Electric Biology
Jun
30, 2010
Experiments with electrostatic
fields might illuminate biological
diversity.A major problem in
biology is the internal motion of
proteins. Researchers from the
University of Pennsylvania using
Magnetic Resonance Imaging were
surprised to discover that the
calmodulin protein
molecule possesses an internal
"jitter" that shakes it billions of
times per second. This revelation
led them to conclude that it is not
merely the complex folded shape of
such molecules that affects their
function, but their internal
movement.
According to Dr. Joshua Wand,
“The situation is akin to the
discussion in astrophysics in which
theoreticians predict that there is
dark matter, or energy, that no one
has yet seen.”
Where the internal energy
necessary for protein binding comes
from is unknown at the present time,
but it seems likely, based on
research with electrostatic fields
on various organisms, that there is
an electrical component to the
source. Cell walls are arranged in a
double layer configuration with
positive and negative ion channels
built-in.
A book called
The Primeval Code (Der
Urzeit-Code) was recently published
in Switzerland, detailing
experiments that demonstrate how a
changing electric field can alter
gametes so much that new species are
created.
According to author Luc Bürgin,
"In laboratory experiments the
researchers there Dr. Guido Ebner
and Heinz Schürch exposed cereal
seeds and fish eggs to an
'electrostatic field' – in other
words, to a high voltage field, in
which no current flows. Unexpectedly
primeval organisms grew out of these
seeds and eggs: a fern that no
botanist was able to identify;
primeval corn with up to twelve ears
per stalk; wheat that was ready to
be harvested in just four to six
weeks. And giant trout, extinct in
Europe for 130 years, with so-called
salmon hooks. It was as if these
organisms accessed their own genetic
memories on command in the electric
field, a phenomenon, which the
English biochemist,
Rupert Sheldrake,
for instance believes is possible."
Electric Universe advocates
recognize that plasma is a
self-organizing phenomenon. Indeed,
Irving Langmuir coined the name
because he saw that collections of
charged particles isolate themselves
from their surroundings in ways that
are similar to biological systems. A
cell membrane could be thought of as
a Langmuir plasma sheath, sustaining
a voltage difference between the
negatively charged interior and the
positively charged exterior.
Electric currents most likely
maintain charge separation across
the membrane layers.
Perhaps these observations can
all be tied together. Sheldrake's "morphic
fields," protein jitter, gamete
alteration that leads to speciation,
and the electric charges in cells
might all be manifestations of
plasma's emergent properties. At
some time in the past, as these
pages have repeatedly emphasized,
Earth's electrical properties were
substantially altered when other
highly charged objects or ionic
clouds passed close to our
plasmasphere.
Intense electric arcs swept
across the surface of the Earth,
creating powerful electromagnetic
fields that could have transmuted
biological organisms in the same way
that they changed the atomic
structure of elements and minerals.
The famous Miller-Urey experiment
demonstrated that inorganic
compounds exposed to electric
currents can be altered to form
organic chemicals like amino acids.
Given the report in