medicine | volume = XXXV | issue = 6 | pages = 409–11| publisher = | location = | date = December, 1931| doi = | id = | pmc=1658030 | pmid=18741967}}</ref>


Little reliable published information exists describing Rife's life and work. In the 1930s, he made several ]s and, using a movie camera, took ] movies of microbes.<ref name="PopSci_June1931"/><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/1931/11/22/archives/bacilli-revealed-by-new-microscope-dr-rifes-apparatus-magnifying.html?sq=royal+rife&scp=2&st=p |title=Bacilli Revealed by New Microscope; Dr. Rife's Apparatus, Magnifying 17,000 Times, Shows Germs Never Before Seen. |newspaper = The New York Times |date = 1931-11-22 | page = 19 }}</ref><ref name=Smithsonian>{{cite book |title=Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution |date=1944 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution |page=207ff |url=https://library.si.edu/digital-library/book/annualreportofbo1944smit |language=en}}</ref> He also built microscopes that included ]s.<ref name=CaWest>{{cite journal | last1 = Kendall | first1 = Arthur Isaac | last2 = Rife | first2 = Royal | title = Observations On Bacillus Typhosus In Its Filterable State: A Preliminary Communication | journal = California and Western Medicine | volume = XXXV | issue = 6 | pages = 409–11| date = December 1931| pmc=1658030 | pmid=18741967}}</ref> Rife claimed magnifications of 17,000× or more for some of these microscopes.<ref name=Smithsonian/>
In a 1932 report in '']'', Mayo Clinic physician Edward C. Rosenow wrote that in addition to other small particles viewable with the standard lab ], small turquoise bodies termed "eberthella typhi" not visible with the standard lab microscopes were seen in filtrate using a Rife microscope. Rosenow attributed their detection to "the ingenious methods employed rather than excessively high magnification".<ref name=ECRosenow2>{{cite journal | author = Rosenow EC | title =OBSERVATIONS WITH THE RIFE MICROSCOPE OF FILTER-PASSING FORMS OF MICROORGANISMS | year = 1932 | journal = Science | volume = 76 | issue = 1965 | pages = 192–3 | doi = 10.1126/science.76.1965.192 | pmid = 17795318}}</ref> Subsequently, one of Rife's microscopes was mentioned in the 1944 Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution.<ref>{{cite journal|journal=Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution|publisher=Smithsonian Institution|title=The New Microscopes|author1=R.E. Seidel, M.D|author2=M. Elizabeth Winter|year=1944}}</ref>


A report published by the Smithsonian Institution described one of these microscopes as equipped for "transmitted and monochromatic beam ], ], and slit-ultra illumination, including also a special device for ]". It added that several doctors had attended a demonstration of another of Rife's microscopes and had been impressed by its clarity and high magnification.<ref name=Smithsonian/>
Rife claimed to have documented a "Mortal Oscillatory Rate" for various pathogenic organisms, and to be able to destroy the organisms by vibrating them at this particular rate. According to the ''San Diego Evening Tribune'' in 1938, Rife stopped short of claiming that he could cure cancer, but did argue that he could "devitalize disease organisms" in living tissue, "with certain exceptions".<ref name=NewsPapers/>


A distinctive feature of the microscopes, according to Rife and to other scientists who examined them, was a false-colour effect by which, when a microbe was illuminated by a particular wavelength of polarised ], different for each type of microbe, the microbe and only the microbe would emit a distinctive colour of light (turquoise for typhoid bacteria, ruby red for ''Mycobacterium leprae'', etc.), thus taking the place of ] and allowing otherwise difficult organisms to be plainly seen.<ref name=Smithsonian/><ref name=CaWest/>
Rife's work and claims were ultimately discredited by the medical community, a result which Rife blamed on powerful conspiracies against him. An obituary in the '']'' described his death at the age of 83 on August 5, 1971, stating that he died penniless and embittered by the failure of his devices to garner scientific acceptance.<ref name="daily-californian"/>


