Lionel Posted May 11, 2004 #1 Share Posted May 11, 2004 Imagine the following scenario: 1 gallon of water is collected from the Scottish lake Loch Ness and poured into the Swedish lake Vattern. A little while later copies of Nessie are swimming around in Lake Vattern. Impossible? Maybe not. The hypothetical scenario is built on the discovery by the French scientist Jacques Benveniste, who already 20 years ago said that water has a memory, but was not taken seriously.In June 1988, the French scientist Jacques Benveniste, M.D. published an astonishing research paper in Nature, which indicated that water has memory. The paper immediately caused a great disturbance in the scientific community, where opposition to his findings was substantial. Biochemical experiments have confirmed that the IgE antibody can stimulate basophils to degranulate. In Benveniste’s experiment, however, after the IgE solution was diluted to 10-120, active degranulation of basophils still occurred. View: Full Article | Source: bahnhof.se Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bathory Posted May 11, 2004 #2 Share Posted May 11, 2004 Their findings demonstrated that extremely diluted solutions still preserved the effect of the original solutions that degranulated basophils. People started to think that Benveniste had been right. i saw a tv show not long ago that showed that this isn't the case, they did a big ass study on it and everything Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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