Subject:  Chemistry/physics/biology, all are one (Guru)..
Date:     Wed, 13 Oct 1999 091204 -0500 (CDT)
From:     "Roy L. Beavers" 
To:       emfguru 
--------------------------------------------------


Hi everybody:

>From time to time (particularly during the early years of EMF-L),
we have talked about the ultimate "mechanism" that results in bioeffects
from EMF;  the "disturbance" or the "coupling" that takes place at the
most minute level -- the impact of the electrons of the atoms and
molecules (from the EMF exposure) upon the electrons of the cells and
tissue of life.

In the news item below, announcing the latest Nobel Prize winners, whose
research has contributed to "proving" the universal theory of the universe
-- that all energy and matter are one, fundamentally -- you will see that:
what we think of as a chemistry process (the bioeffects of EMF) ... is
actually a process common to the natural electromagnetic behavior of the
universe.  That is the process these Nobel Prize winning scientists have
been looking at in their experiments. 

If we can understand what they are doing, it should not be so difficult
for all of us to understand that:   what they are "looking at" is the very
same phenomenon that results in EMF disturbances of the electrons of the
atoms and molecules of our cells and tissue ... causing (in some cases) 
chemical reactions which produce 'abnormal' behavior of our cells and
tissue, resulting in various illnesses.....

This phenomenon has been a part of our natural world since the beginning
of evolution, of course.  But what is different today is the **quantity
and extent and duration** of man-made electromagnetic exposures that have
not been a part of the natural universe before the advent of the "age of
man-made electricity."  Today that "Blue World" of man-made (non-ionizing) 
electromagnetic radiation (in virtually ALL frequencies of the EMR
spectrum) is overwhelming biological systems that may require many 
generations to "evolve" to the point where those man-made EMF exposures
are no longer harmful.

That is what this "EMF problem" is all about.  If we can understand that,
why can't our governments???

Or ... perhaps they do!  They have simply decided that the protection of
life and health is less important than the "other" governmental/political
priorities.

P.S.  I very much enjoyed one of the winners' comments below:  "The main
thing you have to do to win the Nobel Prize is not die......"

Cheerio......

Roy Beavers (EMFguru)......
rbeavers@llion.org.......
.....It is better to light a single candle than to curse the darkness.....
EMF-L web-site can be found at: 
EMF-L archives can be found at: 
..................PEOPLE ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN PROFITS..................

..........DO YOU KNOW OF OTHERS WHO SHOULD BE ON THIS LIST?????...........

     _________________________________________________________________
   
07:14 PM ET 10/12/99

Chemistry, Physics Nobels Awarded


 By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA=
 AP Science Writer=
           Scientists in the United States and the Netherlands were awarded
 Nobel Prizes Tuesday for their efforts to corral some of the
 fastest, smallest phenomena in the universe and peer into their
 very cores.
           None of the winners of the physics and chemistry prizes this
 year are household names. But the face of the chemistry winner,
 Ahmed Zewail of the California Institute of Technology, is familiar
 in his native Egypt, where he appears on two postage stamps.
           Zewail, 53, was honored for pioneering a revolution in chemistry
 by using rapid-fire laser flashes that illuminate the motion of
 atoms in a molecule.
           The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said Zewail's work in the
 late 1980s led to the birth of femtochemistry, the use of
 high-speed cameras to monitor chemical reactions at a scale of
 femtoseconds, or 0.000000000000001 seconds (one-quadrillionth of
 second).
           ``We have reached the end of the road. No chemical reactions
 take place faster than this,'' the academy said. ``We can now see
 the movements of individual atoms as we imagine them. They are no
 longer invisible.''
           Other scientists described Zewail's studies of how chemical
 bonds break and new molecules form as ``the ultimate level of
 observation.'' They said that because his work helps researchers
 manipulate chemical reactions on a fundamental level, it might lead
 to faster computer chips and ultra-precise machinery.
           ``Everything in life is getting faster and faster,'' said Henry
 Kaptyen, a laser expert at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
 ``This lays the groundwork for technology that will develop over
 the next 20 to 50 years.''
           The Nobel committee surprised a sleeping Zewail with a pre-dawn
 telephone call to his home in San Marino, Calif., where he was
 recuperating from a cold.
           But he said, ``The real excitement is, in fact, in the
 fundamental discovery itself _ the ability to observe and study the
 behavior of atoms.''
           Gerardus 't Hooft and Martinus J.G. Veltman won the physics
 prize for developing more precise calculations used to predict and
 confirm the existence of subatomic particles.
           It is the latest in a series of Nobel prizes for researchers who
 are inching closer to a unified theory of the forces that control
 the behavior of matter and the complexities of the universe.
           Veltman, 68, who lives in the central Dutch town of Bilthoven,
 is professor emeritus at the University of Michigan and former
 professor at the University of Utrecht; 't Hooft has been a
 professor of physics at the University of Utrecht since 1977.
           Their research provided a more precise roadmap for physicists to
 find more subatomic particles using more powerful particle
 accelerators.
           Accelerators briefly recreate hot, primordial conditions in
 miniature, to determine whether subatomic particles behave in
 predicted ways, or even exist at all.
           Scientists hope that a new accelerator being built in Geneva
 will confirm the existence of a particle that Veltman and 't Hooft
 have suggested could be located under the right conditions.
           Veltman, who acknowledged that his research was often too opaque
 to explain to his own family, celebrated the award by smoking
 cigars with friends in his home.
           ``The main thing you have to do to get the Nobel Prize is not
 die,'' he said, as his companions roared with laughter.
           The literature prize was awarded Thursday to German novelist
 Guenter Grass. The medicine prize was awarded Monday to Dr. Guenter
 Blobel of New York's Rockefeller University, who discovered how
 proteins find their rightful places in cells.
           The economics prize winner is to be announced Wednesday in
 Stockholm and the peace prize on Friday in Oslo, Norway.
           The prizes, worth $960,000, are presented on Dec. 10, the
 anniversary of the death of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish industrialist
 and inventor of dynamite who established the prizes.

     _________________________________________________________________   






Archive provided courtesy of WaveGuide, http://www.wave-guide.org
Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.emfguru.com