Is water just a background character or a living archive? Explore how its molecular structure stores information and acts as a battery for our health.

Water isn't just a solvent—it’s a communication medium. It’s like the difference between a bucket of loose magnetic letters and a hard drive; one is just a pile of stuff, while the other is organized to hold a narrative.
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Lena: Miles, I was looking at a glass of water today and realized we usually just think of it as H2O—this inert, life-sustaining background character. But what if that’s a total misunderstanding of its nature? I mean, could water actually be "intelligent" or even have a memory?
Miles: It’s a wild question, right? But think about the experiments by Jacques Benveniste or Nobel laureate Luc Montagnier. They suggested that water can actually store and transmit electromagnetic information from substances even after they've been diluted until not a single molecule remains. It’s like the water retains a "quantum fingerprint" of what was once there.
Lena: That’s incredible. So, are we saying the water itself is "remembering," or is it something within the water’s structure, like a mineral matrix, that’s holding onto that data?
Miles: Exactly, and that’s where we have to ask what "memory" even means in a liquid context. Let’s explore how these structured "coherence domains" might actually allow water to function as a biological battery for our consciousness.