Quantifying the amount of orgone energy inside an orgonotic system is of paramount importance for scientific and application purposes. Besides, development of standards for measurement instruments, systems and procedures is mandatory for a better understanding of the orgone energy behavior and concentrations, and for comparison purposes.
The presentation makes an historical overview of the instruments and procedures to measure orgone energy concentrations and fields in simple and complex, open and closed orgonotic systems. Measurement systems and procedures were developed by Reich in the 1940s, and subsequently by Stark, a Swiss physicist, in the 1970s. Nowadays, the only instrument specifically available for the measurement of orgone energy is the Heliognosis LM4 device and its modified scanning version. The LM4 instrument has been developed according to the same principles of the Reich’s Orgone Energy Field Meter. It measures the intensity of the orgone field radiated by living and non-living organisms.
Many are the practical applications of the measures obtained by the LM4:
a) monitoring the general health state of an individual
b) testing water and other liquid samples
c) analyzing food products by determining their energy content
d) studying plants and planning nutrients requirements
e) comparing liquid solutions for health benefits
f) scientific research into life processes
g) testing of alternate energy devices for unconventional energy fields
h) experimenting with accumulators and blankets.
Examples of measurements on vegetable substances and living organisms (taken from the literature) and on fluid substances (data from author’s lab measures) have been discussed in the presentation.









