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In this fascinating and deeply insightful interview, we sit down with Professor Emeritus Marc Henry, a world-renowned chemist from Strasbourg University, author of 10 books, over 160 scientific papers, and cited more than 12,000 times in the scientific literature. Professor Henry joins us to discuss his groundbreaking article “Thermodynamics of Life”—an exploration of entropy, energy, and the philosophical and scientific foundations of what it truly means to be alive.
With his trademark humor and humility, Professor Henry begins by apologizing for his “spicy French accent,” then dives into a sweeping intellectual journey that bridges physics, chemistry, biology, and the very nature of consciousness itself. Drawing from more than 40 years of scientific research, he challenges the way modern biology and medicine interpret fundamental concepts—arguing that they’ve been on the wrong track for more than a century due to a deep misunderstanding of entropy.
He explains that entropy has been simply equated with “disorder”—a subjective and misleading interpretation that has shaped generations of scientists, educators, and physicians. Instead, Professor Henry restores the original meaning introduced by Ludwig Boltzmann and refined through Max Planck’s revolutionary insights: entropy is a precise physical quantity that measures how matter and energy explore space and motion. It’s not about chaos, but about possibilities.
From ovens and blackbody radiation to quantum mechanics, relativity, and the crisis in modern medicine, Professor Henry connects the dots between the smallest particles and the largest galaxies. He reminds us that quantum physics governs the micro-world of atoms and molecules, while general relativity governs the cosmos—and that humanity exists somewhere in between. But the key question, he says, is: What scientific language should we use to describe life itself? His answer: quantum mechanics, because life is fundamentally a quantum phenomenon.
Professor Henry talks about his understanding life as a dynamic, self-organizing process that continually interacts with its environment while maintaining order through the increase of entropy in the universe. In his view, life doesn’t oppose entropy—it depends on it. The entire biological and medical paradigm must be rethought accordingly.
He argues that the medical crises we see today—chronic illness, degenerative disease, and the limits of pharmaceutical approaches—stem from this mistaken view of entropy and energy. By ignoring the true thermodynamic nature of living systems, medicine has lost its connection to the physical laws that govern all matter. “We cannot truly heal in the medical professions,” he says, “if our science is built on a misunderstanding of what life is.”
This conversation is far more than an academic discussion. It’s a philosophical meditation on science, time, and human responsibility. Professor Henry reminds us that writing—unlike speaking—endures. It’s a message meant not only for today’s scientists but also for future generations who may read his words centuries from now. As he eloquently puts it, “We are citizens of the universe.”
If you are interested in:
● The deep connection between physics and biology
● Entropy, biology and medicine
● Why quantum mechanics matters for understanding life
● The crisis in modern medicine
● And how science must evolve to meet the challenges of the 21st century
…then this interview will expand your mind and challenge your assumptions.
🔬 Featured Guest:
Professor Emeritus Marc Henry
Department of Chemistry, Strasbourg University
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎙️ Host: Klaus Schustereder
Scientific discussions on life, energy, and consciousness
📘 Topics Covered:
● Entropy vs. Disorder: The historical misunderstanding
● Boltzmann, Clausius, Carnot, and Planck: The roots of thermodynamics
● Quantum Physics and Relativity: Two languages of nature
● How thermodynamics connects life to the universe
● Why biology and medicine need a paradigm shift
● The concept of Homeodynamics of Life
🧠 Key Ideas:
● Entropy is not disorder—it’s a measure of possible states.
● Medicine and biology must realign with 21st-century physics.
● Life follows the second law of thermodynamics, not against it.
● True understanding of entropy connects us to the cosmos.
#ThermodynamicsOfLife #MarcHenry #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #Thermodynamics #Boltzmann #MaxPlanck #QuantumBiology #PhilosophyOfScience #Homeodynamics #ScienceAndConsciousness #MedicineCrisis #PhysicsOfLife #KlausInterview
In this second chapter of the six-part series Thermodynamics of Life, Professor Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his extraordinary conversation with Dr. Klaus Schustereder. Together, they dive even deeper into the nature of existence and give a fascinating view of life, water, and consciousness.
