Guy-Claude Burger

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Guy-Claude Burger (1976)

Guy-Claude Burger (born September 4, 1934 ) is a Swiss cellist, non-fiction author and inventor of instinctotherapy. Originally a musician and physicist , he later founded a special form of raw food nutrition that he called instinctotherapy . He was convicted of child sexual abuse twice , most recently in 2001 to 15 years in prison .

Life

Guy-Claude Burger was born as a musician in Switzerland in 1934 and had a dual career until the early 1960s: As a musician, he was solo cellist with the Zurich Chamber Orchestra ( Bregenz Festival 1963) and with the Ensemble vocal et instrumental de Lausanne , and had guest appearances among others with Yehudi Menuhin . As a physicist, he was an assistant for theoretical and experimental physics at the University of Lausanne .

A cancer ended this raceways, and he began to question his past life in many places. In the field of nutrition he came up with the question of the genetic adaptation of humans to today's diet and believed that he had rediscovered a "nutritional instinct" that had been lost in humans. Due to the threat of death from cancer, he initially pursued this form of nutrition in a self-experiment with the critical and supportive participation of his family. Burger called this type of diet after instinct "Instincto therapy " (later than Anopsologie called) due observation of cases of complete remission verschiedenster diseases. He later supplemented his theoretical approach with what he called metapsychoanalysis .

In 1978, Burger was sentenced to four years in prison in Switzerland for the sexual abuse of his son. He was arrested in Switzerland in 1997 after former supporter Jean Kicin reported sexual assault against ten-year-olds during an Instincto event at the Chateau de Montramé ( Chateau de Montramé ). In 2001, after four years in pre-trial detention, Burger was sentenced in France to a total of 15 years in prison for serious sexual abuse.

Instinctotherapy

In contrast to other raw food diets, according to instinctotherapy , the choice and amount of food to be consumed is based exclusively on the attraction and repulsion signals, which appear individually very different as smell and salivation reflex (when choosing) and taste (when eating).

Burger and his employees have been doing a long-term experiment (not recognized as scientifically designed) for over forty years, the starting point of which is the question of the genetic adaptation of our organism to today's (still relatively new) diet. Based on experience, Burger formulated the "law of the nutritional instinct" as follows:

Every original food that is attractive to the sense of smell and taste is beneficial to the organism. The same applies vice versa: Harmful or useless foods are generally repulsive to the sense of smell and / or taste.

From the theory of evolution , Burger believes to be able to deduce that an animal which was induced by instinct to eat poisonous plants, for example, or to eat an unbalanced diet, would quickly be inferior and fall victim to natural selection. So the nutritional instinct had to adapt over time to the same extent as any other function of the organism. Burger divides the tricks that humans use to change the original food into five groups:

  • Heat denaturation : different types of cooking, heat drying, freezing, deep freezing, irradiating
  • Mechanical denaturation : mixing, seasoning, laying on top of each other, obtaining extracts, grinding, pressing, mixing
  • Use of animal milk and its products
  • Application of chemistry : fertilizers, pesticides, artificial additives, synthetic products, medicines, etc.
  • Artificial selection and certain cultivation and rearing techniques

Burger separately examined the effects of the elimination of non-original foods on the nervous system and the associated psychological processes. Another book on the subject of nutrition and psyche under the conditions of anopsology is in preparation.

Burger extended his teaching to the realm of sex. Sexual acts by adults with children and adolescents are to be approved, since they could expand the intuition of minors into the realm of supernatural premonitions, experiences and knowledge. He calls the corresponding program metapsychoanalysis .

criticism

Nutrition experts like Udo Pollmer refer to Burger's hypotheses as "sometimes dangerous nonsense".

Burger's term "metapsychoanalysis" for the extension of his theories to human sexuality is viewed by critics as an attempt to provide pedosexualism with a scientific basis.

Works

  • Les enfants du crime ou la fonction délinquance , Orkos Edition, Longueville 1990, ISBN 2-906-72202-2
  • The raw food therapy. Nature, enjoyment, health; the secret of instinctotherapy , Heyne, Munich 1999, ISBN 3-453-14465-1

Individual evidence

  1. Bregenz Festival ( Memento of the original from July 23, 2015 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , List of performances as PDF @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / presse.bregenzerfestspiele.com
  2. Swiss music newspaper: Revue musicale suisse , Volume 106. Hug, 1966 (p. 113/179)
  3. ^ Monteverdi: Marienvesper (recorded in 1968, CD 1996) , credits on allmusic.com
  4. Current musicology 9/1969 (p. 228)
  5. Guy-Claude Burger aux assises , L'Express (French)
  6. La victoire d 'Audrey et des victimes de Montramé  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , La République (French)@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.larepublique.com  
  7. Y: Following the nose , Der Spiegel 24/1995