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Originally posted by GreatTech
An average virus moves (x,y,z coordinate motion) most like which macroorganism? An average virus moves at a speed most like which macroorganism?
Originally posted by soficrow
Well, okay. Is it possible that viruses access quantum wormholes? Or create them?
Originally posted by GreatTech
An average virus moves (x,y,z coordinate motion) most like which macroorganism? An average virus moves at a speed most like which macroorganism?
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by soficrow
Well, okay. Is it possible that viruses access quantum wormholes? Or create them?
No... they don't have the energy to create any kind of wormhole and they can't move so they can't access them.
www.helsinki.fi...
Wormhole super conductivity leads to a quantum model of EEG and nerve pulse. In the model the lipid layers of the cell membrane are identified as coupled wormhole super conductors. Join along boundaries bonds connecting the lipid layers serve as Josephson junctions [Josephson]. The model [eeg] is described in more detail in a separate abstract.
b) Wormholes could be important also in DNA and molecular length scales and perhaps provide even DNA with a rudimentary nervous system. This idea gets support from the successful model of the so called Comorosan effect [Comorosan1,Comorosan2,worm].
Originally posted by GreatTech
MidnightDStroyer, do you work with viruses? Where do you get your information?
Originally posted by soficrow
By the same terms that viruses are not alive, DNA is not alive. Yet this physicist says "Wormholes could ...perhaps provide even DNA with a rudimentary nervous system."
Originally posted by soficrow
Originally posted by Byrd
Originally posted by soficrow
Well, okay. Is it possible that viruses access quantum wormholes? Or create them?
No... they don't have the energy to create any kind of wormhole and they can't move so they can't access them.
I agree that your take is the most obviously sensible - but...
By the same terms that viruses are not alive, DNA is not alive. Yet this physicist says "Wormholes could ...perhaps provide even DNA with a rudimentary nervous system."
Can you explain how this is hypothetically possible, given that DNA is not alive and cannot move?
Wormhole super conductivity leads to a quantum model of EEG and nerve pulse. In the model the lipid layers of the cell membrane are identified as coupled wormhole super conductors. Join along boundaries bonds connecting the lipid layers serve as Josephson junctions [Josephson]. The model [eeg] is described in more detail in a separate abstract.
Originally posted by soficrow
Thanks Byrd.
....I suspect life, loosely defined to include things like prions , somehow bypasses the high energy needed by more pedestrian matter to create wormholes.
Originally posted by soficrow
Originally posted by soficrow
Thanks Byrd.
....I suspect life, loosely defined to include things like prions , somehow bypasses the high energy needed by more pedestrian matter to create wormholes.
Eeew. That is SUCH a stupid comment. I really do know better than to post late at night.
Revised: Some molecules(?) apparently contain a phenomenal amount of energy in their nucleus - maybe enough to enable the creation of wormholes, especially when tweaked with electro-magnetic pulses, radiation, or ???
.
Originally posted by Byrd
...WHAT AN IDIOTIC THING TO SAY!!!
Originally posted by Brand403
Now I have heard that you can accually speed light up past the Standardized measurement of the speed of light.