Rolfe
Adult human female
<pedant mode>Just the obligatory note that "phenomena" is a plural word. The singular form is "phenomenon".</pedant mode>
Rolfe.
Rolfe.
Is water's memory storage infinite? Or is it reset by some process?
If infinite, where is all the information coming from? Is it being extracted from the ambient universe, or actually created in the water?
Created memory? ..hmm?
What happens when the water is absorbed into an organic body? Do my cells remember being a duck?
What about water of crystallisation? (Surely the best candidate for memorable water). Does a rock remember being in the ocean?
Can this memory be interrogated? Can we regenerate a T-Rex from a teaspoon of seawater?
What happens when water evaporates? Does water vapour retain the memory? If not- where does the information go? Can we learn about chemistry by putting our head (covered with a suitable cloth) over a bowl of steaming water and inhaling the vapour?
If a hom solution of silica is put in a glass bottle, it may actually absorb more Si02 molecules from the glass than are in it to start with. Does this decrease the effect? If so, should the patient drink less?
Funny, once you start running your brain backwards, it starts to gather momentum. Can this be why homoeopaths find it so hard to stop?
I wonder what transferring somebody's spinal fluid might do...
<pedant mode>Just the obligatory note that "phenomena" is a plural word. The singular form is "phenomenon".</pedant mode>
Rolfe.
Actually you can edit headings. Just go into advanced edit mode. You have only limited time. Not sure if there any other restrictions.The curse of not being able to edit headings. As soon as I posted it I was kicking myself over this typo.
Thanks anyway.
Athon
No! You have it all wrong! Water only retains a memory when it is treated in the right way. This means shaking it vigorously by a qualified person in the right way. In this way water will retain a memory. Otherwise it will not have any memory.
But even then we could have computers with enormous memory!
<in my best Bill Clinton voice>Well that depends on what the meaning of "it" is.Having it shaken vigorously by a qualified person in the right way is illegal under at least six statutes around here...