Some of the observations Rife claimed to have made with his microscopes are, however, contradicted by modern findings. For instance, he reported that under certain conditions ] bacteria ] into a much smaller form,<ref name=Smithsonian/><ref name=CaWest/> and claimed that most cancerous tumours contained a microbe that had no less than five forms, one of which was indistinguishable from ] while another resembled a ].<ref name=Smithsonian/>
== Modern revival, marketing, and health fraud==


Rife also reported that a 'beam ray' device of his invention could destroy microbial pathogens.<ref name="PopSci_June1931"/><ref name=NewsPapers>{{cite news |last =Jones |first =Newell |title =Dread Disease Germs Destroyed By Rays, Claim Of S.D. Scientist: Cancer Blow Seen After 18-year Toil by Rife |page=1 |publisher=San Diego Evening Tribune |date=1938-05-06 }}</ref> Rife claimed to have documented a "Mortal Oscillatory Rate" for various pathogenic organisms, and to be able to destroy the organisms by vibrating them using radio waves of this particular frequency. According to the ''San Diego Evening Tribune'' in 1938, Rife stopped short of claiming that he could cure cancer, but did argue that he could "devitalize disease organisms" in living tissue, "with certain exceptions".<ref name=NewsPapers/> In a 1931 profile, Rife warned against "medical fakers" who claim to cure disease using "electrical 'vibrations{{' "}}, stating that his work did not uphold such claims.<ref name="PopSci_June1931"/>
Interest in Rife was revived in the 1980s by author Barry Lynes, who wrote a book about Rife entitled ''The Cancer Cure That Worked''. The book claimed that Rife's beam ray device could cure cancer, but that all mention of his discoveries was suppressed in the 1930s by a wide-ranging conspiracy headed by the ]. The ] described Lynes' claims as implausible, noting that the book was written "in a style typical of conspiratorial theorists" and defied any independent verification.<ref name="acs"/>


]
In response to this renewed interest, devices bearing Rife's name began to be produced and marketed in the 1980s. Such "Rife devices" have figured prominently in a number of cases of ] in the U.S., typically centered around the uselessness of the devices and the grandiose claims with which they are marketed. In a 1996 case, the marketers of a "Rife device" claiming to cure numerous diseases including cancer and AIDS were convicted of felony health fraud.<ref>{{cite news | url = http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1370/is_n7_v30/ai_18656599/ |title = Investigators' Reports | work = ] | publisher = ] | date = September 1996 | accessdate = 2009-08-07 | first=Dixie | last=Farley}}</ref> The sentencing judge described them as "target the most vulnerable people, including those suffering from terminal disease" and providing false hope.<ref>{{cite news | url = http://www.fda.gov/fdac/departs/796_irs.html |title = Investigators' Reports | work = ] | publisher = ] | date = September 1996 | accessdate = 2009-01-09 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20071214170405/http://www.fda.gov/fdac/departs/796_irs.html |archivedate = 2007-12-14}}</ref> In 2002 John Bryon Krueger, who operated the "Royal Rife Research Society," was sentenced to 12 years in prison for his role in a murder and also received a concurrent 30-month sentence for illegally selling Rife devices. In 2009 a U.S. court convicted James Folsom of 26 felony counts for sale of the Rife devices sold as “NatureTronics,” “AstroPulse,” “BioSolutions,” “Energy Wellness,” and “Global Wellness.”<ref name=DW>{{cite web|url=http://www.devicewatch.org/reports/rife/folsom.shtml|author=]|title=Rife Device Marketers Convicted|accessdate=2009-08-07|publisher=]}}</ref>


