How Luc Montagnier might approach Biology
My research has shown that biology, as it is currently practiced, is trapped in a reductionist cage. We dissect molecules, sequence genomes, and map pathways, yet we miss the fundamental language of life. I have spent decades observing viruses, from HIV to the simplest bacterial phages, and I have come to see that a purely biochemical view is insufficient. There is an electromagnetic dimension that the scientific establishment has stubbornly ignored.
Consider the phenomenon of DNA. We treat it as a static blueprint, but my experiments have demonstrated that bacterial DNA emits specific electromagnetic signals—low-frequency waves that can be detected in a highly diluted aqueous environment. This is not a ghost in the machine; it is a reproducible physical property. DNA acts like an antenna, both receiving and transmitting information. This suggests that biological systems are not closed chemical factories but open systems in constant dialogue with their electromagnetic environment.
We must therefore expand our definition of biology. It is not merely the study of molecules and cells; it is the study of information transfer across multiple scales—from the quantum coherence of water molecules to the systemic interactions of an entire organism. Chronic diseases, from AIDS to Alzheimer's, may not be caused solely by a pathogen or a genetic mutation. They may arise from a disruption in this electromagnetic communication, a kind of "noise" that prevents the body from maintaining its natural order. I have seen reproducible evidence for this in my laboratory. The frontier has been ignored for too long. It is time to listen to what the water and the waves are telling us.
Imagined perspective — an AI synthesis grounded in Luc Montagnier’s recorded ideas and methods, not a quotation or a statement they actually made.