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Quantum Life PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 23 May 2010 20:47

Researchers at University of Toronto were surprised to see quantum entanglement exhibited in photosynthesis.  Living things have direct access to the five-dimensional properties of the Aether, thus the ability to perform work received from sunlight can activate several proteins at once.

According to the Aether Physics Model, photons are five dimensional structures and take advantage of an extra dimension of frequency, which is not seen by physical matter.  This means the photons can take back door routes outside of our normal space-time reference.  This gives the appearance of energy manifesting in several places at once and also connecting information to several different locations without the appearance of "hard wiring."

In our macro world, such transfers of information are called "paranormal" events.  Since the five-dimensional Aether is not accepted by mainstream science, anything on the macro world involving quantum entanglement falls under the category of pseudo-science.

When quantum entanglement is witnessed by physicists, however, they explain this with the absurd idea that the quantum world works through probability functions.  Probability theory is used because the underlying structure is not understood.  Without the five-dimensional Aether, it is not possible to understand the mechanics driving photons carrying information between two or more seemingly unrelated locations.

Regardless of whether the mainstream chooses to investigate the non-material reality of Aether, those of us on the cutting edge can gain insights from these physics experiments.

If sunlight landing on algae can send energy and information to physically unconnected locations within the living system, it can also share it with different organisms.  Thus we can infer energy received from plants through photosynthesis can also share this energy with humans living in an environment filled with plants.

Many people are already aware of the extra vitality available from growing plants in homes and cultivating a harmonious biosphere in the space surrounding the home, place of work, and other locations.

Last Updated on Sunday, 23 May 2010 21:12
 
Chirality in Biology PDF Print E-mail
Written by David Thomson   
Monday, 15 February 2010 20:22

In the June 2009 edition of Photonics Spectra, Hank Hogan writes about chirality, or the preferred winding direction of biological molecules.  He states:

Chirality

Many molecules, organic and otherwise, exhibit chirality, or handedness. This leads to circular polarization of scattered light. Inorganic materials are a jumble of left- or right-handedness, and the resulting aggregate circular polarization is almost nonexistent.

That’s not the case for living things, however. Life is self-replicating, Sparks said. That leads to selection pressure for either left- or right-handed versions of a particular biomolecule. All known life on Earth, for example, uses only left-handed amino acids in proteins and right-handed sugars in nucleic acids.

The purpose of Hogan's article was to describe the physics behind the search for life on other planets.  The fact that chirality exists at all demonstrates the importance of geometry in molecular structures.

It follows that if living organisms build specific geometries of molecules, then those particular geometries represent the ideal state for molecules, which will appear in the diets of other living organisms.

Udo Erasmus, in his book, Fats That Heal, Fats That Kill, explains in detail the importance of curved fat molecules in the diet.  He cites research, which reveals fat molecules alter to a straight geometry when heated.  Thus fried fats are dangerous to the body because the fat molecule geometry altered to a straight geometry, which means the fats will now solidify at a warmer temperature. Solidified fats in a body means clogged arteries, clogged organs, and clogged joints.

The chirality observation of specific molecules in living organisms also suggests healing technologies involving rotating magnetic fields.  It follows that some weakened molecules might be conditioned to ideal chirality if they are treated with a rotating magnetic field, which might reform molecules to their ideal geometry.

DNA is another important molecular structure of the body.  It too, possesses the property of chirality in the form of a double helix.  As living organisms age, the DNA and RNA tend to become brittle and malformed.  Scientific experiments with DNA demonstrate its return to suppleness and flexibility when exposed to rotating magnetic fields.

Last Updated on Monday, 15 February 2010 20:50