Luc Bürgin Explained

Luc Bürgin (19 August 1970 – 11 May 2024) was a Swiss writer, publicist, and journalist. From 1996 to 2002, Bürgin studied German literature, folklore, musicology, media studies and sociology at the University of Basel. He has served as a journalist for Basler Zeitung Medien and as editor in chief of Baslerstab. He is best known for his writings on fringe science and popular science. Bürgin died on 11 May 2024, at the age of 53.[1]

Der Urzeit-Code

Published in 2007, Bürgin's book Der Urzeit-Code (The Primeval Code), is a popular science book dealing with a patent granted in 1980 to the chemical company Ciba-Geigy (now Novartis), which deals with the process of electroculture, which helped to increase the resilience of crops and reduce the use of pesticides on treated crops. The book details reports and interviews that document the effect of the electroculture process which had not been previously explained scientifically. In the book, Bürgin presents electroculture as a more ecologically-friendly alternative to genetic engineering.

Works

References

1. https://web.archive.org/web/20121105104612/http://tatjana.ingold.ch/index.php?id=goetterspuren

2. http://literaturtest.net/text/buch/rezensio/b/buergin.html

3. Commercial Register: Dr. A. Hedri Foundation for Exopsychology and Epipsychology.

4. http://www.easymonitoring.ch/handelsregister/dr-a-hedri-stiftung-fuer-exopsychologie-und-epipsychologie-275592 Easymonitoring AG, 23 June 2003, accessed on 2 February 2014 .

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.hommages.ch/de/traueranzeige/luc-burginhttps://www.bundle.app/de/technologie/ph%C3%A4nomene-journalist-und-autor-luc-burgin-verstorben-B522597C-9EFF-4D10-A46E-FED0AEC87EBC Phänomene-Journalist und Autor Luc Bürgin verstorben