When we think of memory, most of us think of only living things but believe it or not some inanimate things like water can remember a thing or two.
Twenty years ago, in the summer of 1988, the science world was rocked by one of the most controversial research papers ever published in the highly-respected journal Nature.
According to a charismatic French scientist named Jacques Benveniste, pure water could somehow remember what it had previously contained.Benveniste had started with a substance that caused an allergic reaction, he diluted it over and over again until there was nothing left except water, and then he observed that the pure water still managed to trigger an allergic reaction when it was added to living cells.
If the experiment was correct then it would mean rewriting the laws of physics and chemistry.
Moreover, the research would have a major impact on the credibility of homeopathy, because it is a form of alternative medicine that relies on remedies made by diluting the key curative ingredient over and over again until that ingredient has disappeared.
Even Benveniste was shocked by the implications of his own work.
Unfortunately for Benveniste, the investigators soon discovered that the results in his laboratory were unreliable and he moved out of academia as a result of the Nature debacle, but right up to his death in 2004 he maintained that his research was valid and that he was being ignored by a blinkered scientific establishment.
Even though most of the academic community has doubts about this theory there are some in the field of homeopathic medicine who has always believed in the medicinal affects of very very dilute solutions.
1 comment:
homeopathy works under the same principle. This is amazing right!
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