An obituary in the '']'' described his death at the age of 83 on August 5, 1971, stating that he died penniless and embittered by the failure of his devices to garner scientific acceptance.<ref name="daily-californian"/> Rife blamed the scientific rejection of his claims on a ] involving the ] (AMA), the Department of Public Health, and other elements of "organized medicine", which had "brainwashed and intimidated" his colleagues.<ref name="daily-californian">{{cite news |first=Del |last=Hood| title = Scientific Genius Dies: Saw Work Discredited | work = ] | date = 1971-08-11 |url=https://rifevideos.com/scientific_genius_dies_saw_work_discredited.html }}</ref>
Several deaths have resulted from the use of Rife machines in place of standard medical treatment. In one case, a U.S. court found that the marketer of a Rife device had violated the law and that, as a result of her actions, a cancer patient had ceased chemotherapy and died.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.quackwatch.org/04ConsumerEducation/News/rife.html|author=]|title=Rife Machine Operator Sued|accessdate=2007-02-12|publisher=]}}</ref> In Australia, the use of Rife machines has been blamed for the deaths of cancer patients who might have been cured with conventional therapy.<ref name="SMH" />


== Health fraud after his death ==
In 1994, the American Cancer Society reported that Rife machines were being sold in a "pyramid-like, multilevel marketing scheme". A key component in the marketing of Rife devices has been the claim, initially put forward by Rife himself, that the devices were being suppressed by an establishment conspiracy against cancer "cures".<ref name="acs"/> Although "Rife devices" are not registered by the U.S ] and have been linked to deaths among cancer sufferers, the '']'' reported that over 300 people attended the 2006 Rife International Health Conference in ], where dozens of unregistered devices were sold.<ref name="stimes"/>

Interest in Rife's claims was revived in some ] circles by the 1987 book by Barry Lynes, ''The Cancer Cure That Worked'', which claimed that Rife had succeeded in curing cancer, but that his work was suppressed by a powerful conspiracy headed by the ].<ref name="acs">{{cite journal |title=Questionable methods of cancer management: electronic devices |journal=CA Cancer J Clin |volume=44 |issue=2 |pages=115–27 |year=1994 |pmid=8124604 |doi=10.3322/canjclin.44.2.115|s2cid=31481316 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
The ] (ACS) describes Lynes' claims as implausible, noting that the book was written "in a style typical of conspiratorial theorists", and that Lynes "... cites names, dates, events and places, giving the appearance of authenticity to a mixture of historical documents and speculations selectively spun into a web far too complex to permit verification by any thing short of an army of investigators with unlimited resources."<ref name="acs"/>

After this book's publication, a variety of devices bearing Rife's name were marketed as cures for diverse diseases such as cancer and ]. Some used radio waves as in the original experiments, some used other methods such as a pulsed electric current or pulsed electromagnetic fields at the correct frequencies, or what the manufacturers believed to be the correct frequencies.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Rife Machine Report, Chapter 14 |url=https://rifevideos.com/chapter_14_life_labs_1950s_pad_instrument_without_ray_tube.html |website=rifevideos.com |access-date=13 July 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Rife Machine Report, Chapter 24 |url=https://rifevideos.com/chapter_24_dr_rifes_rf_method_or_the_emf_method.html |website=rifevideos.com |access-date=13 July 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Ringas |first1=Jason |title=Rife and R.I.F.E. machines defined |url=https://www.rife.de/rife-and-r.i.f.e.-machines-defined.html |website=Rife Research, Europe |access-date=13 July 2024}}</ref> An analysis by '']'' found that one typical 'Rife device' cost AU$105 for a rudimentary circuit that simply produced a tiny pulsed electrical current (at a single fixed frequency of about 40kHz). It consisted of a ], wiring, a switch, a standard ] and two short lengths of copper tubing meant to act as handheld electrodes, delivering a current which the author estimated at 1 milliamp at most. Its design was, in fact, almost identical to the "zapper" device promoted by ], rather than having much in common with Rife's original devices. He described this as "the tip of an enormous iceberg", with a wide range of more elaborate devices also on sale from different suppliers, varying widely in design and ranging in price from AU$1,500 to AU$34,000.<ref name="EA">{{cite news | title = Forum | first = Jim | last = Rowe | newspaper=] |date=January 1998 |url=https://archive.org/details/EA1998/EA%201998-01%20January/page/n23/mode/2up }}</ref>

