Jayson Cohen
Jayson Cohen
One of the strangest aspects of biodynamics to me is the practice of dynamizing water. It seems to be all the rage. Instagram is full of videos of biodynamic winemakers stirring their water before doing anything with it. But the explanations I’ve seen for why one might want to do this are far removed from any grounded chemistry or physics.
There are a few related questions I’d be interested in hearing folks who might know more here try to answer on this topic (if there are any answers).
- Can someone explain why this results in any change to the water?
-Has anyone proposed and tested a rigorous explanation as to why this does anything? Released gases? Absorbed gases? Anything? The testing part is the most important to my mind.
- Can someone point me to any before-and-after spectroscopic studies, if there are any, on dynamized water? I’m thinking some type of mass spec and/or Raman spectroscopy to try to identify chemical and physical changes. But anything.
There are a few related questions I’d be interested in hearing folks who might know more here try to answer on this topic (if there are any answers).
- Can someone explain why this results in any change to the water?
-Has anyone proposed and tested a rigorous explanation as to why this does anything? Released gases? Absorbed gases? Anything? The testing part is the most important to my mind.
- Can someone point me to any before-and-after spectroscopic studies, if there are any, on dynamized water? I’m thinking some type of mass spec and/or Raman spectroscopy to try to identify chemical and physical changes. But anything.