It wasn't long after I submitted my ideas that i received a response. It was right around Christmas.
Brilliant!
I think you are onto something really important, and I was not aware of the crab story.
Some years ago I first heard the transmutation concept from a colleague, who told me about the story of the chickens' hard egg shells. Depleting dietary calcium from the chickens failed to make them soft. Only depleting potassium did that, and when potassium was restored, the shells became hard. That impressed me.
I then read the works of Louis Kervran -- I guess you're familiar? That impressed me no end. I gave the book to one of my PhD students, who elected to study transmutation. His results (on plant germination) were ambiguous: it looked like transmutation was occurring, but he could not rule out certain potential artifacts.
So, your story strikes me as interesting.
One issue is energy: transmutation is indisputable with high energy input such as ionizing radiation, but the issue in biology has always been: where's the energy? Creation of EZ water comes with energy: separation of charge represents a huge pool of potential energy. Perhaps that energy, as you allude to, goes into transmutation. (I've been wondering whether the high potassium inside the cell comes from transmutation.)
Perhaps you should write something on this issue? I smell growing interest in the subject.
Best,
Jerry
So, I guess this will be the start for my writings. Doesn't seem that too many people can see that science as we ‘know’ it, is about to to change drastically.