Easter is the day set aside for the contemplation of miracles. How can
Photosynthesis come into being if not for miracles?

The world around us and in us is full of miracles, of blood and brain, of
green sunlight and DNA.

How can the world we know be, if not for miracles?

Cold fusion would be such a miracle, a miracle full of miracles.
If we are after miracles, how does nature do it? What is the natural
meta-theory of miracles?

If we take the religious view, we wait for a profit who is inspired by the
Holy Ghost to descend into our world and perform these miracles.
Does such a man exist? Has he built the Hot Cat for us?

Or do we take the agnostic view of natural selection: survival of the
fittest where miracles evolve over eons of untiring trial and error;
countless deaths and rebirths bathed is endless birth, life, pain, death,
rot and decay hoping upon hope for that one sparkling instance of progress
to be passed forward to the next. Where advancements is few and far between
made in nano-steps without discouragement where automaton repetition and
mindless replication leads to an endless march in a random walk toward
something new with only the slightest chance for change but in the full
light of hope that what replaces is bitter than what is replaced.
But what is revealed is that survival is the key. The metatheory of life
states that those systems that make a future possible are all important.

For both the bacteria, plants, computing systems, and cold fusion reactors
take the square root of the interdependent components and you can find the
number of key components that are so important that not a single other
piece can get by without them.

This rule of survival  applies equally to  complex networks because they
are both examples of open access systems with components that are
independently installed. Bacteria are the ultimate BitTorrents of biology,
referring to a popular file-sharing protocol.
Bacteria has this enormous common pool of genes that they  freely sharr
with each other. Bacterial systems can easily add or remove genes from
their open access genomes through what's called horizontal gene transfer, a
kind of file sharing between bacteria.

The indepensible survival mechanism is the same for plants as well as Cold
fusion reactor.

In either meta-approach of dreams on this day of days where miracles live
again all will work out in the end if the survival principles is
identified.


happy holiday:    Axil


On Sun, Mar 31, 2013 at 5:56 AM, Peter Gluck <peter.gl...@gmail.com> wrote:

> See please: Picking Apart Photosynthesis: New Insights Could Lead to
> Better Catalysts for Water Splitting:
> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/03/130329125305.htm
>
> Perhaps the facts and the modes of thinking, action of the researchers
> could inspire our colleagues who accept that LENR needs a systemic
> approach in order to be understood and made useful.
> Our young colleague Danny Rocha has said that LENR is similar to
> photosynthesis.
> And no collection of CF/LENR quotations can miss what one of our pioneers,
> Chris Tinsley has said: "Cold Fusion is for Hot Fusion what Biochemistry is
> to Chemistry"
> Unfortunately both are right and even more than right.
> Nature is a collection of solution but has no problems. Why wasn't she
> able to imagine something less complex and more accessible, for both cases?
>
> Peter
> Peter
>
> --
> Dr. Peter Gluck
> Cluj, Romania
> http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com
>

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