| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Stanley Cohen, DDS, PA - Dr. Stanley Cohen stanleycohenddspa.com | Bobbi Stanley, Clay Aiken’s local dentist, Cary NC | Stanley smilecary.com |
Stanley Burroughs (October 9, 1903 -June 16, 1991) was the inventor of the Master Cleanse or "lemonade" diet, which he published in his book The Master Cleanser, first distributed in the 1950s. Amazon.com reports (as of 2007-04-10) a sales rank of #170 for The Master Cleanser. His later book Healing for The Age of Enlightenment (1976?) promoted pressure points and color therapy, in addition to his dietary theories.
[edit] Early lifeStanley Burroughs was born in New York and raised in Detroit, Michigan. In the 1930s he migrated from the mid-west and settled in Portland, Oregon. He married and had three daughters, and later he divorced, remarried, moved to California and saw little of his earlier family. Although his original interest was in the lumber industry, he was inspired to explore alternative health theories. During his career, he lived in Oregon, California, and Hawaii. Although Buroughs is most famous as the creator for the "Master Cleanser" diet, this diet was only one of numerous alternative health practices he promoted. He was also an advocate of colored light therapy and of deep massage, as well as a practitioner of deep reflexology. He was a strict vegetarian. He was also an occasional but strict[clarification needed] nudist[citation needed]. He began his alternative health practices in the Portland area in the 1940s by conducting lectures and practicing reflexology on regular clients. [edit] Later yearsStanley Burroughs died in Newcastle, California, on June 16, 1991, at the age of 87, after a two-week battle against acute pneumonia. His death certificate also mentions leg fractures, apparently from a fall, and a urinary infection, as contributing conditions to his death. No autopsy was performed. [edit] Controversy And Legal ProblemsDuring his life, he had legal troubles related to his alternative health practices. The California Supreme Court case People v. Burroughs, 35 Cal.3d 824, (1984) gives some indication of Burroughs' legal problems. At his criminal trial in California, Burroughs was convicted of second-degree felony murder, felony practicing medicine without a license, and unlawful sale of cancer treatments. The felony murder charge stems from the jury's finding that the patient's death was a homicide committed by Burroughs while he was engaged in the felonious unlicensed practice of medicine. The California Supreme Court described the facts surrounding the treatment as follows:
While the second-degree murder conviction was reversed by the California Supreme Court (holding that the felony murder jury instruction provided by the trial court was erroneous because felony practicing medicine without a license was not inherently dangerous to human life and could not serve as the predicate offense on which to base liability for felony murder), the court affirmed the other convictions and believed that Burroughs was susceptible to a possible conviction of involuntary manslaughter. 678 P.2d 894 (Cal. 1984). The cleansing regimen employed by Burroughs in this case is more commonly known as the "Master Cleanser." While the California Supreme Court decision in State v. Burroughs represents the culmination of his most significant legal trouble, it was not his only conviction: in 1960 Burroughs was convicted of practicing medicine without a license. 678 P.2d 894, 900 (Cal. 1984). The "Master Cleanser" has been promoted heavily since Burroughs' death, as a means to cleanse ones system and regain energy and health. In promoting this small book, Burroughs is often lauded for his diet and praised for his insights into health practices. Although there are numerous anecdotal accounts of believed health benefits from individuals that have followed the Master Cleanser" program, there is no scientific evidence that the "Master Cleanser" has any health benefits beyond a possible placebo effect. [edit] References
|
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |