Get our latest book recommendations, author news, and competitions right to your inbox.
Table of Contents
About The Book
• Shares scientific research on sunlight therapy and tuberculosis, as well as studies on sunlight with regard to osteoporosis, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, tooth decay, psoriasis, heart disease, and several forms of cancer
• Reveals how the sun can act as a natural disinfectant, killing viruses and bacteria, and how this wisdom was put into use by doctors
• Explains how sunlight affects eyesight, sleep, mental health, and the immune system
For thousands of years, the human race lived in harmony with the sun and used its heat and light as medicine. In recent history, however, with skin cancer on the rise, we have become too focused on the negative effects of the sun. Fortunately, science has made new discoveries showing just how beneficial the sun truly is to our lives.
In this new edition of The Healing Sun, Richard Hobday draws on historical and scientific evidence to explore the many ways that sunlight affects our health and well-being. He shows how the sun acts as a natural disinfectant, killing viruses and bacteria outdoors as well as inside buildings. The author highlights how sunlight therapy has been used to prevent and treat serious health problems like tuberculosis and other infections in the years before antibiotics were developed. Explaining how doctors of the past realized that sunlight and fresh air helped patients recover, he shows how this wisdom was put into use by doctors such as Niels Finsen, Oskar Bernhard, and Auguste Rollier, who each contributed substantially to the development of heliotherapy.
Hobday also examines the role of sunlight in regard to conditions like osteoporosis, rickets, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, tooth decay, psoriasis, heart disease, and several forms of cancer. Exploring the sun’s effects on body and mind, the author reveals how our modern artificially lit lifestyles can throw off our biological rhythms, create stress within the body, and lead to poor sleep as well as worsening eyesight, cataracts, obesity, depression, and weakened immune systems from lack of vitamin D.
Showing why and how we should welcome the healing sun back into our lives, this seminal book reveals how humanity needs sunlight for health and well-being and for vitality and happiness.
Excerpt
This book explores the benefits of exposing your body to the sun, rather than the dangers. It has been written with the aim of restoring a little balance to the currently rather one-sided debate on sunlight and its effects on human health. You may be completely unaware, as I was when I began the research for this book, that in the right hands sunlight is a medicine. Throughout history it has been used to prevent and cure a wide range of diseases, and a few doctors still use its therapeutic properties to good effect. However, at the present time it is widely held amongst certain sections of the medical profession and the population at large that the damaging effects of sunlight on the skin far outweigh any benefits. Public health campaigns reinforce this message in an attempt to curb the annual increase in skin cancers. Any illusions about tanned skin being a sign of health or providing more than minimal protection to further exposure to the sun’s rays seem to have been dispelled. So why read a book on the positive effects of sunlight and sunbathing?
To put it bluntly; your life could depend on it. Sunlight may cause skin cancer, but there is also evidence that it could prevent a number of very common and often fatal diseases: breast cancer; colon cancer; prostate cancer; ovarian cancer; heart disease; multiple sclerosis; and osteoporosis. When combined, the number of people who die from these conditions is far greater than the number of deaths from skin cancer; which is why the current bias against sunlight needs, in my opinion, to be redressed, and why I would advise you to read this book.
But before going any further, let me explain how I came to write this book. Usually books of this kind are written by doctors of medicine, or medical journalists, and not doctors of engineering. However, my background is a little unusual in that for many years, while I was designing or evaluating what could broadly be called solar energy technologies of one form of another -- solar collectors; equipment for use in spacecraft; and energy-efficient buildings -- I was also studying complementary medicine. Working alongside architects on one particular project I became aware of a ‘lost’ tradition of designing sunlit buildings to prevent disease, rather than to save energy, and I became interested in the healing powers of sunlight. I began to study the history of sunlight therapy and found that the physicians who practiced this ancient healing art, and the architects and engineers who supported them in their work, used sunlight very differently from the way many of us do today. As I am particularly fond of sunbathing, and only really feel fit and well when I have a tan, this came as something of a revelation. So, in the following pages I have attempted to summarize what was known about sunlight therapy in the past. In comparing this with some of the latest findings from medical research on sunlight and health I have, as you will see, come to some rather controversial conclusions. In order to understand them fully, I would strongly advise you to read the whole book rather than go straight to the final chapter.
