Mike Carrell wrote:
----- Original Message ----- From: "thomas malloy"
The would, if they could. But I don't think that the second law is
any danger from any dingus. Living systems OTOH, can reverse it, and
there are reports that they do emit photons, perhaps someone knows
more about this.
Living systems do not reverse the second law .... Some studies of cell
chemistry find very complex couplings among the molecules, including
exchange of photons. Bioluminescence is rather commonplace among sea
creatures in the darkness of deep oceans.
Mike - as you are a long-standing and vocal supporter of BLP, the
hydrino, R. Mills and his theories, and CF - I am a bit surprised that
you have not considered the hydrino implications of bioluminescence in
the deep oceans - especially with the UV connection to that phenomenon -
and plenty of Hy-catalysts available in sea water ... plus the lack of
sufficient ambient heat (or food sources) in those extreme locations -
to create much of a heat gradient or normal chemical energy source.
Not to worry ...<g> Among the many projects on my list of long-neglected
R&D for the coming year, once I am appointed chief-overseer and
high-muck-a-muck of the total science budget of the NWO, and which
projects can be easily handled with the $10 billion which will be saved
by immediately canceling ALL hot fusion projects (except maybe for
Robert Bussard's) and most funding to MIT (punishment for the CF
debacle) is to look for solar-generated hydrinos in nature (oceans and
ionosphere) and to look for evolved forms of life which are using them.
Among the candidates are:
1) Anything bioluminescent (except for the GM Chinese pigs)
2) Anything which can migrate for thousands of miles without eating
(butterflies and hummingbirds)
3) Anything which can hibernate for months on insufficient food
4) Bacteria which can survive in extreme conditions w/o an adequate food
source.
BTW - it could be that in some extreme situation "food" as normally
defined is most useful for the amino acids and minerals necessary to
replace worn tissue - and to supplement the "alternative" source of
energy - which can be based on "supra-chemical" reactions ... which BTW
are not limited to the hydrino, and may well involve 18O, the heavy
isotope of oxygen.
Jones