Roger Coghill still rides.

MRC_Hans

Penultimate Amazing
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Aug 28, 2002
Messages
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Isn't it time we had a look at our old friend Roger Coghill again?

His website seems to have been having a facelift. One of the scams we have been attacking is gone, but the site is still full of lies and woowoo. He even endorses dowsing and homeopathy.

Hans
 
The £2000 ($3000) Coghill Challenge to power utility workers and the NRPB is:

Place any human infant of less than three months age to sleep each night for at least eight hours in an ELF electric field of 100 Volts per metre for thirty days. My studies predict that child will die, or become so seriously ill that the test will have to be called off
Source

Whattamaroon.... :rolleyes:
 
CFLarsen said:
The £2000 ($3000) Coghill Challenge to power utility workers and the NRPB is:

Place any human infant of less than three months age to sleep each night for at least eight hours in an ELF electric field of 100 Volts per metre for thirty days. My studies predict that child will die, or become so seriously ill that the test will have to be called off

Source

Whattamaroon.... :rolleyes:
DUDE! Why would anyone want to take that challenge?!

Sorry, I didnt follow the Bioelectromagnetics thread, but hopefully someone pointed out the serious serious ethical problems with his challenge? (Has he at least considered using a rabbit or lab rat?)
 
Yahweh said:
Sorry, I didnt follow the Bioelectromagnetics thread, but hopefully someone pointed out the serious serious ethical problems with his challenge?
On many, many occasions.
 
http://www.cogreslab.co.uk/prehistory.asp


"As I write, global warming (the infra red radiation problem) has meant the detachment of a iceberg the size of Portugal from Antarctica which is now drifting northward, melting as it goes. This in turn will increase the weight of water pressing down on that and other faultlines...from which there is only one consequence.

Some great stuff at that site. They actually have graduate students on staff at his ‘institute?” How does he make payroll? By selling magic cat beds? Come on!
 
Quote:Place any human infant of less than three months age to sleep each night for at least eight hours in an ELF electric field of 100 Volts per metre for thirty days. My studies predict that child will die, or become so seriously ill that the test will have to be called off:Unquote

The electric field we all live in is typically 100 to 200 V/m with the ground positive (Not in thunderstorms, though, when it can be much greater.
 
One of my favourites is his: http://www.cogreslab.co.uk/brainc2.asp

...snip...

The hypothesis that endogenous electric fields from the brain can influence cellular processes directly without chemical action is tested by examining their influence on lymphocyte viability as shown by trypan blue exclusion.

...snip...

And of course (as it seems nearly all these er... "complementary" sites promise) he can help your sex life with the wonderfully named "Mood Maker"

http://www.galonja.co.uk/galonja_sh...&g_u_nam=&g_tim=&pid=97&v_det=1&full=1&c_id=0

...snip...

Can help with impotency without the use of powerful drugs. The Mood Maker will gently and gradually increase circulation in the pelvic area. The small unit discreetly attaches to your underwear.
Viagra, eat your heart out!!

...snip...

Well I suppose you'll not go blind! ;)
 
Yahweh said:

DUDE! Why would anyone want to take that challenge?!

Sorry, I didnt follow the Bioelectromagnetics thread, but hopefully someone pointed out the serious serious ethical problems with his challenge? (Has he at least considered using a rabbit or lab rat?)

Ethics - don't be silly, this isn't about ethics according to Coghill it is about killing a child to prove his point. What has ethics got to do with this? This is science!

Don’t forget as a condition of the challenge:

...snip...

Write to me or E-mail me in the usual way to enter. Entrants must agree that we will let visitors to our website know the results of this trial, with the outcome verified by the coroner or doctor attending the infant.

...snip...


So if as Coghill claims will happen the child is harmed or even killed all he is bothered about is making sure the killing is publicised on his website for the entertainment of visitors to his site.

I suppose he could offer a video of the experiment and sell that for £9.95, perhaps list it between the Magnetic Cat Bed and the Mood Maker? Should turn a nice penny or two for him.


(Edited for words and formatting.)
 
I also love his absolute nonsense explanation ofPhoton Platinium. Roger seems to think that a conductor of a specific lenght can, via resonance, change the wavelength of an incoming wave :rolleyes:. But then, we have earlier found out that his knowledge of electro theory is sketchy, at best.

And in a beautiful Kumaresque way he manages to build a faulty theory that is useless, even if it were right. Even if this photon platinium could produce the waves he claims, they would just be the same IR waves that the body produces all the time by being 37degC :nope:.

Hans
 
MRC_Hans said:
Isn't it time we had a look at our old friend Roger Coghill again?

His website seems to have been having a facelift. One of the scams we have been attacking is gone, but the site is still full of lies and woowoo. He even endorses dowsing and homeopathy.
Which scam is it that's gone? Not "Asfailure," by any chance?

It seems to have its own web presence: http://www.asphalia.co.uk/ albeit without all of the purple prose that was there when cogreslab.co.uk linked to it. If you follow the link to "Shopping Cart," it takes you straight back to galonja.co.uk, the site of Coghill's online shop, and which seems to share a phone number and postcode with cogreslab.
 
And I love the "Pet Coaster"
Given the choice your pet will always choose to drink magnetic water, they can tell the difference. Magnetic water is more natural. Using a pet coaster ensures that your pet receives maximum benefit from their drinking water. They will love the taste.
I just bet he has double-blind studies supporting this one. ;)

"Magnetic water is more natural"???? :rolleyes:
 
Mojo said:
And I love the "Pet Coaster"I just bet he has double-blind studies supporting this one. ;)

"Magnetic water is more natural"???? :rolleyes:
On this forum he talked about a single trial with his own pet where the level in the "magnetised" bowl went down more quickly....

Rolfe.
 
Re: Re: Roger Coghill still rides.

Mojo said:
Which scam is it that's gone? Not "Asfailure," by any chance?

It seems to have its own web presence: http://www.asphalia.co.uk/ albeit without all of the purple prose that was there when cogreslab.co.uk linked to it. If you follow the link to "Shopping Cart," it takes you straight back to galonja.co.uk, the site of Coghill's online shop, and which seems to share a phone number and postcode with cogreslab.
No, I'm thinking of that silly double spiral pendant with imploded water in it that was supposed to protect you from EM waves. I forget its name, but he had conducted a test on it and we plucked his protocol to little bits in the Bioelectromagnetics thread .

About the pet coaster, in that same thread, he explained his test: His old airdale definitely preferred to magnetic water whenever he watched.

Hans
 
Rolfe said:
On this forum he talked about a single trial with his own pet where the level in the "magnetised" bowl went down more quickly....
Maybe magnetised water is more volatile. ;)
 
Given the choice your pet will always choose to drink magnetic water, they can tell the difference. Magnetic water is more natural. Using a pet coaster ensures that your pet receives maximum benefit from their drinking water. They will love the taste.

This is actually false. Dogs in particular seem to favor really stinky puddle water...
 

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