Episode 3 | How we communicate through light

Living The New Science with Lynne McTaggart - A podcast by lynnemctaggart - Fridays

One of the great mysteries of biology is how cells communicate with each other. The standard scientific view is that DNA, the blueprint of the bodies proteins and amino acids somehow manages to spear head all the bodies dynamic activities. Where scientists fall short is explaining how DNA knows when to orchestrate this, and how these chemicals all blindly bumping into each other can operate more or less simultaneously. The late German physicist, Fritz Albert Popp stumbled upon the fact that all living things from single celled plants, to human beings emit a tiny current of photons, tiny particles of light. He labelled them biophoton emissions and believed that he had uncovered the primary communication channel of living organisms. Popp believed that this faint radiation, rather than biochemistry is the true driving force in orchestrating and coordinating all cellular processes in the body.