Jones, Is this paving the way to a new kind of doping in sports? To be seen at next Olympic Games! ;-)
mic Il giorno 10/nov/2011 17:54, "Jones Beene" <jone...@pacbell.net> ha scritto: > Need a break from Rossi madness? Slow slide into crazy? Do you know about > the "Mental illness happy hour"? > > Well those guys have learned that co-mingling wry humor (or rye humor, if > after 5) with pathological science is a good place to start. To that end, > here is an unauthorized episode. > > Start with a provocative science story, not quite pathological yet - and > take it from there... > > http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45230351/ns/technology_and_science-science/ > > "The brain requires about 22 times as much energy to run as the equivalent > in muscle tissue. The energy required ... comes from the food we eat. Human > brains are three times larger than our closest living relative, the > chimpanzee... but the two species have the same metabolic rate....This > extra > energy must be coming from somewhere." > > The so-called "Expensive Tissue Hypothesis" (ETH) of the authors tries to > answer that, but of course, you will not find LENR or any alternative > energy > hypothesis considered. After all, they have to protect their > phongna-balogna > jobs. (as recipients of liberal largess) > > However, moving further down the slow slide into pathology -- if one > suspects that some version of f/H (fractional hydrogen) could be partially > involved (in human evolution) to boost the energy level of a standard diet > - > whether it involves the Mills' hydrino or an alternative hypothesis, then > there is a place to search for answers. Look at the role of chemicals in > the > brain which have been associated with gainful systems in alternative > energy, > and cross-compare that with evolution and diet of proto-humans. Kind of a > positive feedback loop. > > In this category, a prime suspect would be potassium. And the best fit in > the periodic table for a Mills catalyst that does not require a plasma or 3 > body reaction, is molybdenum. Molybdenum cofactor is an enzyme intimately > associated with neurochemistry. Can we connect the dots? > > Not really but, speaking of evolution in the context of splitting-off from > the line of the aforementioned chimpanzee ... with the realization that a > top dietary source of potassium is bananas. Bananas made apes what they are > today, so to speak, but there were more choices on the horizon. Voila... we > now have our pathological rationale for the 'out of Africa' migrations. > They > were not an effect of advancing mentality - but instead were partially the > cause (dietary cause). A search for more and better f/H catalysts. > > Say James, when is the BBC going to revive "Connections"? > > Anyway, it could be coincidental but hominids really started to evolve > rapidly, especially in the cultural context, when they learned about the > other prime potassium sources: figs, dates, raisins, apricots, melons and > wine. Generally these source thrive further north than ape country. > > Matter-of-fact: figs, dates, raisins, apricots, melons and wine ... sounds > coincidentally like happy hour at a mid-Eastern restaurant, no? > > Is it five yet? > > Jones > > > > >