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Evolution and the Surviving Instinct
by Jeff Hammon
404 pages
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Is reincarnation the product of human evolution?
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Paperback
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$26.95
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+ Flat-rate shipping & handling as low as
$4.00 for US customers.
Faster shipping and international shipping available for more.
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Category: Science
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(requires Adobe Reader)
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About the Book
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It was first viewed under a microscope in the 1920's, but it's rotary-catalysis motion was not proven until 1994 winning Professor Paul Boyer and Dr. John Walker the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1997. However, it's real importance in biology is still being completely overlooked, even though it provides the only logical explanation for cellular differentiation, animal instinct, human memory, the sexual selection process of the hymenoptera insects, the differences in re-growth potential of various organisms, and XX chromosome hermaphrodites. It may also be the answer to a question we do not typically dare to ask in scientific terms: what really happens to us when we die?
"It" is the ATPase enzymes. Professor Boyer referred to it as "a splendid molecular machine", and it certainly is, even more than Professor Boyer seems to have realized. It is the proof that biology is not the double-helix of DNA, but the rotary-catalysis motion of the ATPase enzymes. It is the proof that life is not a chemical reaction of the chromosomes, but an embedded memory of metabolism, and that changes almost everything we know about the very fundamentals of biology.
That splendid molecular machine may even be the answer to much more. It may very well be the explanation for the human conscience, human emotions, the human soul. That little machine is found in every living organism on Earth, from bacteria to elephants, embedding the memory of every activity of the organism, and that may well be the very cause of human emotions, life after life. Is reincarnation a product of human evolution? The evidence is found in the workings of those little rotating enzymes.
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| About the Author |
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Jeff Hammon is a freelance writer living in Montana. He specializes in science and history, having written everything from magazine articles on automobiles, to instruction manuals for electro-magnetic locating equipment. He also appeared on NBC's Unsolved Mysteries in a re-examination of the 1871 Wickenburg Massacre in Arizona. |
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