Draft:Bill Cox
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Comment: Wikipedia is not the place to promote pseudoscience. I’ve never seen the phrase “alternative science” before, but the obvious comparison point is alternative facts, i.e. lies. —pythoncoder (talk | contribs) 18:10, 2 January 2026 (UTC)
Comment: The title of this draft either has been disambiguated or will need to be disambiguated for acceptance.If the title of this draft has been disambiguated, submitters and reviewers are asked to check the disambiguated title to see if it is the most useful disambiguation, and, if necessary, rename this draft. If this draft is accepted, the disambiguation page will need to be edited. Either an entry will need to be added, or an entry will need to be revised. Please do not edit the disambiguation page or insert a link to this draft unless you are accepting this draft.The disambiguation page for the primary name is William Cox.You may ask for advice about disambiguation at the Teahouse. Bobby Cohn 🍁 (talk) 16:41, 2 January 2026 (UTC)
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Bill Cox is an American dowsing instructor, consultant, author, and researcher whose work focuses on radiesthesia, form-energy concepts, and fields sometimes described as marginal or alternative sciences. Active for more than forty years, Cox has conducted instructional workshops and consulting projects internationally and has written books, articles, and instructional media on dowsing practices and related subjects.[1]
Background and influences
Cox cites dowser and experimenter Verne L. Cameron as a significant early mentor and influence on his professional development in radiesthesia and dowsing practices.[1] His work has emphasized what he describes as “form energy” and rediscovered or ancient understandings of energetic phenomena associated with geometric structures.
Research and field investigations
Over the course of his career, Cox has participated in more than twenty exploratory expeditions to locations including Egypt, Mexico, South America, India, and various island regions.[1] These investigations have been described as efforts to gather observational and experimental information related to orientation, electrical and magnetic readings, ionic and sound measurements, and other site-based effects interpreted within intuitive or subjective-physics frameworks.
Complementary to his dowsing research, Cox reports undertaking a multi-decade study of the feng shui landform tradition, particularly its treatment of earth–sky alignment and spatial energy relationships.[1]
Publications and media
For nine years, Cox edited and published the bi-monthly international newsletter The Pyramid Guide, which ran for 55 issues and focused on experimental work relating to pyramidal forms and geometric cavity resonators.[1]
He has authored several books and manuals on dowsing and form-energy research and has produced instructional media including the 55-minute film and DVD Discover Dowsing and a later program titled A Dowsing Workshop.[1] Cox has also appeared on a number of radio and television programs discussing dowsing and marginal-science research.
Instruction and consulting
Cox has conducted workshops, training clinics, and lectures on five continents, providing instruction in dowsing instruments and methods to students and professionals.[1] As a consultant, he has reported work in locating water, oil, minerals, and other subsurface resources for governments, developers, utilities, mining operators, and private clients. Within dowsing communities, he is frequently associated with primary water exploration and map dowsing, the latter employed as a remote reconnaissance technique prior to field investigation.[1]
Professional affiliations
Cox was a charter member and secretary of the U.S. Psychotronics Association from 1974 to 1978. He has also been described as an honorary advisor and contributing author to Akademia Okamoto in Japan, an organization focused on alternative technology studies and research.[1]
Selected works
Editor and publisher, The Pyramid Guide (55 issues)
Discover Dowsing (film and DVD; 55 minutes)
A Dowsing Workshop (instructional program)
Books and manuals on dowsing and form-energy research (eight titles reported)
See also
References
Category:Dowsers Category:American non-fiction writers Category:Alternative science Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
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