Such 'Rife devices' have figured prominently in several cases of ] in the U.S., typically centered around the uselessness of the devices and the grandiose claims with which they are marketed. In a 1996 case, the marketers of a 'Rife device' claiming to cure numerous diseases including cancer and AIDS were convicted of felony health fraud.<ref>{{cite news | url = http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1370/is_n7_v30/ai_18656599/ |title = Investigators' Reports | work = ] | publisher = ] | date = September 1996 | access-date = 2009-08-07 | first=Dixie | last=Farley|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160910194617/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-18656599.html|archive-date=September 10, 2016}}</ref> The sentencing judge described them as "target the most vulnerable people, including those suffering from terminal disease" and providing false hope.<ref>{{cite news | url = https://www.fda.gov/fdac/departs/796_irs.html |title = Investigators' Reports | work = ] | publisher = ] | date = September 1996 | access-date = 2009-01-09 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20071214170405/https://www.fda.gov/fdac/departs/796_irs.html |archive-date = 2007-12-14}}</ref> In some cases cancer patients who ceased chemotherapy and instead used these devices have died.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.quackwatch.org/04ConsumerEducation/News/rife.html|author=Stephen Barrett|author-link=Stephen Barrett|title=Rife Machine Operator Sued|access-date=2007-02-12|publisher=]}}</ref> A Washington State couple Donald and Sharon Brandt, who operated a clandestine health-care clinic from their home in ]<ref name="stimes">{{cite news | url = https://archive.seattletimes.com/archive/20071221/indictment21m/pair-indicted-on-fraud-charges-in-medical-device-probe | title = Pair indicted on fraud charges in medical-device probe | first = Christine | last = Willmsen | author2 = Michael J. Berens | newspaper = ] | date = 2007-12-21 | access-date = 2008-04-24}}</ref> based on Rife's inventions were convicted for a short imprisonment period.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mddionline.com/news/makers-unapproved-device-sentenced |title=Makers of Unapproved Device Sentenced |last= |first= |date= |website= |publisher= |access-date= |quote=}}</ref> Rife devices are currently classified as a subset of radionics devices, which are generally viewed as ] by mainstream experts.<ref name="acs"/> In Australia, the use of Rife machines has been blamed for the deaths of cancer patients who might have been cured with conventional therapy.<ref name="SMH">{{cite news | title = Cheating Death | first = Ben | last = Hills | newspaper=] |date=30 December 2000 |url=http://www.healthwatcher.net/quackerywatch/Cancer/Cancer-news/smh001230rife-aus.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160630035906/http://www.healthwatcher.net/quackerywatch/Cancer/Cancer-news/smh001230rife-aus.html |archive-date=30 June 2016 |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2002 John Bryon Krueger, who operated the Royal Rife Research Society, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for his role in a murder and also received a concurrent 30-month sentence for illegally selling Rife devices. In 2009 a U.S. court convicted James Folsom of 26 felony counts for sale of the Rife devices sold as 'NatureTronics', 'AstroPulse', 'BioSolutions', 'Energy Wellness', and 'Global Wellness'.<ref name=DW>{{cite web|url=http://www.devicewatch.org/reports/rife/folsom.shtml|author=Stephen Barrett|author-link=Stephen Barrett|title=Rife Device Marketers Convicted|access-date=2009-08-07|publisher=]}}</ref>

== Legacy ==

In 1994, the American Cancer Society's journal '']'' criticized Rife's methods and devices in an article titled "Questionable Methods of Cancer Management: Electronic Devices". The ACS reported that Rife machines were being sold in a "], ] scheme". A key component in the marketing of Rife devices has been the claim, initially put forward by Rife himself, that the devices were being suppressed by an establishment conspiracy against cancer "cures".<ref name="acs"/> Although 'Rife devices' are not registered by the U.S. ] and have been linked to deaths among cancer sufferers, '']'' reported that over 300 people attended the 2006 Rife International Health Conference in ], where dozens of unregistered devices were sold.<ref name="stimes"/>

