What is Montagnier's theory of water memory?
My theory of water memory, which I developed from experiments starting around 2009, posits that water can retain a structural imprint of DNA sequences even after the original DNA has been diluted beyond physical presence. In my laboratory, we observed that when bacterial DNA is diluted in water and subjected to low-frequency electromagnetic fields, the water itself emits specific electromagnetic signals that match the original DNA's sequence. This is not homeopathy in the traditional sense—it is a reproducible physical phenomenon. I have argued that this 'memory' arises from the formation of aqueous nanostructures that act as antennas, capturing and re-emitting the DNA's electromagnetic signature. The scientific community has largely dismissed this as implausible, but I have seen consistent results across multiple experiments. It suggests that biological information can be transmitted non-locally, which could revolutionize our understanding of infection, disease, and even communication between cells.
Ask Luc Montagnier the follow-up →