You are right that just randomly moving magnets over parts of the body is not likely to produce statistically relevant improvements in health. However, don't confuse that with what Levin's lab is doing. Levin is trying to discover the inherent intercellular "electrical" programming that controls the development and healing of the body and organs. That is why he is looking to add specialists in network/systems analysis and programming, instead of people who can put a bunch of magnets together.
Well, they say to use the device about 9" away I think they said but said it will work up against the body or as much as 3' away. Magnetic fields drop off very sharply, especially for small magnets. The field would be strong right at the machine, much weaker at 9 inches and imperceptible except for a sensitive instrument at 3 feet.
Is it the rate of spin that makes a difference between this and the many random magnetic fields we are likely to encounter during the day including weak ones? Since its spinning, its not like each magnet is aligned with a certain part of the body. I read the part about how to build one and I probably missed a link to something but it seemed like extremely vague instructions. All I see is a hemisphere with some magnets stuck to the inside and a motor to rotate it
I'll grant you that he is working on it, trying to find the right way to do it but this device sounds more and more like quackery. Maybe he slapped this together to make money to fund the real research?
Here is a quote
"The PrimerCube produces a rotating magnetic field that no other device currently available is capable of producing. In our research, the unique field emitted by this device provides health benefits offered by no other known technology"
In what way is this unique? No other device is "capable" of producing this field?
"The PrimerCube contains a patented magnetic array. Our research indicates that this magnetic array creates a uniquely structured ionic field. This ionic field produces unparalleled health benefits"
"ionic field"?? what on earth does that mean? I even did a search on that term and it seems to be meaningless. Magnetic fields do not ionize as far as I'm aware. And the "patented magnetic array" does that mean the order in which they placed the magnets does the trick?
I'm sorry but this device, or at least the way they explain it reeks of scam. It puts up more red flags than a chinese communist party meeting. An nmr, nuclear magnetic resonance machine creates much more powerful fields than any magnet you can buy over the counter. I haven't heard about any health benefits except for being able to see things in the body.
I am not dismissing bioelectricity. Neither do I dismiss Levin's research, but putting out a scam device gives him a black eye and casts doubt on future proclamations. How about some testing and submit a paper to a peer reviewed journal? Then, I would consider trying one, depending on the results. But I'm not holding my breath waiting for that to happen