Hu, Huping and Wu, Maoxin (2006) Photon Induced Non-local Effects of General Anaesthetics on the Brain. [Preprint]
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Abstract
Photons are intrinsically quantum objects and natural long-distance carriers of information in both classical and quantum communications1. Since brain functions involve information and many experiments have shown that quantum entanglement is physically real, we have contemplated from the perspective of our recent hypothesis2 on the possibility of entangling the quantum entities inside the brain with those in an external anaesthetic sample and carried out experiments toward that end. Here we report that applying magnetic pulses to the brain when a general anaesthetic sample was placed in between caused the brain to feel the effect of said anaesthetic for several hours after the treatment as if the test subject had actually inhaled the same. The said effect is consistently reproducible on all four subjects tested. We further found that drinking water exposed to magnetic pulses, laser light, microwave or even flashlight when an anaesthetic sample was placed in between also causes consistently reproducible brain effects in various degrees. We have in addition tested several medications including morphine and obtained consistently reproducible results. Further, through additional experiments we have verified that the said brain effect is the consequence of quantum entanglement between quantum entities inside the brain and those of the chemical substance under study induced by the photons of the magnetic pulses or applied lights. We suggest that the said quantum entities inside the brain are nuclear and/or electron spins and discuss the profound implications of these results.
Item Type: | Preprint |
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Keywords: | Nonlocal Effect, Quantum Entanglement, Anesthesia |
Subjects: | Neuroscience > Biophysics Philosophy > Philosophy of Mind |
ID Code: | 4783 |
Deposited By: | Hu, Dr. Huping |
Deposited On: | 16 Mar 2006 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:56 |
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