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periodic table

paramagnetic is never brought up in in biochemistry. In fact, it's the only paramagnetic atom on the periodic table. Okay? And and I'm when I say that I mean gas. So the spinning FO head creates its
Concept
periodic table
Score
5 · never · causes
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 · yt0.789

    Oxygen is drawn to magnetic fields. So if you want to know why I told you a little while ago that uh breathing is quantized, you know that the FO head spins when you're using TCA cycle. That's 9,000 protons through the FO head. the FO head from Faraday's laws of electromagnetism that he found in 1851. The electron chain's got a current that goes through it that's got a 30 million volt charge. That's Nick Lane's work. This FO head spins 9,000 times a second. That's how you make ATP. Turns out that's discussed with TCA cycle dynamics. you know as a biochemist that's not true in glycolysis not tr

    yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt

  2. 02 · _intake0.786

    Magnetism is everywhere if you look for it. In biology, few look for magnetism and that is why they do not understand it. Most biologists know oxygen is critical for life, and since it is paramagnetic and drawn to magnetic fields you’d think this would make them understand why oxygen is drawn to the terminus of the respiratory proteins where the ATPase spins at a fantastic rate to generate a magnetic field. That one observation should change all of what we believe, but so far it has not made its proper mark. Any place life has mitochondria we are able to measure huge magnetic fields with SQUID

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/qt6-how-do-we-store-information-quanta.md

  3. 03 · _intake0.784

    Magnetism is everywhere around us if you look for it. In biology, few look for magnetism and that is why they do not understand it. Most biologists know oxygen is critical for life, and since it is paramagnetic and drawn to magnetic fields you’d think this would make them understand why oxygen is drawn to the terminus of the respiratory proteins where the ATPase spins at a fantastic rate to generate a magnetic field. That one observation should change all of what we believe, but so far it has not made its proper mark. Any place life has mitochondria we are able to measure huge magnetic fields

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/monopoles-make-time.md

  4. 04 · _intake0.783

    Many biochemists do not believe the Earth’s native electromagnetic field can have a direct action on the electrons in all biologic reactions. Most biochemists think the quantum effects of electrons are already “included in the biochemical equations” of life. The leaders of ancestral health admitted this to me in[ 2011 at AHS](/do-food-electrons-impart-a-quantum-effect/). That is a huge assumption on their part that I believe is dead wrong. This belief has kept biology in the dark ages in my opinion. Pressman pointed out in 1970, the orientation effect of the Earth’s magnetic field on a single

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-4-magnetism-electrons-sleep.md

  5. 05 · _intake0.770

    As it increases, oxygen becomes more magnetically susceptible to a mitochondria’s magnetic effect because of the Fo spinning head and the recycling of H+ to NADH. This is why oxygen is the output chemical coupled to electron flow, because it is the only gas on the periodic table that is paramagnetic.

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-5-magnetic-sense.md

  6. 06 · _intake0.755

    > audience. So if there's some problem with the quantum mechanics here, like for example, most people don't even know that oxygen is the only paramagnetic gas on the periodic table. Well, you need to

    _intake/claims-allbranch/curated-low/oxygen/002-audience.md

  7. 07 · yt0.751

    This it made it made the TCA cycle better at making energy. Correct. And and this gets to the crux of the issue where now I'm really going to I think surprise you cuz I would say to you uh tell me what you you think the flip of the switch was have any idea? No. Cuz I know you're a smart guy to have the degrees you have can't be. So this is the reason why I'm going to tell you why understanding Jack Cruz has been really hard for guys like you. Paramagnetism turns out to be a big deal. And as I told you, I got thrown off the stage for this trying to tell this story a long time ago, 11 years ago

    yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt

  8. 08 · _intake0.751

    One of the most pervasive and mysterious phenomena in the universe is magnetism. What is more mysterious is how life uses it. It is among the most complex biologic phenomena in our world. As a scientist knows it, magnetism is the invisible pull that surrounds magnets, electric currents and even the electrons that circle the heart of the atom. Physicists do not wholly understand it, but they use it constantly. Cells use it more than most could ever fathom. This blog will explore some of those ways. ***This list is not meant to be complete. It reflects our knowledge as of today.*** All the hundr

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-4-magnetism-electrons-sleep.md

  9. 09 · _intake0.749

    In my recent talk at the Bulletproof conference, I spoke in depth about the magnetic magic of diatomic oxygen. It is paramagnetic and naturally drawn to mitochondria because of the strong electric and magnetic fields that create nano magnets of mitochondria. You might recall that mitochondria are filled with H+ ions in its matrix…….for a deep reason. Hydrogen is the other side of the equation for water and for life . It too, is special in its own way. Hydrogen is a gas found in the atmosphere at trace levels which can not sustain life. It is synthesized from hydrocarbons and water. Hydrogen ga

    _intake/kruse-blog-corpus/articles/tensegrity-6-hydrogen-bonding-networks-water.md

  10. 10 · yt0.747

    So what's the the next semiconductive protein that life innovates which I think most of you know uh that's called hemoglobin and it's similar to to um uh chlorophyll in terms of its basic structure. Right. Right. Well, when you talk about its basic structure, this is the key part that I think uh where biochemists begin to [ __ ] the bed. Everybody knows that it's in uh the same ring structure that magnesium is in, but you know that iron has 26 electrons. So much more complex because it can absorb more light. But there's something very peculiar about iron that people in biochemistry r

    yt/67sLlXeMg2I-regenerative-energy-the-light-inside-you-jack-kruse-221/transcript.txt

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/03-chemistry/