09-05-2016, 07:25 AM
(08-29-2016, 01:58 AM)Shannon Wrote: So there's no such thing as, say, radioactivity? Light? Heat I think you're wrong about there being no such thing as nonphysical energy sources. In fact, I would say that it is actually not even true that physical matter is the majority of all representation of energy.
To elaborate on this, check Gerald Pollack The Fourth Phase of Water. In this book, Pollack argues that there is a fourth crystalline phase of water, besides the phases of ice, damp and liquid. This crystalline phase is used in the body to store UV and infrared light. This is called an "exclusion zone".
That's why I recommend to people to use a lot of incandescent and halogen lamps in their offices, and black lights (preferably 365nm UVA) after 11AM. UV light can be used as an alternate source of energy, besides food. If you open any biochemistry book, you see that the body does not use proteins, fats and carbohydrates in the mitochondria, but electrons. Hence, the non-material energy sources acting within the body can be explain from a perspective of biophysics.
If people want another book on this topic, read Johnjoe McFadden's Life on the Edge: The Coming Age of Quantum Biology
Another example would be cold therapy. What does cold therapy or cold thermogenesis do? It increases the magnetic effect in the mitochondria. This is a physical effect. What does the increased magnetic field in the mitochondria do? This allows for an increased current of electrons on the inter mitochondrial membrane. The increased magnetism also makes the exclusion zone more effective, increasing its ability to hold IR and UV light.
These are some of the ways I increase the use of non-physical energy sources in my daily life. You do not have to rely on food. Trees do not, but humans have a limited but actual capacity to create energy from light as well. You need some nutrients, such as DHA, cholesterol and sulfur to utilize UV light for example, but at least Shannon is getting plenty of these on his Ketogenic diet.