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Nanotechnology

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The Seven Laws of Nutrition

Mike Adams
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There are no cows that have PhDs in nanotechnology, yet every cow has billions of nanotech cells circulating through its system fighting off disease, taking care of free radicals, eliminating cancerous cells that might be circulating through their body and even doing miraculous things like duplicating strands of DNA. I know it may seem strange to think of a cow as a miracle of nature. But in fact, a cow automatically creates and leverages biomolecular technology that puts our modern science to shame.
I always laugh at this because the human body already has nanotechnology that does all of this and much more. We have an immune system that puts any man-made technology to shame. Our body already knows how to repair itself. It has literally billions of cells that know how to be healthy — that know how to use optimum nutrition and put it to good use to support a healthy organ or body system. If you're looking for a nanotech miracle, just look at the human body. It's already there! You're already a walking miracle of molecular technology that works even when you don't understand how it works.

Cures for cancer already exist, but not in the realm of chemical-based medicine, says holistic nutritionist

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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The human body is a miracle of nanotechnology that far exceeds the advances of modern science. And even if you were to understand all the physical structures and chemical interactions of the immune system, I still don't think you would grasp its complexities, because there are many interactions in the immune system that are energetic in nature. That's why cancer researchers can run lab tests for a hundred years and burn through a billion dollars in funding and still not uncover the mythical "cure for cancer.

Antibacterial silver products finally begin to emerge after years of FDA oppression

Mike Adams, the Health Ranger
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One company claims to have particle size so small that if they could actually produce those, they should be in the nanotechnology industry, rather than the nutritional supplement industry. There are no particles that small in silver solutions. I'm doing more research on this, but in the meantime, one product I can recommend is by a company called Invision. It's called Silver 100, and you can go to the website http://www.silver100.com. This company makes an outstanding silver product that I have used and researched; I have checked out this company.

101 Things You Don't Know About Science And No One Else Does Either

James Trefil
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Where Will nanotechnology Take Us? in the kind of machine shop that's been around since the Industrial Revolution, if you decide to make a gear, say, the procedure is simple: you take a block of metal and remove all of the atoms you don't want, leaving behind those atoms that make up the gear (to be honest, I doubt that many machinists think of their work this way). Scientists are just starting to develop a new way of manufacturing. The field of nanotechnology is devoted to understanding how to manipulate materials at the level of individual atoms and molecules.

Physician: Medicine and the Unsuspected Battle for Human Freedom

Richard Leviton
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Molecular nanotechnology is admittedly a "radical" concept, Regis says, "but one thing complete control of the structure of matter meant was complete control of human biology, and that in turn meant the eradication of disease and aging." nanotechnology will make gene therapy a practical reality; if Parkinson's disease is a flaw in the genetic code, send in a nanoassembler to fix it; if sickle-cell anemia is the result of a single misplaced amino acid, then send in a nanomachine to remove the valine and install the correct glutamic acid instead.

101 Things You Don't Know About Science And No One Else Does Either

James Trefil
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The term "nanotechnology" is often applied to any technique that produces very small things, such as the miniaturized circuits discussed elsewhere. Using techniques like those used in making circuits, scientists have succeeded in building incredibly small equipment ?a completely functioning steam engine only a thousandth of an inch on a side, for example. But these techniques usually involve removing unwanted atoms (albeit on a very small scale) rather than adding them. One of the most intriguing examples of nanotechnology involves powdery, crystalline, natural materials called zeolites.

The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know

James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch
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A billionth of a second, fa The term is often used to refer to a very short time: "He missed having an accident by nanoseconds." nanotechnology (nan-oh-tek-nol-uh-jee) A branch of technology devoted to producing devices on an atomic scale. The working part of a typical nanotechnology device might be only a few thousand atoms in width. neural networks A computer system that is designed to mimic the human brain or some other biological system in its functioning.

Stopping the Clock: Longevity for the New Millenium

Ronald Klatz and Robert Goldman
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Palo Alto, California) is a pioneering researcher in computational nanotechnology at Xerox PARC and was the manager of the Language Group at Elxsi. He received his doctorate in electrical engineering from Stanford University. Dr. Merkle is the author of numerous publications and the holder of six patents. He is a researcher, educator, author, and administrator.

The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know

James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch
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See also nanotechnology.) microchip The basic component of modern miniaturized electronics. The "chip" is a series of electrical circuits built into a tiny wafer of silicon or another semiconductor, fa These circuits may be made by exposing the chip to a high temperature vapor of controlled composition. The vapor deposits a thin layer (sometimes only a few atoms thick) on the silicon. In this way complex layers of materials such as those found in transistors can be built up in a very small area. microfilm A film on which miniature copies of documents are reproduced.

101 Things You Don't Know About Science And No One Else Does Either

James Trefil
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One of the most intriguing examples of nanotechnology involves powdery, crystalline, natural materials called zeolites. The interiors of these crystals are full of nanometer-sized holes, or pores, of remarkably uniform width connecting larger chambers, or voids. The idea is that these pores will allow through only molecules or atoms of a specific size ?in fact, the first industrial use of zeolites was as a kind of "sieve" to sort out different molecules.
A place where nanotechnology seems to be progressing rapidly is in the construction of so-called carbon nanotubes. When placed in a strong electric field, carbon atoms can arrange themselves into sheets, which then fold up into a set of nested tubes. A set of tubes typically will contain up to twenty individual tubes that are up to 20 nanometers across and some thousands of nanometers long. Some researchers are trying to find ways of keeping carbon atoms happy enough to grow nanotubes several feet long.