], the world's largest independent cancer research charity, has stated: {{quote|"There is no reliable evidence that the Rife machine works as a cure for cancer.... There is also no evidence that it doesn't cause harm.... Many websites promote the Rife machine as a cure for cancer. But no reputable scientific cancer organisations support any of these claims."<ref name=CancerUK_Rife>{{cite web | url=https://www.cancerresearchuk.org/about-cancer/cancer-in-general/treatment/complementary-alternative-therapies/individual-therapies/rife-machine-and-cancer | author=Cancer Research UK | title=Rife machines | date=2018-11-12 | publisher=]}}</ref>}}

A 2000 article in '']'' warned: {{quote|"Cancer sufferers have died after putting their faith in a device with electrical parts worth just $15" ({{Inflation|US|15|2000|fmt=eq}}), further reporting that Rife machines are "unanimously condemned as worthless by mainstream scientists and banned in at least two American States."<ref name="SMH" />}}

== See also ==

* {{anl|Albert Abrams}}
* {{anl|Electromagnetic therapy (alternative medicine)}}
* {{anl|List of ineffective cancer treatments}}
* {{anl|Medical applications of radio frequency}}
* {{anl|Pulsed radiofrequency#Therapeutic uses}}


== References == == References ==

{{Reflist|2}}
{{refs}}


== External links == == External links ==

* , a site promoting Rife's claims
* from the ] * from the ]
* from the ] * from the ]


{{Authority control}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see ]. -->

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| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION =
| DATE OF BIRTH = 1888-05-16
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 1971-08-05
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Rife, Royal}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Rife, Royal}}
] ]
] ]
] ]
]
]
] ]
] ]
] ]
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]
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Latest revision as of 03:59, 13 November 2024

American inventor (1888–1971)

Royal Raymond Rife
Royal Raymond Rife in his Lab
Born(1888-05-16)May 16, 1888
Elkhorn, Nebraska, U.S.
DiedAugust 5, 1971(1971-08-05) (aged 83)
El Cajon, California U.S.
NationalityAmerican
OccupationInventor
Known forMicroscopes and Rife’s device
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Royal Raymond Rife (May 16, 1888 – August 5, 1971) was an American inventor and early exponent of high-magnification time-lapse cine-micrography.

Rife is known for his microscopes, which he claimed could observe live microorganisms with a magnification considered impossible for his time, and for an "oscillating beam ray" invention, which he thought could treat various ailments by "devitalizing disease organisms" using radio waves. Although he came to collaborate with scientists, doctors and inventors of the epoch, and his findings were published in newspapers and scientific journals like the Smithsonian Institution annual report of 1944, they were later rejected by the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Cancer Society (ACS) and mainstream science.

Rife's supporters continue to claim that impulses of electromagnetic frequencies can disable cancerous cells and other microorganisms responsible for diseases. Most of these claims have no scientific research to back them up, and Rife machines are not approved for treatment by any health regulator. Multiple promoters have been convicted of health fraud and sent to prison.

Life and work

Royal Raymond Rife (age 43) in Popular Science Magazine (June 1931)

Little reliable published information exists describing Rife's life and work. In the 1930s, he made several optical compound microscopes and, using a movie camera, took time-lapse microscopy movies of microbes. He also built microscopes that included polarizers. Rife claimed magnifications of 17,000× or more for some of these microscopes.

A report published by the Smithsonian Institution described one of these microscopes as equipped for "transmitted and monochromatic beam dark-field, polarized, and slit-ultra illumination, including also a special device for crystallography". It added that several doctors had attended a demonstration of another of Rife's microscopes and had been impressed by its clarity and high magnification.

A distinctive feature of the microscopes, according to Rife and to other scientists who examined them, was a false-colour effect by which, when a microbe was illuminated by a particular wavelength of polarised monochromatic light, different for each type of microbe, the microbe and only the microbe would emit a distinctive colour of light (turquoise for typhoid bacteria, ruby red for Mycobacterium leprae, etc.), thus taking the place of staining and allowing otherwise difficult organisms to be plainly seen.

