The Great Cosmic Sea of Reality Predicts Water Acts as a Biologic Antenna of Natural Healing through Regenerative Biomorphic and Bio-cognitive Fields
Keywords:
Abstract
The Cosmic Dark Matter Fractal Field Theory (CDMFFT) predicts that there is a database of archetype information stored in the Dark Matter/Dark Energy zone of our Cosmos. (*1) This unexplored part of our reality represents the unseen 96% of our visible universe conceivably not only responsible for the underlying form but possibly acting as a repository of stored information involved in evolutionary influence of form and function within many types of morphogenetic and bio-cognitive fields. This previously unrecognized and unseen process could explain many mysterious enigmas in our study of the biosphere on our planet as well as others, such as total regeneration of severed anatomical parts of certain life forms. The spontaneous healing of otherwise fatal pathology in our own and other species of the animal kingdom, even the long search for how a human fertilized cell knows its blueprint of form and function that takes it from a zygote, to a blastula and finally to a developing living embryo! It is even conceivable that this biologic water antenna even is responsible for receiving the signal of life from the DM/DE zone to start ortrigger the first heart beat of life. (*2)As well as, the delusional effects of dehydration on the cognitive function of our brain in arid environments or water deficient circumstances.
Downloads
- Article PDF
- TEI XML Kaleidoscope (download in zip)* (Beta by AI)
- Lens* NISO JATS XML (Beta by AI)
- HTML Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- DBK XML Kaleidoscope (download in zip)* (Beta by AI)
- LaTeX pdf Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- EPUB Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- MD Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- FO Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- BIB Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
- LaTeX Kaleidoscope* (Beta by AI)
How to Cite
Published
2019-05-15
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 Authors and Global Journals Private Limited
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.