Physician: Medicine and the Unsuspected Battle for Human Freedom

Richard Leviton
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By the mid-1990s, Regis says, nanotechnology was advancing steadily toward its goal; already there were atomic switches, self-replicating molecules, molecular shuttles and trains, even artificial atoms. • Transplant frenzy. For conventional medicine, increasingly the master of ever more technologically heroic procedures, the human has become a body parts shop. Organs—kidneys, lungs, livers, hearts, eyes, pancreases—are expendable, exchangeable, transplantable. A 1990 report by the U.S.
The image we take away is that neurological illnesses are caused by nanotechnology failures that deconstruct the integrity of the human mechanism. Genetic clockwork is by definition beyond our reach, control, or intervention; it acts, often aberrantly, and we passively receive its results, and often suffer. We must be precise: genetic "defects" may be beyond the patient's reach, but not the physician's, aided with the innovations of gene therapy.
Eric Drexler, nanotechnology's goal is to remake the world, molecule by molecule, using atom-sized robotic assemblers. You could make a meat machine, obviating the cow yet ending up with edible meat, "absolutely indistinguishable" from the cow. It would be a mechanical cow, a meat factory at the atomic level, as billions of robotic assemblers work mechanically in parallel, pushing individual molecules into place, synthesizing beef.
Their goal is to dominate and control the physical plane and to darken our perception of everything else, to heighten intelligence, but to obscure its spiritual referents, "to make [a human] into a sheer automaton of cleverness." As nanotechnology illustrates, the goal is complete mechanical control (by automatic robots) of human biology and matter. The influence of Ahrimanic elementals is "as a cold and freezing, soulless cosmic impulse," icy logic without love or compassion that "strangles men's individual intelligence" and appropriates it for themselves.
The Emerging Science of Nanotechnology: Remaking the World—Molecule by Molecule. Little, Brown and Company, Boston, 1995. Rennie, Drummond, M.D., "The Cantekin Affair, "Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 266, No. 23, (December 18, 1991). "Report Expects AIDS to Depress Africa's Fast Population Growth," The New York Times, (July 3, 1996). Richards, Bill. "Hold the Phone: Doctors Can Diagnose Illnesses Long Distance, to the Dismay of Some," The Wall St. Journal, (January 17, 1996).

The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy: What Every American Needs to Know

James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch
See book keywords and concepts
The working part of a typical nanotechnology device might be only a few thousand atoms in width. neural networks A computer system that is designed to mimic the human brain or some other biological system in its functioning. They were developed to deal with problems, like pattern recognition, that the brain does well but that traditional computer systems cannot handle easily. nuclear power Electrical power generated by a nuclear reactor.

Quantum Psychology: How Brain Software Programs You and Your World

Robert Anton Wilson
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PSI tests validated ?Nanotechnology and the Hillis Connection Machine ?Walt Disney as futurist ?The electromagnetic 'V Effect and the 'Paranormal' ?The Immortalist Party ?Father Fox and Creation Spirituality ?Extraterrestrial theories of evolution ?'Mind-Body' Relations and Recent Neurochemical Discoveries ?Psychic Smites CSICOP ?Mind Machines and Head Hardware ?Bucky Fuller's Global Energy Grid in Russia, Central America and Germany ?Cyber-Terrorism and Computer Pathologies ?Notes on longevity research ?Sex, Satanism and Sodomized Dogs in Southern California ?Interviews with Dr.

101 Things You Don't Know About Science And No One Else Does Either

James Trefil
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The field of nanotechnology is devoted to understanding how to manipulate materials at the level of individual atoms and molecules. Instead of starting with a lot of atoms and removing the ones you don't want, the so-called nanotechnologists will build their structures by adding only those atoms that are desired, one at a time. A word about definitions: "nano" is the prefix for one billionth. A nanometer is one billionth of a meter ?the size of ten or so atoms lined up next to each other, or about one hundred-thousandth the width of a human hair.

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ABOUT THE CREATOR OF NATURALPEDIA: Mike Adams, the creator of this NaturalNews Naturalpedia, is the editor of NaturalNews.com, the internet's top natural health news site, creator of the Honest Food Guide (www.HonestFoodGuide.org), a free downloadable consumer food guide based on natural health principles, author of Grocery Warning, The 7 Laws of Nutrition, Natural Health Solutions, and many other books available at www.TruthPublishing.com, creator of the earth-friendly EcoLEDs company (www.EcoLEDs.com) that manufactures energy-efficient LED lighting products, founder of Arial Software (www.ArialSoftware.com), a permission e-mail technology company, creator of the CounterThink Cartoon series (www.NaturalNews.com/index-cartoons.html) and author of over 1,500 articles, interviews, special reports and reference guides available at www.NaturalNews.com. Adams' personal philosophy and health statistics are available at www.HealthRanger.org.

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