Nexus - 1904 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 47 of 99

Page 47 of 99
Nexus - 1904 - New Times Magazine-pages

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Does DNA Emit LIGHT? DNA LIGHT? DOES EMIT Living organisms use light, or photons, to communicate with each other. As biophysicist Dr Fritz-Albert Popp discovered, DNA is an essential source of light emissions, sending out biophotons across a wide range of frequencies. Are Humans Really Beings of Light? get lots of suggestions for stories, and I really appreciate them, but some of them are too good to be true. An example of this is the story of a giant human skeleton—maybe 40 feet [around 20 metres] tall—that was discovered by a Russian archaeological team. The story had photos and links accompanying it and looked promising, but when the links were researched they went in a circle. Each link used the other link as the source. Finally, the elements of the photos turned up and we recognised that a good Photoshop job had fooled everyone. I had this same experience when I was sent an article where a Russian (again) scientist, Dr Pjotr Garjajev, had managed to intercept communication from a DNA molecule in the form of ultraviolet photons—light! What's more, he claimed to have captured this communication from one organism (a frog embryo) with a laser beam and then transmitted it to another organism's DNA (a salamander embryo), causing the latter embryo to develop into a frog! But this was just the beginning. Dr Garjajev claims that this communication is not something that happens only inside the individual cells or between one cell and another. He claims that organisms use this "light" to "talk" to other organisms and suggests that this could explain telepathy and ESP. It was like human beings already had their own wireless Internet based on our DNA. Wow! tried to find a scientific journal that had this experiment. All I could find were blogs and other websites that carried the same story, word for word, without any references—that is, until | stumbled on the work of Dr Fritz- Albert Popp. Then everything I had just read seemed very plausible. Fritz-Albert Popp thought he had discovered a cure for cancer. I'm not convinced that he didn't. It was 1970, and Popp, a theoretical biophysicist at the University of Marburg in Germany, had been teaching radiology—the interaction of electromagnetic (EM) radiation on biological systems. Popp was too early to worry about things like cellphones and microwave towers which are now commonly linked with cancers and leukaemia. His world was much smaller. He'd been examining two almost identical molecules: benzo[a]pyrene, a polycyclic hydrocarbon known to be one of the most lethal carcinogens to humans, and its twin (save for a tiny alteration in its molecular makeup), benzole|pyrene. He'd illuminated both molecules with ultraviolet (UV) light in an attempt to find exactly what made these two almost identical molecules so different. by Dan Eden © 2010-12 for Viewzone.com Web page: http://viewzone.com/dnax.html Why Ultraviolet Light? Popp chose to work specifically with UV light because of the experiments of a Russian biologist named Alexander Gurwitsch who, while working with onions in 1923, discovered that roots could stimulate a neighbouring plant's JUNE - JULY 2012 NEXUS ¢ 45 www.nexusmagazine.com