So, why the heck doesn't he 'call' it an "ice" crystal?
The shape changing is phenomenal enough without misleading labels to mess
with credibility.
 Calling an ion a particle is , well, "legally" correct, but does a
deliberate injustice to the conveyence of meaning and heads well down the
road to fraud when the diameter of an ion is substituted for a "particle"
size.
 Why apply a semi-fraudulant name to a real effect?  It seems
counterproductive if the effect is for real, but will 'rope in' the gee
whiz ignorant crowd.
 Right there, motives are questionable and therefore effect, by
mis-association.


 I would expect something like that from Dennis Lee.
 Lee is a great showman but he's by no means honest in his presentations.
 His most effective tools to confuse are the mixing of terms, verbal
misdirection, intimidation, Patriotic Bible thumping 'anti everyone else'
rhetoric and slight of hand science worthy of a fine stage illusionist
where the bits and pieces are true to some degree but applied to 'prove' a
flat out over-all lie to a sorted and sized group of "believers".

If it takes confusion to sell an idea, that doesn't do much for the
veracity of the idea.
 See what I mean?
Ode


At 04:15 PM 4/27/2005 -0400, you wrote:
>
>From what little I have read about it, they are ice crystals.  They grow in
>different shapes, like snowflakes, but the structure of the crystal can vary
>significantly depending on what the crystal has been exposed to. The same
>water will form crystals of one shape when you start, then after exposure to
>things like love, hate and so forth the crystals will form in a completely
>different shape.  Very odd behavior for water. My granddaugher was wanting to
>do a science fair project on this, but we decided it is just not practical
>during warm weather without a walk in freezer.
>
>This is the same information that was in the movie "What the Bleep do we
>Know".
>
>Marshall
>
>Ode Coyote wrote:
>
>> Sure looks like an "ice" crystal or snowflake to me.
>> If that's what it is, then "water" crystal is a bit like mis-leading a
>> normal occurance into the miraculous realms.
>>  Oh my gosh and gee whiz... a lava crystal!  Here catch, take it to the
>> museum quick!  [hurls rock]
>>
>> ode
>>
>> >Of course we already know that water reacts to intent through the work of
>> >Masaru Emoto and his water crystal photos
>> >http://www.masaru-emoto.net/english/entop.html
>> >
>> >I hope this helps substantiate earlier things I have claimed but did not
>> >have the data available to prove.
>> >
>> >Marshall
>> >
>> >
>> >
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