Cell Language Theory, The: Connecting Mind And Matter

(Elliott) #1
Key Terms and Concepts 43

“6x9” b2861 The Cell Language Theory: Connecting Mind and Matter

(v) The E component of the D–E systome produced in B may be stabi­
lized by the D–E signals arriving from A through the pre­fit mecha­
nism [25, pp. 209–220] rather than the induced­fit mechanism of
Koshland. This means that the water in B may already contain many
coherence domains formed transiently through Brownian motions and
the signal from A selects a small number of these pre-existing water
structures or “aquastructures” [494] that are complementary to D.

If the 5­step mechanism proposed above for the BMEs can be proved to
be correct in the future, it may have profound consequences in both basic
biology and medicine, including homeopathic medicine. For example, the
key difference between Western medicine and homeopathy may turn out to
be that the former emphasizes the system component, while the latter is
related primarily to the environmental component of the systome and hence
both individually may be viewed as incomplete. The complete medicine, i.e.,
the systome medicine, may not emerge unless and until the traditional system
medicine is integrated with the emerging environmental medicine (including
homeopathy). These and related ideas are recapitulated in Table 2.3.

2.14 Cell Water as a Four-Dimensional Proton Transfer
Network: Water is to Cell Language What Air
is to Human Language
Primarily based on the cell water structures suggested by Ling
(see Figure 2.9) and Pollack (see Figure 2.10) and supported by theoreti­
cal results of Bono et al. [110] and Del Guidice [364], I have come to
postulate that

The water molecules inside a living cell are organized in space and
time in order to facilitate the transfer of protons from one site to
another in a living cell via the Grotthuss mechanism, just as a silicon
chip facilitates the transfer of electrons from one site to another via
quantum mechanical tunneling.

The Grotthuss mechanism, formulated by German chemist F. von
Grotthuss (1785–1822) in 1806, refers to the mechanism of proton

(2.27)

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