The sun transmits energy in the form of electromagnetic waves: radio waves; microwaves; infrared radiation; visible light; ultraviolet radiation; and x-rays. Only a small amount of the sun’s energy reaches us, as most of it is filtered out by the earth’s atmosphere, so solar radiation at ground level is composed of visible light, and ultraviolet and infrared waves. Until the latter part of the 19th century it was thought that the ‘heat’ of the sun -- what we now know to be the infrared rays -- caused sunburn. Then scientists discovered that it is the ultraviolet component of sunlight which causes the skin to tan, and they began to use ultraviolet radiation on skin diseases. They then found that they could get better results with sunlight itself.
Attitudes towards the sun and its healing powers have changed quite markedly throughout history, because of scientific discoveries of this kind, or changes in fashion. Pale skin has been, and still is, considered desirable in countries with agricultural economies where the majority of the population work outdoors, and where a suntan is the mark of the laboring classes. Down the centuries, the well-to-do have done their best to keep the sun at bay. Society ladies used veils, parasols, wide-brimmed hats and even skin-whiteners to keep their complexions ‘pale and interesting’. But in the developed world, where comparatively few people work outside, the opposite applies: tanned skin continues to be fashionable and a sign of prosperity for many people, despite public health campaigns advising against sunbathing. Tanning in order to follow the dictates of fashion has little to do with health. A ‘vanity tan’ has little in common with the forgotten art of sunbathing for health. By the same token, enjoyment and appreciation of sunlight is very different from the carefully considered use of the sun’s rays to treat serious diseases.
Sunlight therapy has a habit of being discovered and then falling from favor, and when this happens it disappears almost without trace, sometimes for hundreds of years. It was very popular at the beginning of the 20th century, but has since seen a dramatic reversal in its fortunes with the result that a great deal of knowledge about the healing powers of sunlight has been ignored or forgotten. Did you know, for example, that sunlight kills bacteria and is quite capable of doing so even when it has passed through window glass? Also, were you aware that sunlit hospital wards have less bacteria in them than dark wards, and that patients recover faster in wards which admit the sun? Perhaps not, but as infections actually caught in hospital are now the fourth most common cause of death after heart disease, cancer and strokes, it is worth bearing in mind.
In fact, your forebears were probably better informed about the sun’s healing properties than you are: people hold very different views on sunbathing depending on when they were alive and where they happen to live. Take, for example, a typical well-educated resident of Essen or any industrial city in Germany in the 1920s. Let us say he had served in the German army during the Great War, was wounded, and returned home having recovered from his injuries. Someone in these circumstances would have held sunlight in much higher regard than many of us do today. He would probably been aware of the scientific discoveries that had been made about light in the years immediately before the war: in 1903 the Nobel Prize for medicine was awarded to the Danish physician, Niels Finsen, in recognition of his success in treating tuberculosis of the skin with ultraviolet radiation. Then again, during the war military surgeons may have used sunlight to disinfect and heal his wounds at a sunlight therapy clinic in the Black Forest, or a similar institution in the Swiss Alps. Had he contracted tuberculosis on his return to Germany, sunlight therapy, or heliotherapy as it became known, might have been used to aid his recovery. The physicians who supervised the treatment of his wounds or tuberculosis would have paid very close attention to the way he responded to sunlight and, in particular, how well his skin tanned. In those days, the deeper the tan, the better the cure.
Sunbathing for health in this way required the services of skilled physicians who knew precisely the conditions most favorable for their patients: the best time of day to expose them to the sun; the best time of year; the correct temperature for sunbathing; what foods to give; how much exercise to allow in each case; which type of cloud cover would let enough of the sun’s rays through to cause burning and so on. Then, as now, the overriding concern was to prevent burning; but it was the actual process of tanning which dictated the progress of the treatment and whether or not it was successful.
During the 1930s sunbathing was encouraged as a public health measure. Diseases such as tuberculosis and rickets were common in the industrial cities of Europe and North America at this time and it became accepted practice to expose anyone considered susceptible to either of them to sunlight. So the sun was used to prevent disease as well as cure it. Also, architects were introducing sunlight into buildings to prevent the spread of infection because, as we have already seen, it kills bacteria. They designed hospitals and clinics for sunlight therapy and even included special window glass so that patients could tan indoors during bad weather -- ordinary window glass prevents tanning because it acts as a barrier to ultraviolet radiation.
In marked contrast to our German friend of the 1920s, someone living in Britain today would have a very different impression of sunlight and its effects on the human body. The received wisdom is that there is no such thing as a safe or healthy tan, and that a tan is a sign of damaged skin trying to protect itself from further injury. Children and adults are advised to protect themselves from the sun; particularly during periods of sunny weather during the spring and early summer. They are to avoid the sun between the hours of 11 am and 3 pm and protect themselves with T-shirts, hats and sunscreens. As you can see, there has been a complete reversal in thinking on the subject.
