The memory of water, Luc Montagnier, July 2014 - Note: The - TopicsExpress



          

The memory of water, Luc Montagnier, July 2014 - Note: The video subtitles were tanslated with google toolkit so is not a perfect translation! - Translated description from french: Died in 2004, Jacques Benveniste, researcher at Inserm, was at the center of a global controversy with his thesis on the memory of water. Applying this theory to its own research, the Nobel Prize in medicine Luc Montagnier has made a surprising finding that may cause a revolution in medical... The origin of life on Earth, water is essential to the survival of the species. But for some scientists, this fundamental element would be unsuspected capacities. In the 1980s, a doctor renowned immunologist, Jacques Benveniste, claimed to have discovered that water would be able to keep in mind the properties of the molecules with which it has been in contact, even when they are not there more. An amazing theory which was the subject of a huge controversy. Quickly, the validity of its work was put into doubt and Benveniste, rejected by the scientific community. But, driven by curiosity, Luc Montagnier, Nobel Prize in medicine for the discovery of HIV, resumed his research. As soon as the first experiment on blood plasma of patients infected with the AIDS virus, it detects electromagnetic waves. It was a real surprise. I do not expect and I was fascinated by this phenomenon,remembers the doctor virologist, who immediately thinkmedical applications . To highlight the amazing properties of the water discovered by those he considers the Galileo of the 20th century, Luc Montagnier has decided to lift the veil on its current research and proposes to carry out, before the camera, an eye-opening experience: the transduction of DNA. Towards the digital biology? The DNA molecules of a patient infected with HIV highly diluted in sterile water are placed on an electromagnetic wave sensor connected to a computer. The resulting signal, digitized, is then sent by mail to the University of Sannio of Benevento, Italy. After setting out a tube of pure water to these digitized waves, the transalpine team uses PCR, a revolutionary technique that allows you to replicate a DNA sequence. Against all odds, a molecule identical to 98 per cent at the Paris original was well restored in aqueous solution. The water would thus have a memory! And electromagnetic waves have the same properties as the material which has issued. How is it possible? Hard to say, because the problem that currently, it is that it requires biologists to be the time of physicists and chemists, and it, it is not necessarily easy for them, explains Marc Henry, Professor of chemistry and quantum physics at the University of Strasbourg. For Pr Luc Montagnier, who is already working on applications concerning HIV/AIDS, autism, some sclerosis, diseases Alzheimers and Parkinsons, the opportunities are immense. Because this discovery would call into question the current medical approach, both in terms of diagnosis and of therapy - the human body being composed 70% water. The day where it is assumed therefore that waves can act, we can act by waves, said Luc Montagnier. And at this time there can be treated by the waves. It is a new field of medicine that scares the pharmaceutical industry. » Amandine Deroubaix Documentary; Duration 52 Author Christian Manil Director Christian Manil and Laurent Lichtenstein Production Doc en Stock, with the participation of France Télévisions Year 2013 france5.fr/et-vous/France-... https://youtube/watch?v=eFiWtN2jL6k&feature=share
Posted on: Tue, 27 Jan 2015 15:07:18 +0000

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