Healing Crystals and Gemstones: From Amethyst to Zircon
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Average customer review:Product Description
A comprehensive listing of the therapeutic uses and healing effects of the most important crystals and gemstones.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #47130 in Books
- Published on: 2004-11-01
- Binding: Hardcover
- 302 pages
Customer Reviews
Dangeous nonsense
This book is typical of the "healing crystal" literature: a lack of understanding of basic geology and chemistry, combined with healing claims that are not substantiated in any way, resulting in dangerous advice for people with serious health conditions.
The book is littered with errors. Even the very first sentence is incorrect, when it claims that all gemstones originate from hot magma. (Opal, for example, can be sedimentary.) The authors claim "jasper ... always has a trigonal structure", when in fact jasper essentially doesn't form crystals at all. On page 150, the authors claim that fluorite is "also known as feldspar", when in fact feldspar is an entirely different mineral. On page 75, the authors confuse native antimony with the mineral stibnite, which is actually antimony sulfide. On page 85 the authors claim that that aragonite is silicon dioxide, not calcium carbonate. The mineral Charoite is consistently misspelled as "Chaorite". They claim that the crystal structure of Herkimer diamonds is similar to that of real diamond, when in fact they crystallize in completely different systems. They claim that kunzite is "aluminum acetate-lithium", when in fact it is a lithium aluminum silicate; no acetate at all is contained in it. They claim that Magnesite "consists almost entirely of pure magnesium", when in fact it is just magnesium carbonate. They claim that Magnesite "was first discovered in Africa", when in fact its co-type localities are in Greece and Italy.
The authors recommend the use of various minerals without noting health problems associated with them. Fr example, the authors recommend actinolite to stimulate "the inner organs such as the liver and the kidneys", but fail to note that the tiny fibers of actinolite have been associated with severe and potentially life-threatening respiratory disorders. They recommend using orpiment "externally as a powder to treat sexual disorders", but this is not a good idea, as orpiment is arsenic sulfide.
But the most serious problem with the book is the repeated and unsubstantiated health claims, all made without a single reference to any study in support of them. Someone with serious health problems might be persuaded to use the entirely ineffective remedies suggested in this book instead of seeking effective medical treatment. Cancer is unlikely to be helped by toumaline, sugilite, or lapis lazuli. High blood pressure cannot be improved with sodalite, lapis, or chrysoprase. Diabetes sufferers will find no relief with citrine or pyrite. Kidney ailments will not be improved with jade. For ulcers you should see your family doctor, not wear jasper or topaz.
I doubt this review will persuade many people, but they should ask: how was all this "knowledge" assembled? Where are the studies? How could a reader check if the authors were simply making all this up?
great book but pages fell out
This is a great book as far as the contents but after looking thru the book a couple of times several pages were falling out.
Healing Crystals and Gemstones: From Amethyst to Zircon
This book is a very handy book. I reference it very often. It has nice clear pictures and detailed descriptions on a wide variety of different crystals and gemstones. Over all a very good and informative book.





