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Scientists Investigate Water Memory
OdeWire 
December 20th, 2011
By Diana Rico
New research from the Aerospace Institute of the University of Stuttgart in Germany supports the theory that water has a memory—a claim that could change our whole way of looking at the world.
Does water have memory? Can it retain an “imprint” of energies to which it has been exposed? This theory was first proposed by the late French immunologist Dr. Jacques Benveniste, in a controversial article published in 1988 in Nature, as a way of explaining how homeopathy works. Benveniste’s theory has continued to be championed by some and disputed by others. The video clip above, from the Oasis HD Channel, shows some fascinating recent experiments with water “memory” from the Aerospace Institute of the University of Stuttgart in Germany. The results with the different types of flowers immersed in water are particularly evocative.

Photo: Geraint Rowland via Flickr
If Benveniste is right, just think what that might mean. More than 70 percent of our planet is covered in water. The human body is made of 60 percent water; the brain, 70 percent; the lungs, nearly 90 percent. Our energies might be traveling out of our brains and bodies and into those of other living beings of all kinds through imprints on this magical substance. The oceans and rivers and rains might be transporting all manner of information throughout the world.
I like to believe that the good doctor was correct–if for no other reason, because the phrase “the memory of water” makes my heart leap up and spin.
[Source: OdeWire]

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Why is there no information on what they are looking at? It isn’t just a visual image, we can all look at drops of water and see there is no difference.
Benveniste was incompetent in his experiments and his conclusions were to address something that didn’t happen so no evidence there.
All seems highly implausible and the woo-speak at the end of all the information ending up in Holland makes me suspect this is just a spoof.
Benveniste’s experiments have been reproduced successfully at other labs, including the University of Toronto.
Materials Science research has illustrated for years that starting materials in water actually change its structure.
Luc Montagnier has detected radio frequencies being generated by highly diluted bacterial DNA.
Thanks to Benveniste and other pioneering researchers!
There are thousands of scientists worldwide who are contributing to nano-particle research and open-access publishing.