Some of the observations Rife claimed to have made with his microscopes are, however, contradicted by modern findings. For instance, he reported that under certain conditions typhoid bacteria changed into a much smaller form, and claimed that most cancerous tumours contained a microbe that had no less than five forms, one of which was indistinguishable from E. coli while another resembled a fungus.

Rife also reported that a 'beam ray' device of his invention could destroy microbial pathogens. Rife claimed to have documented a "Mortal Oscillatory Rate" for various pathogenic organisms, and to be able to destroy the organisms by vibrating them using radio waves of this particular frequency. According to the San Diego Evening Tribune in 1938, Rife stopped short of claiming that he could cure cancer, but did argue that he could "devitalize disease organisms" in living tissue, "with certain exceptions". In a 1931 profile, Rife warned against "medical fakers" who claim to cure disease using "electrical 'vibrations'", stating that his work did not uphold such claims.

Rife machine (1922)

An obituary in the Daily Californian described his death at the age of 83 on August 5, 1971, stating that he died penniless and embittered by the failure of his devices to garner scientific acceptance. Rife blamed the scientific rejection of his claims on a conspiracy involving the American Medical Association (AMA), the Department of Public Health, and other elements of "organized medicine", which had "brainwashed and intimidated" his colleagues.

Health fraud after his death

Interest in Rife's claims was revived in some alternative medical circles by the 1987 book by Barry Lynes, The Cancer Cure That Worked, which claimed that Rife had succeeded in curing cancer, but that his work was suppressed by a powerful conspiracy headed by the American Medical Association. The American Cancer Society (ACS) describes Lynes' claims as implausible, noting that the book was written "in a style typical of conspiratorial theorists", and that Lynes "... cites names, dates, events and places, giving the appearance of authenticity to a mixture of historical documents and speculations selectively spun into a web far too complex to permit verification by any thing short of an army of investigators with unlimited resources."

After this book's publication, a variety of devices bearing Rife's name were marketed as cures for diverse diseases such as cancer and AIDS. Some used radio waves as in the original experiments, some used other methods such as a pulsed electric current or pulsed electromagnetic fields at the correct frequencies, or what the manufacturers believed to be the correct frequencies. An analysis by Electronics Australia found that one typical 'Rife device' cost AU$105 for a rudimentary circuit that simply produced a tiny pulsed electrical current (at a single fixed frequency of about 40kHz). It consisted of a nine-volt battery, wiring, a switch, a standard 555 timer chip and two short lengths of copper tubing meant to act as handheld electrodes, delivering a current which the author estimated at 1 milliamp at most. Its design was, in fact, almost identical to the "zapper" device promoted by Hulda Clark, rather than having much in common with Rife's original devices. He described this as "the tip of an enormous iceberg", with a wide range of more elaborate devices also on sale from different suppliers, varying widely in design and ranging in price from AU$1,500 to AU$34,000.

Such 'Rife devices' have figured prominently in several cases of health fraud in the U.S., typically centered around the uselessness of the devices and the grandiose claims with which they are marketed. In a 1996 case, the marketers of a 'Rife device' claiming to cure numerous diseases including cancer and AIDS were convicted of felony health fraud. The sentencing judge described them as "target the most vulnerable people, including those suffering from terminal disease" and providing false hope. In some cases cancer patients who ceased chemotherapy and instead used these devices have died. A Washington State couple Donald and Sharon Brandt, who operated a clandestine health-care clinic from their home in Mount Vernon based on Rife's inventions were convicted for a short imprisonment period. Rife devices are currently classified as a subset of radionics devices, which are generally viewed as pseudomedicine by mainstream experts. In Australia, the use of Rife machines has been blamed for the deaths of cancer patients who might have been cured with conventional therapy. In 2002 John Bryon Krueger, who operated the Royal Rife Research Society, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for his role in a murder and also received a concurrent 30-month sentence for illegally selling Rife devices. In 2009 a U.S. court convicted James Folsom of 26 felony counts for sale of the Rife devices sold as 'NatureTronics', 'AstroPulse', 'BioSolutions', 'Energy Wellness', and 'Global Wellness'.

