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- Seven Principles of the Human Body Field
Seven Principles of the Human Body Field
- By Peter Fraser
- Published 12/3/2007
- Peter Fraser
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A sound wave of up to 100,000 Hertz, when it’s traveling through certain kinds of solid matrices, behaves differently from a photon, a particle of light. By the way, at the quantum level, sound can be considered a “particle,” and it is called a phonon. Just as a photon is a quantum particle of electromagnetic energy, of light, a phonon is a quantum particle of sound energy, which takes on particle-like properties when sound travels through certain kinds of crystal-lattice solids, as are found in some types of body tissues. The heart makes a lot of phonons. The heart makes over a hundred different sounds, according to some sources, although others suggest it makes only four major ones.
Perhaps you never thought about phonons before. Google the words “phonon biology” and you will find out about phonons in a quantum biology state being processed by the Golgi complex in the cell. This fits the NES observation about the phonon and its link with the Golgi complex.
When we at NES talk about imprinting, we are leaving homeopathy behind and looking at all sorts of different and interesting effects that interest the physics people. So far as homeopathy is concerned imprinting is a two-hundred-year-old idea, and we do believe that it’s time academia got onto it! But let me tell you about how we are different from even homeopathy. This new version of imprinting is the basis of NES technology.
I did an experiment years ago showing, I thought, that things self-imprint very easily, and all that is needed is a fluctuation in the magnetic field surrounding the things that are to be imprinted. In other words, the passage of the sun and moon’s fields would be enough to do it. Of course, all homeopathic materia medica are simply imprinted using low-frequency sound, but imprinting also occurs naturally and is not something at all artificial. We can do it with sound waves, light or with magnetic field fluctuations.
To our great surprise at NES we found that the heart appeared to be able to imprint information, memories and such, only onto one primary type of cell (a lipid), if it has the choice of many to choose from. For some reason people think that memory is in the brain. Yet anyone who has had a massage will know that we get memories flooding to consciousness when a certain part of the body and its muscles are manipulated. Sometimes even sounds over certain parts of the body can induce memory recall. The Tibetans have bells for ringing over the body’s energy centers, or chakras as the Hindus call them. But the heart is also part of this memory system.
Supposing your memory of health is forgotten? Most sick people seem to forget what health is like and enter a new strange world where they cannot do things. Then after they are cured, they can’t remember being sick. Can these bits of knowledge, or memories, be passed on to your children? Is this how evolution works? These ideas were entertained by Lamarck long ago and still are credible. He was the co-discoverer of evolution with Darwin and liked the idea that tadpoles didn’t have to go to swimming college to learn to swim. To know more, Google the words” Lamarck evolution” or “epigenetic inheritance.”
If we really want to know how evolution works we have to drop some of the ideas of the DNA people and look again at the possibility of the structures inherent in space as actually being able to influence what and how we learn, and the structure of that learning. We can look at education in a new way as well. What we are suggesting is that all we have to do is repeat a message and store it in the body fat. Repeating messages we know already is a key to all learning. Could it be just like the homeopathic succussion process, where information is repeated a few dozen times in a field of light or sound waves? There are lots of things this imprinting process applies to. Think of repetition of bird calls in nature. How many times does a bird repeat a message? Is it trying to imprint a message?
But let me get back to my point. Our research shows that the heart is a primary imprinter of information into the body and that it is part of our emotional-memory system. It imprintes via phonons onto lipids in the blood stream. That leads us to ask, can people lose their memory when they take certain kinds of cholesterol-lowering drugs, which are supposed to dissolve certain fats? An MD in the USA has written a book about just that! He lost short- and long-term memory while on this kind of drug, and once he went public, he heard from many, many other people who experienced the same problem.[1] The pharmaceutical biologists can’t explain that side effect. But NES theory can.
We believe there are two primary ways of imprinting information onto other structures. But to imprint using even these methods, the message has to be repeated. The two methods are:
·Pressure waves (such as those produced by the heart), which is the very low-frequency method.
·Different light frequencies used in a certain way, in a super high-frequency method.
We are not alone in believing that space retains its own type of memory. The repetition of energy and information can actually change space, can imprint space! Check out the work of Dr. William Tiller, who found that when he removed certain machines that had been used in certain healing studies over extended periods of time, the space in the room where the studies took place and the machinery was located retained information about those studies, and this change in space was measurable![2]
So, to really understand imprinting, you have to alter your ideas of what space is and what its characteristics are. You also have to revise your ideas of what the electron and photon are, and to consider the role of phonons in new ways, especially in biology.
[1] See former US astronaut and NASA scientist Duane Graveline’s self-published book Lipitor: Thief of Memory, which is available online from Amazon.com and other book-selling sites.
[2] See William Tiller’s books Conscious Acts of Creation: The Emergence of a New Physics, Walnut Creek, CA: Pavior, 2001; and Science and Human Transformation: Subtle Energies, Intentionality and Consciousness, Walnut Creek, CA: Pavior, 1997.
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