Reasons for the current antipathy towards the sun are not hard to find. After the Second World War, improvements in housing and nutrition led to a marked decrease in the incidence of the very diseases which sunlight had been used to treat. When antibacterial drugs such as penicillin and streptomycin became widely available in the 1950s, medical practice changed out of all recognition. These new drugs offered the prospect of rapid cures for a wide range of infections, and so the hygienic and medicinal properties of sunlight were no longer considered to be as important as they had been. Sunlight therapy became unfashionable, and was soon relegated to the position of historical curiosity.
More recently there has been a great deal of emphasis on the harmful effects of sunlight. There is now a ‘hole’ in the ozone layer to worry about, as well as a year-on-year increase in the incidence of skin cancer. Sunlight is undoubtedly a powerful accelerator of skin ageing, and can trigger cancer in susceptible individuals but, paradoxically, it is essential to our health. The human body needs sunlight to manufacture vitamin D by synthesizing it in the skin. The optimal level of vitamin D for health is not known, and so the amount of sunlight exposure needed to perform this vital function is still very much open to question. What this means is that warnings about sunlight being essentially harmful need to be treated with caution. Sunlight may cause skin cancer but, as you will see in the following pages, there is evidence that the sunlight could be crucial in preventing a number of diseases that are associated with low levels of vitamin D. Also, relatively little importance has been attached to the influence of nutrition in the genesis of skin cancer. Yet the limited amount of research carried out on the subject shows that what you eat determines how your skin responds to sunlight. The proportion of fat in your diet, together with the vitamin and mineral content of your food, could decide how likely you are to sustain skin damage in the sun.
The medical literature on sunbathing is contradictory: one field of investigation highlights the benefits while another stresses the dangers. One of the more unfortunate developments in modern medicine is a trend towards specialization. In these circumstances it is difficult not to be unduly influenced by the views of experts in one field or another and miss the wider picture. It becomes much more difficult to see the wood for the trees or, rather, the sunlight through the trees. Indeed, to fully appreciate the beneficial effects of sunlight it is sometimes advantageous to put aside conventional medical thinking altogether and look to other traditions of healing. Sunlight, when used as a medicine, does not lend itself to the western reductionist method of analysis: trying to fathom its therapeutic effects at a molecular level, to the exclusion of all else, may not be the best way to unlock its secrets.
The physicians who used sunlight on war wounds and diseased bones and joints at the beginning of this century knew sunlight therapy worked but were at a loss to know why. Lacking a scientific theory with which to explain the effectiveness of the treatment they had to rely on a largely empirical approach. One consequence of this is that it has been easy for subsequent generations of doctors to ignore or dismiss their methods and their results, which is regrettable.
There is much that they can teach us so, in addition to reviewing their work, I have briefly examined the ways in which the sun has been used to heal in cultures other than our own. This has entailed going back to the very early history of medicine and that of architecture too as, historically, there have often been close links between medicine and building design. The first physician known to history -- an Egyptian of the 27th century BC called Imhotep -- was also one of the world’s most celebrated architects. . . .
Product Details
- Publisher: Findhorn Press (December 21, 2021)
- Length: 224 pages
- ISBN13: 9781644114025
Raves and Reviews
“This is such a potent and timely book, advocating the life-giving, health-enhancing benefits of pure, neat sunshine. It is timely because Richard rebalances current cultural beliefs that the sun is harmful and, crucially, can also help reduce the spread of Coronavirus and other pathogens. I have long recommended sunshine and fresh air to my clients as a natural way of helping heal depression and other conditions.”
– Michael Hawkins, counselor, in National Health Service (UK) and private practice
“Any connection of the natural world and health peaks my interest, and this thorough exploration of how the sun impacts on our health does not disappoint. You come away with a renewed sense of the power of nature and how, with correctly applied knowledge, it can be harnessed within medicine to fight disease and, in real practical ways, be part of a healthy lifestyle.”
– Clive Witham, LAc, MSc, OMBAcC, acupuncturist and author of Holographic Gua Sha and The Book of Orie
“It’s impressive what Richard Hobday’s comprehensive research reveals about the healing powers of sunlight on diabetes, infections, and even on cancer. With a responsible use of this free life force, we can truly achieve much for our health.”
– Ewald Kliegel, massage therapist, naturopath, and author of Holistic Reflexology
Resources and Downloads
High Resolution Images
- Book Cover Image (jpg): The Healing Power of the Sun 2nd Edition, New Edition of The Healing Sun Trade Paperback 9781644114025