Hi, Jason,

Thanks for your valuable information!

I wonder if the original purpose of MPS is
being neglected. According to Searle, Henry
Crooke invented MPS in 1910-1913 and it
wasn't for stabilization during storage before
being dispensed. If I am reading Searle
correctly, Crooke wanted CS to be stabilized
for isotonicity in the presence of serum
following an intravenous or intramuscular
administration. If I am correct, perhaps MPS
for CS that will be taken orally is just a
big waste, or worse. Searle suggests on
page 56 of his book that chlorine ions
contribute essentially to the stabilization
of some sols. Could it be possible that
gastric HCl protects CS, rather than destabilizing
or destroying it. It seems counter to familiar
principles of chemistry except that, after all,
colloids are a separate physical state, not
just ordinary chemical reagents.

I would like to know more about your reference
to non-hertzian energy or standing waves. Do
these have anything to do with scalar longitudinal
waves that have been attributed to Maxwell's
equations in their quaternionic formulation?

Your quoted material from Dr Savely Yurkovsky
is very intriguing. Do you know him personally?
I am just curious because I may be going to his former
neighborhood (Coney Island-Brighton Beach,
"Little Odessa") soon to study technical Ukrainian
for a biomedical translation project. The author of
the preface of his book is well-known and
respected in my field.

Best regards,

Matthew