Introduction to research and the co-presence testimonial
What happens after death does not disappear – it changes carrier. JANUSZ SŁAWIŃSKI
For the last seven years of Professor Janusz Sławiński's life, I had the honour and privilege of spending them in his close proximity – a spiritual one, too. We met over a decade earlier, at the Catholic University of Lublin, where I first encountered his work on ultra-weak necrotic radiation – a phenomenon observed and recorded in organisms after death.
This wasn't a metaphor, it was concrete data. Professor Sławiński – a biophysicist who collaborated with Fritz-Albert Popp, among others – was one of the few scientists in Poland who had the courage to investigate borderline phenomena. His publications referred to cellular light, the theory that death is not an immediate cessation of the life process but a release of information in the form of a measurable signal, and above all, to the bioplasmic nature of life, i.e., the assumption that an organism is not merely a chemical or mechanical structure, but a wave-field system in which energy and information…
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