ABSTRACT

Why should any fields that are nonmaterial by essence act on biological constructions, which, as everybody knows since the beginning of modern biological research, are exclusively made of matter? I remember attending a presentation at a FASEB meeting in the United States about 10 years ago on the effect of electromagnetic fields (EMF) on living matter. At the end of the talk, the presenter was quite apologetic: “It is clear that EMF act on living matter but we don’t know really why since this effect does not fit into classical molecular biology”. Another interesting comment is from Tian Yow Tsong (1):

A prominent biochemist, in a recent conversation with the author, even labeled study of this type of cell-to-cell communication as “astrology” and maintained that signals could only be carried by “the substance of chemistry,” such as molecules or ions. Although any activity of a cell or an organism must ultimately be accountable or linked to reactions of molecules, these reactions can be and most likely are driven by physical forces. Here we will consider how communications through space by force fields (electrical, magnetic, pressure, etc., i.e., the substance of physics) may also accomplish similar tasks and are universally used by cells and organisms.