I'm a member of the bioelectromagnetics group -- one of the scientists there
mentioned that an associate was able to grow big plants in his research,
using only distilled water with the frequencies for the needed minerals and
trace elements put into it.

Homeopathy aside, putting the frequencies into the water doesn't even
require dilution; a computer program and frequency generator can do it.

In Russia they are using the technique to eliminate disease, instead of
blasting apart pathogens a la Rife.

This reminds me of the experiment in which cows prone to getting mastitis
were given magnetized water where the controls were given non-magnetized
water. In the control group 19/20 got mastitis, and in the magnetic group,
only 1/20.



ciao

Duncan
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dean T. Miller" <dtmil...@midiowa.net>
To: <silver-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 27, 2001 8:39 PM
Subject: CS>Proof of homeopathy?


| Hi All,
|
| From the "cold fusion" publisher ...
|   ***********************************************
| Nice article in The Guardian, supporting Jacques Benveniste.  Major
| European independent replication.
|
| http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4152521,00.html
|   ***********************************************
|
| "About homeopathy, Professor Madeleine Ennis of Queen's University
| Belfast is, like most scientists, deeply sceptical. That a medicinal
| compound diluted out of existence should still exert a therapeutic
| effect is an affront to conventional biochemistry and pharmacology,
| based as they are on direct and palpable molecular events. The same
| goes for a possible explanation of how homeopathy works: that water
| somehow retains a "memory" of things once dissolved in it.
|
| This last notion, famously promoted by French biologist Dr Jacques
| Benveniste, cost him his laboratories, his funding, and ultimately his
| international scientific credibility. However, it did not deter
| Professor Ennis who, being a scientist, was not afraid to try to prove
| Benveniste wrong. So, more than a decade after Benveniste's
| excommunication from the scientific mainstream, she jumped at the
| chance to join a large pan-European research team, hoping finally to
| lay the Benveniste "heresy" to rest. But she was in for a shock: for
| the team's latest results controversially now suggest that Benveniste
| might have been right all along. "
|
|
| -- Dean -- from (almost) Duh Moines  (CDP, KB0ZDF)
|
|
| --
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