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Throat Singing Chanting Slime Mold Loners Metamaterial relativistic quantum nonlocal Yuan Qi Penrose
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Professor John Bonner and the Slime Molds:
"To form one of these herding bodies you lose 25% to 30% of the cells - those cells are actually sacrificing themselves for the spores. It really is a case of cellular altruism. They're dead. They're gone. They're not recyclable at all. But if you think about it a bit you realize that it is just not a peculiarity of the slime molds, that really is a general principle. In fact it is a basic strategy found among all organisms. For instance a wheat, a stalk of wheat grows and the top is the seed and in the late summer it turns beautifully yellow and that's because it's all dead. So again you have in this plant you have this long stalk made up entirely of dead cells and at the top you only have the viable seed. So in fact almost all organisms have this same principle. Consider ourselves for example, we're much - we do it in a much more lavish fashion. Practically all our cells are sacrificed in the sense that the strategy is always to see that some of our cells can go on to the next generation. So in the case of the slime molds, the strategy is to make spores that go on. In the case of the, the more expensive case of the wheat it's only the seeds that go on. In our own case it's only the very few reproductive cells which go on to the next generation to produce perhaps three or four children at the most. So death from the human point of view may not be the extremely distressing thing that we think of it, if you compare it to what happens in slime molds. Because then you can see that it is really part of a strategy. And this strategy is something which manages to perpetuate one generation to the next through certain cells which are protected and manage to produce the subsequent generations."
"Here, we explore benefits to sociality in a social amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum. Two advantages to social behavior in the slime mold D. discoideum have been suggested: protection from predators (Kessin et al. 1996) and long-range spore dispersal (Bonner 1982; Huss 1989; Kessin 2001)."
"Bacteria and Archaea, however, were kicked out of the protist kingdom when the separation between eukaryotes and prokaryotes was established "
Lynn Margulis and Karlene Schwartz, in their book The Five Kingdoms (W.H. Freeman, 1998), struggled heroically to justify the Protista (they preferred the term Protoctista) kingdom. "Undulipodia (aka flagella) were present in common ancestors to all the phyla, even before mitochondria, given that the anaerobic archaeprotists bear them."
It is the microtubule-tublin that is the common foundation of ALL kingdoms of life!!
modern human left brain dominance shuts off our sense of smell fast - as new smells are recognized via theta brain waves in REM consciousness. Smell is based on quantum noncommutative phase of both frequency and geometric phase. So yes we already have nonlocal perception of smell - we just don't realize it. Qigong masters can smell over the phone and smell long distance! spiritual healers can smell cancer - as rotting dead flesh - just as dogs can smell cancer.
Slime Mould
John Bleibtreu and Humphry Osmond interview
On the role of the plasmodial cytoskeleton in facilitating intelligent behavior in slime mold Physarum polycephalum
"Specifically, we model the topology of both the actin and tubulin cytoskeletal networks and discuss how computation may occur therein. Furthermore, we present bespoke cellular automata and particle swarm models for the computational process within the cytoskeleton and observe the incidence of emergent patterns in both. Our work grants unique insight into the origins of natural intelligence; the results presented here are therefore readily transferable to the fields of natural computation, cell biology and biomedical science. We conclude by discussing how our results may alter our biological, computational and philosophical understanding of intelligence and consciousness."
Sir Roger Penrose & Dr. Stuart Hameroff: CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE PHYSICS OF THE BRAIN
Sacred Chants Of Tibet - The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir | Chants for Protection and Good Fortune
Slime mould: The fundamental mechanisms of biological cognition
/S0303264717304574
biological annihilation
psychedelics as quantum nonlocal pi resonance
"To form one of these herding bodies you lose 25% to 30% of the cells - those cells are actually sacrificing themselves for the spores. It really is a case of cellular altruism. They're dead. They're gone. They're not recyclable at all. But if you think about it a bit you realize that it is just not a peculiarity of the slime molds, that really is a general principle. In fact it is a basic strategy found among all organisms. For instance a wheat, a stalk of wheat grows and the top is the seed and in the late summer it turns beautifully yellow and that's because it's all dead. So again you have in this plant you have this long stalk made up entirely of dead cells and at the top you only have the viable seed. So in fact almost all organisms have this same principle. Consider ourselves for example, we're much - we do it in a much more lavish fashion. Practically all our cells are sacrificed in the sense that the strategy is always to see that some of our cells can go on to the next generation. So in the case of the slime molds, the strategy is to make spores that go on. In the case of the, the more expensive case of the wheat it's only the seeds that go on. In our own case it's only the very few reproductive cells which go on to the next generation to produce perhaps three or four children at the most. So death from the human point of view may not be the extremely distressing thing that we think of it, if you compare it to what happens in slime molds. Because then you can see that it is really part of a strategy. And this strategy is something which manages to perpetuate one generation to the next through certain cells which are protected and manage to produce the subsequent generations."
"Here, we explore benefits to sociality in a social amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum. Two advantages to social behavior in the slime mold D. discoideum have been suggested: protection from predators (Kessin et al. 1996) and long-range spore dispersal (Bonner 1982; Huss 1989; Kessin 2001)."
"Bacteria and Archaea, however, were kicked out of the protist kingdom when the separation between eukaryotes and prokaryotes was established "
Lynn Margulis and Karlene Schwartz, in their book The Five Kingdoms (W.H. Freeman, 1998), struggled heroically to justify the Protista (they preferred the term Protoctista) kingdom. "Undulipodia (aka flagella) were present in common ancestors to all the phyla, even before mitochondria, given that the anaerobic archaeprotists bear them."
It is the microtubule-tublin that is the common foundation of ALL kingdoms of life!!
modern human left brain dominance shuts off our sense of smell fast - as new smells are recognized via theta brain waves in REM consciousness. Smell is based on quantum noncommutative phase of both frequency and geometric phase. So yes we already have nonlocal perception of smell - we just don't realize it. Qigong masters can smell over the phone and smell long distance! spiritual healers can smell cancer - as rotting dead flesh - just as dogs can smell cancer.
Slime Mould
John Bleibtreu and Humphry Osmond interview
On the role of the plasmodial cytoskeleton in facilitating intelligent behavior in slime mold Physarum polycephalum
"Specifically, we model the topology of both the actin and tubulin cytoskeletal networks and discuss how computation may occur therein. Furthermore, we present bespoke cellular automata and particle swarm models for the computational process within the cytoskeleton and observe the incidence of emergent patterns in both. Our work grants unique insight into the origins of natural intelligence; the results presented here are therefore readily transferable to the fields of natural computation, cell biology and biomedical science. We conclude by discussing how our results may alter our biological, computational and philosophical understanding of intelligence and consciousness."
Sir Roger Penrose & Dr. Stuart Hameroff: CONSCIOUSNESS AND THE PHYSICS OF THE BRAIN
Sacred Chants Of Tibet - The Gyuto Monks Tantric Choir | Chants for Protection and Good Fortune
Slime mould: The fundamental mechanisms of biological cognition
/S0303264717304574
biological annihilation
psychedelics as quantum nonlocal pi resonance
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