This article examines the human body's genuine electrical and magnetic properties, separating settled science from contested research and from unsupported popular claims. It reviews the real, peer-reviewed field of biomagnetism, including the 1963 first measurement of the magnetocardiogram and clinical magnetoencephalography, while precisely scoping the extreme weakness of these fields relative to Earth's magnetic field. It examines the action potential, the real electrochemical mechanism (Hodgkin and Huxley, 1952) underlying every nerve impulse in the human body, and the 2002 discovery of melanopsin-containing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (Berson, Hattar, and colleagues) as the actual mechanism behind circadian light entrainment. It examines the genuinely contested research on grounding (earthing), including documented findings of reduced pain and improved sleep alongside a 2022 systematic review's finding of insufficient evidence and pervasive industry funding conflicts, and reviews the real but scientifically unconfirmed cultural tradition of directional sleep practice in Vastu Shastra and Feng Shui. The article explicitly names and defines pseudophysics and vitalism as documented patterns in alternative medicine discourse, distinguishing naturopathy's evidence-based core (sleep hygiene, nutrition, hydration, stress reduction) from its unproven vitalistic claims, and concludes with a practical framework for engaging with the body's real signaling systems without overstating what current science has actually confirmed.
Narayan Rout (Sun,) studied this question.