Newsletter2Feb

 

 

 


 

  DEAR MEMBERS OF

The Quantum Medicine NEWSLETTER

Have a good week!!!


 This is February 2th  newsletter!

Let's invite other people to subscibe to this newsletter! For Archives

The full version is at the link: www.quantumedicine.com/article/nuovofile165.html

These are the subjects:

1) Ecstasy may damage the brain’s physical defences

2) Entangled Minds

3) Positive Thoughts Work as Well as Drugs

 The thought of the week  by  Dr. Dennis  Waitely   ________________________________________________________________________  

 

Ecstasy may damage the brain’s physical defences

 

The drug ecstasy reduces the brain’s defences, reveals a new study of rats, leaving it vulnerable to invasion by viruses and other pathogens.

 

The brain is protected by a fence of tightly packed cells, called the blood-brain barrier. This prevents all but the smallest molecules from passing through. But the new experiments show that MDMA – the chemical name for ecstasy, or “E” – somehow forces open that barrier, allowing larger molecules access to the brain.

Bryan Yamamoto at Boston University, US, and colleagues gave rats four doses of MDMA over 8 hours. “We were trying to approximate a human dosaging pattern,” says Yamamoto. The scientists also injected a blue dye, made of molecules too large to get into the rats' brains under normal circumstances.

 

One day later, the researchers found the dye had made its way into parts of the brain, such as the caudate and the hippocampus. Ten weeks later, despite no further doses of MDMA being given, new injections of dye were still passing through the blood brain barrier.

           

Ten weeks in rats could be considered the equivalent of five to seven years in humans. “It does seem to be a very protracted opening,” says Yamamoto. But, as yet, he is unable to say for sure whether the breach is permanent.

 

http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8314

 


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Entangled Minds

 

A restlessness is brewing in science. Unexpected discoveries in many scientific disciplines are shaking previously held assumptions. One commonality among these discoveries is that observations once believed to be meaningless, or mere anomalies, are being reconsidered. In the process, new revelations are surfacing about the nature of reality. A few examples will serve to illustrate the rising tension:

 

  • Cosmologists have learned that we might have accidentally overlooked 96% of the universe. The missing preponderance of the universe is dubbed "dark" matter and energy, and we know next to nothing about it.

 

  • Neuroscience dogma used to assert that neurons in the brain do not regenerate, and that mental functioning inevitably deteriorates when there is a brain injury or as neurons die in the course of aging. Now, new data are revealing that brain neurons do, in fact, regenerate. The brain is much more plastic than previously imagined.

 

  • In the borderlands between physics and chemistry, researchers are re-examining claims of cold fusion after 15 years in the deep freeze. Successful replications from laboratories around the world continue to suggest that unexpected effects, possibly nuclear fusion, really do occur in supposedly impossible ways. Have the prejudices of hot fusion researchers, who have spent billions of dollars in a still-vain attempt to build controllable fusion reactors, deflected attention from this anomaly?

 

  • In physics, the idea of entanglement--the quantum theory prediction that under certain circumstances particles that appear to be isolated are actually instantaneously connected through space and time-is not only known to be demonstrably real, but is far more pervasive and robust than anyone had imagined even a few years ago. Devising new forms of entanglement has become a central focus in the accelerating race towards developing practical quantum computers.

 

When science begins to churn with unexpected developments and tolerance for new ideas, breakthroughs are often lurking over the horizon. The consequences of such revolutions are not fully appreciated until long after they've occurred, but one thing is certain: Just as modern science propelled the world into the nuclear, information, and genetic engineering ages, the pregnant postmodern era is likely to introduce radical changes in everything-- from our daily lives to the dynamics of global society. One topic likely to change is science and society's view of the paranormal, that uncertain realm just beyond the reach of science but perpetually alive within our experience.

 

One element of the paranormal--which I will refer to as entangled minds--is, I believe, on the threshold of transforming from paranormal to normal.

 

Researchers will discover that under certain conditions, living cells also exhibit properties associated with quantum entanglement. Then the idea of bioentanglement will emerge, a concept that is more general than today's special cases of entanglement involving inanimate particles and photons.

 

Coming to grips with the idea that we live within a profoundly holistic reality still remains a challenge given that our daily experience more often reinforces a sense of isolation than a sense of unity. But as more people are exposed to these concepts, I expect that common sense may evolve into a new, uncommon sensibility in which psi is regarded as boringly normal.

 

http://shiftinaction.com/node/122


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Positive Thoughts Work as Well as Drugs

 

Evidence has been found that suggests a patient’s beliefs and hopes may affect their outcome of prognosis.

 

One study found that optimism could lower the risk of heart disease in older men, whereas pessimism can increase the disease. Strong evidence has proven that patients with heart disease who feel hopeless about their condition do worse because they lost faith in themselves.

 

But whether a person’s attitude can be changed is still an unanswered questioned, a psychologist studying this said. He believes that schools should incorporate a method to teach children about optimism so that no child has to face an illness with a negative attitude. The earlier you teach a person how to handle certain situations, the better they can handle that situation later in life.

 

However, studies show when it comes to cancer patients, the idea that always being optimistic is important in cancer prognosis has been discredited. In addition, current studies don’t support any link between stress and cancer, and some researchers say there is no evidence that supports the notion that a person’s attitude can help cure cancer.

 

http://www.mercola.com/2004/feb/14/positive_thoughts.htm         

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