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melanin

understand this there is a reason that all five of our senses and the six sense which is our mitochondria has paly and melanin always between the environment why because it has to sense that issue
Concept
melanin
Cross-concepts
mitochondria
Score
7 · always · must · because
Status
candidate — not yet promoted to canon

Corpus evidence — top 10 passages

Most-relevant passages from the entire indexed corpus (67,286 paragraph chunks across YouTube transcripts, PubMed, arXiv, archive.org, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, OpenAlex, and more) ranked by semantic similarity (bge-small-en-v1.5).

  1. 01 · _intake0.971

    > understand this there is a reason that all five of our senses and the six sense which is our mitochondria has paly and melanin always between the environment why because it has to sense that issue

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/melanin/002-understand-this-there-is-a-reason-that-all-five-of-our-sense.md

  2. 02 · _intake0.870

    - **8** [never/because/i-proved] · `02:19:45.300` [Beyond DNA: The Electromagnetic Blueprint of Life - Jack Kru](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrdRVDk66JE&t=8385) > fascinated by it since I'm a little boy but I didn't know what melanin really did until I got to be about 40 years old then when I figured out I'm like this is the [ __ ] Greatest Story never told - **7** [always/must/because] · `02:01:40.679` [Dr. Jack Kruse: Decentralizing Medicine and Shaping Future H](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJaR2XgTmPI&t=7300) > understand this there is a reason that all five of our senses

    _intake/canon-claims-raw/BY-CONCEPT.md

  3. 03 · _intake0.829

    Jack Kruse: Decentralizing Medicine and Shaping Future H](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJaR2XgTmPI&t=7307) > which is our mitochondria has paly and melanin always between the environment why because it has to sense that issue why because if it doesn't the resulting waveform that comes out of the thalamus - **7** [must/because/evidence] · `00:42:05.920` [Red Light, Blue Light, Brain Damage: Dr. Jack Kruse Explains](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2njvFN-W4zc&t=2525) > mitochondrial DNA that we're talking about because you need to understand well yeah that's a big deal. And then when you thin

    _intake/claims-allbranch/BY-CONCEPT.md

  4. 04 · _intake0.813

    This is why UV and IR light are not used in the eye camera part of the retina. They are used in the eye clock and in mitochondria to sense waves to control growth metabolic programs to control energy flows through our atomic lattices. It appears our senses pay attention to the ones that give us the most “bang for our buck” to drive change on a chaotic planet. In this way the rate of change of the environment can be linked to the quantity of heteroplasmy in mitochondria. It then appears that the shear amount of heteroplasmy would determine the phenotype of the diseases a life force gets because

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/biohacking-time-with-methylene-blue.md

  5. 05 · _intake0.800

    This brings up another interesting observation: **Why are the women of paleo falling apart?** Might it be, because women are all built by evolution to be to more sensitive to environmental cues, to pass them to their offspring. Could blue light and non native EMF affect the relationship between the mitochondria and the nucleus? Ubiquitination 5 shows that light and water chemistry are directly effected. Do they have the same defect in knowledge that Mr. Moore has? Let us have a look.

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/ubiquitination-6-uncoupled-cycles-uncouples-knowledge.md

  6. 06 · yt0.796

    And that that loop, the way in which it works is when light comes through it, uh the mitochondria in the leptin melanocortin pathway, the central retinal pathways, changes the way mitochondria are able to perform tasks. Those tasks people learned about in biochemistry. And it turns out that melanin, one of the interesting things about it that very few people talk about is it absorbs all frequencies of electromagnetic radiation. But here's the the the real big part for your question. Melanin does something that's even more amazing. Uh it's a metal keylator. And it turns out evolution built this

    yt/NG98vFRYYSc-men-of-law-podcast-19-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt

  7. 07 · yt0.794

    When you understand the basics of the wiring diagram of mitochondria and then you begin to understand what controls that wiring diagram, it goes back to the first question you asked me in this podcast. Melanin. Melanin controls four atoms. And those four atoms do very different things. What are those atoms? Iron, copper, manganese, and molybdenum. Okay? The chemical signals for those of you who are not scientists F E C U M N and M O. You can look them up. They all have different effects directly on mitochondria. Why is that important, Carl? Remember that light show I told you that comes out? Y

    yt/NG98vFRYYSc-men-of-law-podcast-19-with-dr-jack-kruse/transcript.txt

  8. 08 · _intake0.785

    The ear is our most sensitive of the 5 senses because mammals bury a ton of mitochondrial capacity in a giant synapse called the calyx of Held. This makes the auditory relays in all mammals an exquistite redox sensor. Redox is a function of the water a mitochondrion makes so that light can interact with it to make and exclusion zone to generate other signals and waveforms to fine tune our senses. This system is faster at neuronal signal transmission than most other parts of the brain. The calyx of held holds the largest known connections between neurons. This calyx releases an array of neurotr

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/cpc-14-tinnitus-quantum-view-point.md

  9. 09 · _intake0.784

    - **8** [always/never/because] · `01:11:21.900` [Beyond DNA: The Electromagnetic Blueprint of Life - Jack Kru](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrdRVDk66JE&t=4281) > why red light has such tremendous benefits for mitochondria why because sunlight always has red in it when Blue's available but guess what your iPhone never does that's the whole - **8** [always/never/because] · `00:23:33.280` [Red Light, Blue Light, Brain Damage: Dr. Jack Kruse Explains](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2njvFN-W4zc&t=1413) > because guess what? The guy that controlled the budget, Anthony Fouchy, made sure we always

    _intake/canon-claims-raw/BY-CONCEPT.md

  10. 10 · _intake0.779

    So this implies: what if your sensory systems, which are all based upon cell membranes in eukaryotes are not in good shape because DHA or melatonin cycles are off? If you read the Time 9 blog you might understand why now. Think about the DHA/melatonin/eicanosanoids. Is it starting to make sense how the gears in your sensory pathways can lead to disease by increasing your % mitochondrial heteroplasmy in the central retinal pathways now?

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/time-10-sensory-integration.md

Curation checklist

  • ☐ Verify excerpt against source recording
  • ☐ Tag tier (axiom · law · principle · primary derivation · observation)
  • ☐ Cross-cite to ≥1 primary source (PubMed / arXiv / archive.org)
  • ☐ Promote to bucket-canon/05-biophysics/