Let's think about this:
Depending on the reference source, the average human body consists of between 10- and 50 trillion (10-50 million million) cells, each of which has DNA inside, wherein each DNA molecule consists of billions of atoms (primarily carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen and oxygen) arranged into four discreet groups of nucleotides (types of building block code).
Without getting into the magnitude of electrical forces involved in chemical bonding, do you mean to say that the energy of air vibrating at 526 times per second, impinging on the outer surface of the body, is going to repair DNA?
All of the DNA?
Which (if any) DNA molecules is it going to repair?
How does one know that a repair has been made on even one DNA molecule?
For every DNA molecule repaired, how many others will be damaged?
Worse yet, might the frequency cause damaged DNA molecules to become cancerous?
How does one create a control sample (wherein no signal is applied, but the same measuring scrutiny is applied) to compare with the experimental sample?
How many discreet experiments are needed to rule out random chance?
What is the amplitude of the 526Hz signal required to repair DNA?
How does one know when exactly 526.00000000 Hz has been accomplished?
What kind of tolerance is allowed on the 526Hz figure? 1/2Hz? 1/1000Hz
In what medium -- air (and at what temperature and pressure)? -water? a vibrating table?
For how long must the frequency be applied?
The list of questions goes on and on, and the topic becomes "ridiculous-er and ridiculous-er" to paraphrase Lewis Carol, author of Alice in Wonderland.
I cannot speak for the rest of the civilized world, but approximately 15 out of 16 people of the USA population (nearly 94% of some 300 million people) are scientifically ILliterate. Belief in such pseudo-scientific nonsense such as specific frequencies, crystals, pyramids, magnets, etc., placed near the human body -- makes for comical reading, but has no merit *.
* Some of us may argue that "you can't say that; you can't prove that it's not true"; to these people, I would state that while I cannot disprove these ideas, I am confident that the probability of such things happening would require more time than the age of the known universe for them to occur with measurable reliability.
<climbs down from soapbox platform>
Cheers,
Joe
Last edited by jcfelice88keys (10-10-2010 01:10)