Every day, we come across another interesting work, and every day one can
be surprised again and again. "Why do you say that now?" If you say
so, we will talk about a simple but thought-provoking situation: the memory of
water.
"What does that mean?" Let's explain right away, it is claimed
that water has a memory similar to that of humans. A memory that can carry even
hundreds of thousands of years of information and can be affected by what is
written, said, thoughts or energies.
Of course, this is not a scientifically proven reality yet, it is just an
idea that some scientists have put forward as a result of their studies. And of
course, those who criticize themselves and say that this is not true are too
many to be underestimated.
Here are the claims of both sides about the memory of water, which has
caused serious debates for many years, and the thoughts about the memory of
water.
Japanese scientist Dr. Masaru Emoto, with his interesting experiments on water, is one of the first names to come up with the "memory of water" phenomenon, which has been the subject of debate for a long time. Realizing that each drop of water has a different and unique structure, Dr. Masaru Emoto decided to take action on this and tried to find out what was behind these changes in the structure of water. "Can water have a property like collecting information?" Emoto, who made experiments based on the question, conducted various tests with his teammates on water samples with almost all the same properties.
The scientist, who has done many different studies, from writing words with
different meanings such as "thank you" and "stupid" on the
same water bowl, to speaking out loud to the water, even to listening to music
and watching movies in the water, finally found that some changes occur in the
structure of water with each different intervention. has detected.
You can see that a similar result was obtained in this study, just as in
studies that describe plants that are listened to classical music grow and
develop faster and more beautifully than others.
However, no one, including
Masaru Emoto, has been able to provide scientific evidence to explain the
reason for this situation.
Likewise, a French scientist, Dr. Jacques Benveniste is also one of those
who think that water has a memory.
One of those who surprised him with his studies on water since the 1980s
and who thinks that water has a memory, just like Emoto, is Dr. Jacques
Benveniste. The scientist, who started his experiments with a toxic substance
that he added in trace amounts to a small amount of water, later discovered
that this substance did not disappear no matter how much he diluted this
mixture.
While this situation was perceived as quite normal at first, Benveniste took
this experiment one step further and gave only the frequency (vibration) of
this poisonous substance instead of adding toxic substances to clean water. According to his claim, the water was just as toxic as the water in which
the poisonous substance was directly added.
" After the concept of
"water's memory" was introduced, while the debate was growing,
Madeleine Ennis, a professor working at Queens Belfast University, decided to
do a comprehensive study and rolled up her sleeves. It was quite surprising
that Ennis, who asked academics working in various European countries such as
France, Italy and the Netherlands to conduct tests independently from each
other, got similar results, and that academics who did not know each other and
who did experiments without knowing what kind of water and active substance in
the test tubes received similar results. caused.
According to those who think that water has a memory, water affects human
life with its hundreds of years of accumulation and current vibrations.
After all these experiments, scientists who thought that water had a
memory, but could not explain it scientifically, said that all this could arise
as a result of energy and interactions. According to them, a drop of water
found in a river flowing at the end of the world many years ago, now has an
incredible amount of knowledge when consumed by a person, and this has an
effect that can affect a person's physical and mental health.
Variables such as diseases or bad words that are registered in the memory
of water in a negative way due to the vibration that the water gives to the
memory, affect people negatively, but on the contrary, situations with positive
frequencies also affect people positively.
So much so that among those
who argue that water has a memory, there are even those who talk about
unidentified effects that later connect the results of these experiments to
different spiritual energies.
Yet another group of scientists agrees that the results of these
experiments are purely random.
There are also many scientists who say, "If water had a memory, the
sum of those effects over thousands of years would have had a much greater
effect than what is now said or can be predicted," and that water cannot
have a memory as described above.
There were those who said that when scientists who said that water has a
memory repeated their experiments in the same way, they could not get any
results, and there were even those who offered the above-mentioned scientists
to repeat the experiments in exchange for money. But scientists, who argue that water has a memory, did not take kindly to
the idea of repeating the experiments in front of everyone.
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