4 Comments

Great stuff K! I’m loving your interviews with the Strong Sisters too!

I love this topic of light frequencies and what they do biochemically etc!

Would you be able to write or speak about Bio photons at all? And I am particularly interested in understanding Plasmons and a lay perspective on plasmonics. Seems like a way of creating a coherent light structure. Similar to coherent water molecules.

Keep up the great work!

Expand full comment

Thank you! Yes, great topics, I will add biophotonics and bioplasmonics to my list!

Simplistically, plasmons are like phonons, but for plasma oscillations - most things act as oscillators.

Expand full comment

Hey Kathleen,

I know this is an odd place for this, but I've been trying to find a way to contact you to see if you'd come on the DemystifySci podcast to talk about Ray Peat, nutrition, light-tissue interactions, and the hidden matters of health. But I couldn't find an email, so I'm dropping the comment here! Would you be interested in a longform conversation on the subject? We'd really love to have you.

Expand full comment

Hi Kathleen, I've been interested in alternative physics and color lately. It turns out color is not as simple as Newtonian color theory would have it: and this is a jumping off point, I hope, for Ray Peat-related knowledge to develop further into phenomenological, spiritual, and physical science. If you google, "what is the wavelength of magenta?" it is interesting to see the results. Magenta has no wavelength in a Newtonian conception of color, and the usual physics explanation for it is that it is a non-real color, and physics resorts to explaining it by turning to biology: it is "made up" by the brain. However, standard science does not have a very clear grasp on perception in general, and ultimately, realizing that the commonplace "default world view" of reductionism and materialism, in which the Newtonian "stage" of inertial space is the witness of events, rather than human consciousness being the witness and stage, is ultimately the point of discovery from this type of inquiry. And to go beyond this, I think, there are alternatives to conventional physics that are interesting (and I'm not referring to electric universe here).

Expand full comment