Legacy

In 1994, the American Cancer Society's journal CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians criticized Rife's methods and devices in an article titled "Questionable Methods of Cancer Management: Electronic Devices". The ACS reported that Rife machines were being sold in a "pyramid-like, multilevel marketing scheme". A key component in the marketing of Rife devices has been the claim, initially put forward by Rife himself, that the devices were being suppressed by an establishment conspiracy against cancer "cures". Although 'Rife devices' are not registered by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and have been linked to deaths among cancer sufferers, The Seattle Times reported that over 300 people attended the 2006 Rife International Health Conference in Seattle, where dozens of unregistered devices were sold.

Cancer Research UK, the world's largest independent cancer research charity, has stated:

"There is no reliable evidence that the Rife machine works as a cure for cancer.... There is also no evidence that it doesn't cause harm.... Many websites promote the Rife machine as a cure for cancer. But no reputable scientific cancer organisations support any of these claims."

A 2000 article in The Sydney Morning Herald warned:

"Cancer sufferers have died after putting their faith in a device with electrical parts worth just $15" (equivalent to $27 in 2023), further reporting that Rife machines are "unanimously condemned as worthless by mainstream scientists and banned in at least two American States."

See also

References

  1. "Dr Royal Raymond Rife (1888-1971)". Find a Grave Memorial. August 5, 1971. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  2. "Local Man Bares Wonders of Germ Life: Making Moving Pictures of Microbe Drama". San Diego Union. November 3, 1929.
  3. ^ H. H. Dunn (June 1931). "Movie New Eye of Microscope in War on Germs". Popular Science. 118 (6): 27, 141. ISSN 0161-7370.
  4. "Bacilli Revealed by New Microscope; Dr. Rife's Apparatus, Magnifying 17,000 Times, Shows Germs Never Before Seen". The New York Times. 1931-11-22. p. 19.
  5. ^ Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution. Smithsonian Institution. 1944. p. 207ff.
  6. ^ Kendall, Arthur Isaac; Rife, Royal (December 1931). "Observations On Bacillus Typhosus In Its Filterable State: A Preliminary Communication". California and Western Medicine. XXXV (6): 409–11. PMC 1658030. PMID 18741967.
  7. ^ Jones, Newell (1938-05-06). "Dread Disease Germs Destroyed By Rays, Claim Of S.D. Scientist: Cancer Blow Seen After 18-year Toil by Rife". San Diego Evening Tribune. p. 1.
  8. ^ Hood, Del (1971-08-11). "Scientific Genius Dies: Saw Work Discredited". Daily Californian.
  9. ^ "Questionable methods of cancer management: electronic devices". CA Cancer J Clin. 44 (2): 115–27. 1994. doi:10.3322/canjclin.44.2.115. PMID 8124604. S2CID 31481316.
  10. "The Rife Machine Report, Chapter 14". rifevideos.com. Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  11. "The Rife Machine Report, Chapter 24". rifevideos.com. Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  12. Ringas, Jason. "Rife and R.I.F.E. machines defined". Rife Research, Europe. Retrieved 13 July 2024.
  13. Rowe, Jim (January 1998). "Forum". Electronics Australia.
  14. Farley, Dixie (September 1996). "Investigators' Reports". FDA Consumer. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Archived from the original on September 10, 2016. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  15. "Investigators' Reports". FDA Consumer. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. September 1996. Archived from the original on 2007-12-14. Retrieved 2009-01-09.
  16. Stephen Barrett. "Rife Machine Operator Sued". Quackwatch. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
  17. ^ Willmsen, Christine; Michael J. Berens (2007-12-21). "Pair indicted on fraud charges in medical-device probe". Seattle Times. Retrieved 2008-04-24.
  18. "Makers of Unapproved Device Sentenced".
  19. ^ Hills, Ben (30 December 2000). "Cheating Death". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016.
  20. Stephen Barrett. "Rife Device Marketers Convicted". Quackwatch. Retrieved 2009-08-07.
  21. Cancer Research UK (2018-11-12). "Rife machines". Cancer Research UK.

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