Gregg Braden See book keywords and concepts | In our 21st-century world of microchips and nanotechnology, it's no wonder we're skeptical when we hear that moving the atoms of reality is so simple that even a child can do it. It just sounds too easy to be true ... that is, until we consider what the science has shown us and what our most cherished spiritual traditions have always said: We live in a reflected universe, and we are creating the reflections. | Ron Garner See book keywords and concepts | Crystals can be programmed, just like microchips, to hold and radiate the magnetic love energy frequency. We can utilize this knowledge to produce structured water that is alive, active, and high in energy. This is an example of the application of the Universal Love Energy that all organisms seek.
Biophotons and Derivative Energy Devices
It was suggested earlier that the quantity of biophotonic light does not necessarily equate to quality. Any electrical or magnetic energy device that is man-made is secondary to the primal energy; it is derived from it. | Win Wenger, Ph.D. and Richard Poe See book keywords and concepts | Yet, for all its bits, bytes, and microchips, the Stinger depends upon the intuition of its human operators. Expert Stinger shooters report that, just after hearing the beep that means they have acquired the target and just before pulling the trigger, they always stop and ask themselves, "Does it feel right?" They have learned in the field that if you fire the missile when it feels wrong, you miss. But when it feels right, you hit your mark.
Military researchers named this procedure the K check, or kinesthetic check. Nobody really understands how it works. | Mark Hyman, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | These microchips can test your blood for the presence and activity of many of the thousands of specific enzymes in your liver that process and eliminate drugs. The chips can also test to see if you can handle a particular medication—drugs that may be toxic to one person aren't to another. And the chips may also be able to identify whether a particular person may require a higher level of a particular nutrient, vitamin, or mineral, in order to process certain medications efficiently.
Look for pharmacogenomics. And remember that drugs don't always cure disease. Sometimes, they can cause it. |
The Search for Other WorldsFred Alan Wolf See book keywords and concepts | | Yet, despite its enormous practical successes (quantum theory correctly predicts the behavior of such things as lasers, microchips, photocells, nuclear reactors, long-range deep-space communication devices, many types of solid-state inventions, transistors, and materials at very low temperatures, to mention just a few), quantum theory is still so contrary to intuition that, even after eighty years since its inception, most experts do not agree what to make of it.
The Wave Was Not Real
At first physicists believed that the wave was not real, in spite of its having a real effect in the world. | James Trefil See book keywords and concepts | How Powerful Can microchips Be? in the 1960s, at the very beginning of the computer revolution, a man named Gordon Moore (who went on to become one of the founders of Intel) noticed that the growth of computer technology had an unusual feature: the memory of computers (the amount of information they can store) was doubling every two years. In the time since then, we have come to realize that almost every index of power in a computer ?the size of circuits, the speed at which processing can be done, and so on ?seems to get twice as good every two years as well. | | In addition, where microchips are concerned we are almost at the point of running into fundamental physical limits. Take the example of the smallest feature we can inscribe on a microchip. Research programs are in place that will allow widths of a few hundred atoms, but at this level we start to encounter problems. It is very difficult, for example, to get electrons around sharp bends when the channel they're following is that narrow ?they tend to leak out the side. These sorts of difficulties can be expected to multiply as the feature size is reduced. | | To give just one example, as engineers make silicon microchips smaller and smaller, they run into a serious problem that is due to the nature of electrons. If electrical current is running through two wires that are very close together (as they must be in ultraminiature machines), then the electrons in one wire will start to affect those in the other. This limits the flow of information into the computer in much the same way that a tunnel or bridge limits the flow of traffic into a city. | | Thus the ability to make very fine lines on our microchips does not necessarily translate into a technological breakthrough like those that produced the personal computer and the present generation of electronics.
Where Will Nanotechnology Take Us? in the kind of machine shop that's been around since the Industrial Revolution, if you decide to make a gear, say, the procedure is simple: you take a block of metal and remove all of the atoms you don't want, leaving behind those atoms that make up the gear (to be honest, I doubt that many machinists think of their work this way). | | Such wires could be used as connectors on highly miniaturized microchips. Another use for these materials is in chemical detection. A thin film of zeolites that will pick up only one type of molecule is laid on another material, and if that molecule is present in the environment, it will enter the tubes in the zeolite, changing the properties of the zeolite film slightly. In this way, even tiny amounts of the target molecule can be detected.
Another important area of nano-research is "designer solids" ?large-scale materials made from specific molecular modules. | James A. Duke, Ph.D. See book keywords and concepts | The battery-powered ones often contain microchips that make a real racket. I'd advise not buying them for your children or grandchildren. They're bad for youngsters' ears, not to mention your own.
Personal computers can also make a racket if they're equipped a certain way. You might be familiar with one of the special attachments that's marketed for video games, a sound effects device called Sound Blaster. The name says a lot: This gadget is way too loud.
If the youngsters in your family like to listen to their rock music on their personal stereos, they're really putting their ears at risk. | Arthur C. Upton, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | | Typical victims of these cumulative trauma disorders include key-punch operators who sit hunched while typing hundreds of characters per minute; slaughterhouse workers, who carve the same cut of beef hour after hour, day after day; checkout clerks, who repeatedly guide groceries over laser scanners; and electronics workers, who spend whole days handling thousands of tiny microchips with various kinds of tweezers (see Chapter 10, "Musculoskeletal Ailments"). | Gabriel Cousens, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Animals are routinely and systematically treated as "things"; as simply raw materials of the agribusiness; as stock in the market like gold and silver coins or computer microchips; or as "livestock" rather than living creatures that have a spark of God in them. The outstanding book Diet for A New America, by John Robbins, discusses these issues in detail. For example, we do not even call chickens by their names any more. They are called "broilers" if they are going to be eaten or "layers" if their industrial purpose is to lay eggs. |
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