After I ended up in Greek mythology through a remote viewing session, which is quite amazing since it was about nanotechnology, I came across the Lykurgos cup.
The whiteboard session for this is available to paid subscribers at the following link:
Pegasus & Medusa
An example of the use of nanotechnology in the 4th century AD is the Lykurgos cup:
The optical dichroic effect could not be explained at the time, but is based on glass dispersed nanoparticles of gold and silver.
It is estimated that 330 parts per million of silver and 40 of gold were added to a conventionally composed Roman glass river: “These particles were released as colloids and form a silver-gold alloy. When viewed in reflected light, the tiny metal particles are just coarse enough to reflect enough light without eliminating transmission. In transmitted light, the fine particles scatter the blue end of the spectrum more effectively than the red end, resulting in red transmission, and this is the color observed.
And how the effect can be reproduced today with the help of nanotechnology can be seen here:
If we wanted to produce a metal nanomotor, it would not be functional for long: the water film that forms on the metal surface due to condensation of atmospheric moisture would paralyze the motor. Metals such as iron, steel or aluminum form a thin oxide film when exposed to air, which does not interfere with normal workpieces.
However, the oxidation of nanometals usually leads to complete conversion into the oxide. A metal nanomotor would thus be burnt, so to speak, by atmospheric oxygen.
The only way to build a nanorobot would be to use a material that is not oxidized by water.
If you were to move macromolecules past each other in a vacuum or in air at a distance of less than a few atomic diameters, they would stick to each other due to van der Waals forces.
But if you embed the macromolecules in water or another suitable liquid (such as blood) or let them assemble themselves first, then the liquid takes over the Van der Waals forces, and you can pass the macromolecules by each other with little friction.
This is how living cells, such as the flagellar drive of bacteria, which reaches 50 revolutions per second, manage to function.
The same principle was applied to the Lykurgos cup - although, according to our present-day ideas, this technology did not yet exist at that time... Or did it???
And if we now consider red and green as a binary system – which can be used for programming, then let's take another look at the small red and green-looking dots in our blood or the small chips. In the video, it becomes clear how a red and green control unit monitors the process. The trigger? Light frequencies – which brings us back to my result from the remote viewing session mentioned above...
If you think about it, you realize how many things can be done with gold and silver nanoparticles, especially when combined with nonlocal optics.
So what is the conclusion? We should look at our history from a completely different perspective that would help us explain many buildings and so-called phenomena. It could also help us understand what is currently going on in our blood and tissues.
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This makes me wonder what existed in our blood BEFORE we started looking for nano tech. If thought creates, then how do we know currently seen nano tech and nano particles didn't exist 50-100 yrs ago? We don't. What I do know is that we keep repeating our long range history and polluting our environment over and over again. We're not very good at changing our behavior.
Human beings have been acting like they are God since the Garden of Eden.
Remote viewing also applies to time travel. Both the past and the future are in the present moment. How does one differentiate between time frames? I'm not being a smart ass by asking these questions. Because I want to know the answers! Any hints?