Ray Kurzweil talks about alkaline water



 

Ray Kurzweil

Ray Kurzweil was inducted in 2002 into the National Inventors Hall of Fame, established by the U.S. Patent Office. He received the $500,000 Lemelson-MIT Prize, the nation’s largest award in invention and innovation. He also received the 1999 National Medal of Technology, the nation’s highest honor in technology, from President Clinton in a White House ceremony. 

He has also received scores of other national and international awards, including the 1994 Dickson Prize (Carnegie Mellon University’s top science prize), Engineer of the Year from Design News, Inventor of the Year from MIT, and the Grace Murray Hopper Award from the Association for Computing Machinery. He has received twelve honorary Doctorates and honors from three U.S. presidents. 
He has received seven national and international film awards. Ray’s books include The Age of Intelligent Machines, The Age of Spiritual Machines, and Fantastic Voyage: Live Long Enough to Live Forever. Four of Ray’s books have been national best sellers and The Age of Spiritual Machines has been translated into 9 languages and was the #1 best selling book on Amazon in science. 
Question: I have read on the Internet that it is not possible to create alkaline or acid water
from pure water and that water that is pure enough to drink can’t be split into alkaline and
acid components. Is this true?
Answer: As responsible scientists, we had the same skepticism when we first heard about
alkaline water. Therefore, the first thing we did was to purchase a water alkalinizer as well as an
accurate electronic pH meter. We ran tap water with pH 7.1 from our home faucet into the
device and found that the water coming out of the alkaline outlet had a pH of 9.5 (indicating very
alkaline), while the water from the acid outlet measured pH 4.5 (indicating very acidic).
We repeated this experiment with a variety of tap waters obtaining alkaline outputs with a pH
ranging from 9.5 to 9.9. It is true that “pure” or distilled water can not be ionized. If you were to
try to “split” distilled water, it would not work. Tap or spring water, however, has dissolved
minerals in it. It’s the minerals in the water; primarily calcium, potassium and magnesium that
allow water to be “split” by an electric current into alkaline, “electron-rich” (i.e., containing
negatively charged ions that can engage in chemical reactions to provide electrons to positively
charged free radicals) and acid, “electron-deficient” components. Individuals who say it is not
possible to split tap or spring water are misinformed.
One site on the Internet states “Ionized water is nothing more than sales fiction; the term
is meaningless to chemists. Most water that is fit for drinking is too unconductive to
undergo significant electrolysis.”
The above statement is easily shown to be incorrect with a simple pH meter and an electrolysis
machine. Most tap waters run through the machine produce highly alkaline water as measured
by a pH meter.
Question: Since you advocate drinking alkaline water, why not simply mix something like
sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) with water and drink that? There are, in fact, alkaline
waters sold that are made by mixing water with bicarbonate. Wouldn’t that work as well
and be much less expensive than a water alkalinizer?
Answer: There are more benefits to “alkaline water” than simply the alkalinity or pH. The most
important feature of alkaline water produced by a water alkalinizer is its oxidation reduction
potential (ORP). Water with a high negative ORP is of particular value in its ability to neutralize
oxygen free radicals.
ORP can also be directly tested using an ORP sensor and meter. We have conducted these
experiments as well. We found that water coming directly from the tap had an ORP of +290mV,
while the water coming out of the water alkalinizer had a negative ORP. The more negative the
ORP .

George Bush Acidic? Heavens to Betsy No!



Acidic?

Graham, our general manager, contributes to a health blog in the US. He posts to it just like this blog, and he includes many articles we have on file here in Australia. One such article was written by me about acidic or alkaline ‘personalities’ pointing out that calm people are usually more alkaline, and aggressive people more acidic. The first example of an acidic personality I suggested was the late Saddam Hussein. The second example was of an alkaline type; the Dalai Lama.

Now… up until now Graham has been getting wonderful comments on his articles. But when he added that George Bush was probably and acidic type (and really, folks, look at his diet!) Whaoh! the Americans did NOT like it, accusing him of ‘confusing politics with health’. Which brings me to this rather coincidental link comparing the way Americans think to Europeans.

pH Food Question: How to measure pH in a recipe.



I received an interesting question today:

Hi Ian,

We are developing an easy tool for people to determine pH levels of food and recipes and would really like to speak with you about it.
I spoke with Leon Bartlett from your office and he kindly forwarded me the Alkaline Defence Program pdf which I have begun reading.
On the third page of the pdf, you mention that “it isn’t the ratio of the acid/alkaline minerals in our food” that helps create our acid/alkaline balance. If this is the case, then how do you determine if a recipe or food is right for you once ingested?
Our main question is: when determining the overall pH of a recipe, does the quantity of each ingredient matter?
A good question! 
I said it isn’t the ratio because the latest works on alkaline food classification, carried out by German researchers Drs Thomas Remer and Friedrich Manz were based on a  pretty obvious flaw in most of the acid/alkaline food charts we see on the net today. They realised, in a  ‘Duh-Oh’ moment, that not all acids affect the body in the same way.
As an example, I regularly consume doses of Ascorbic Acid, a.k.a. Vitamin C in its purest and most absorbable oral form. The early charts lumped all acids together with a  simple/simplistic ‘burn a food and test the pH of the ash result’ approach. Remer and Manz looked at what acids the foods were composed of and from their knowledge of nutrition and metabolism, classified not just the pH but the effect of the acids in the food. This forms the basis of our Acid/Alkaline Food Chart.
So unfortunately – and fortunately, it isn’t as simple as ‘how much’ alkaline or acid there is in a food after metabolism. Unfortunate, because many readers thought it was simple; just eat the foods with high alkaline pH, and they were wrong. Fortunate because it gives us an opening to a  higher understanding of the relevance of both acids and alkalis in our diet.
So, folks, I wish I could answer it simply, but I can’t, and I know of no-one who has taken the next step, which is to look at how, specifically, to reduce the symptoms of acidosis on our bodies through daily diet. I believe we have the answer but I am neither scientist or doctor.. and my answer is a tough call.
Give up sugar. Sugar as sugar, sugar as starch, sugar as carbs. Replace this quick and nasty power source with the one you have been using for thousands of years. FAT.
I’m doing it, Cassie is, my relatives and some of our team are.. and so far the results have been excellent.
Cassie is blogging on it, and although she has just begun, I’d love you to take a look and leave a comment or ten. Here’s her blog address.