Building on the foundation laid in Part 1, this discussion moves from physics and thermodynamics into the heart of cosmology and philosophy. Professor Henry challenges the long-held idea that life on Earth is merely an improbable accident. Instead, he proposes a breathtaking hypothesis: life is an inherent property of the universe itself—as natural and inevitable as gravity, light, or time. Through the lens of thermodynamics, astrophysics and chemistry, he explains how the same universal principles that govern the birth of stars also give rise to consciousness within living beings.
Henry retraces the historical evolution of scientific thought—from Aristotle’s Earth-centered cosmos, through Galileo’s heliocentric revolution, and onward to the quantum and relativistic models that shape our understanding today. Yet, he warns, our minds still cling to outdated paradigms that separate humanity from the cosmos. True science, he argues, demands humility: to recognize that we are not the masters of nature, but expressions of it.
🌌 Key Themes & Ideas
A Scientific Synthesis:
Professor Henry unites the physical sciences and the metaphysical quest for meaning. The same thermodynamic laws that drive the stars also drive the evolution of life and mind. When hydrogen burns in stellar furnaces, it gives rise to helium, oxygen, and carbon—the essential ingredients of life. Hydrogen and oxygen then combine to form water, the cosmic medium that enables organization, memory, and awareness. From this union emerges biology, emotion, and thought.
In this framework, life is not random—it is the universe learning to know itself through living systems.
Henry challenges both reductionist biology and conventional medicine to adopt a broader, holistic vision that honors this unity. When science returns to its true foundation in thermodynamics and the physics of information, it can once again serve the well-being of humanity and the planet.
“We are not accidents of chemistry,” Henry explains. “We are the expression of the universe’s own consciousness—its desire to perceive, to evolve, and to understand itself.”
🎙️ Guest: Professor Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
📚 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration of science, philosophy, and spirit—bridging quantum physics, thermodynamics, water, and consciousness to reveal a unified understanding of existence through one of France’s most original scientific thinkers.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #Water #Consciousness #Astrophysics #PhilosophyOfScience #Hydrogen #Life #Universe #Homeodynamics #ScienceAndSpirit #KlausSchustereder #QuantumBiology #Thermodynamics
In Part 3 of Thermodynamics of Life, Professor Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his profound dialogue with Dr. Klaus Schustereder—this time exploring one of the most challenging and inspiring ideas in all of science and philosophy:
Does consciousness come before matter?
Building on the previous episode’s revelation that life and water are universal properties of the cosmos, Professor Henry expands the discussion to the quantum origins of consciousness, the structure of matter, and the thermodynamic foundations of health and disease.
According to Henry, the modern scientific worldview has been shaped by a deep misunderstanding: that matter gives rise to consciousness. Drawing from quantum physics, relativity, and thermodynamics, he turns this assumption upside down—showing that consciousness precedes matter, giving form and meaning to everything that exists.
He explains that the “vacuum” of quantum physics is not empty, but a field of potential—a universal ether or “quantum vacuum” that generates both matter and energy. Matter, he says, is not a substance in itself but a visible manifestation of invisible fields interacting through vibration. Everything we experience—the table, our bodies, the stars—is ultimately a pattern of coherent fields structured by information.
🌌 Key Concepts & Themes
💫 The Physics of Life and Healing
Professor Henry goes further to explore the link between consciousness, information, and medicine. Drawing on Ilya Prigogine’s thermodynamics of irreversible processes, he explains that life depends on a continuous flux of entropy—an ongoing flow of energy and information that sustains dynamic order.
When this flow is blocked or reduced, illness appears. Health, therefore, is not a static state but a balanced exchange of entropy and information between body, mind, and environment.
Henry contrasts modern medicine’s material approach—which treats only the body—with a broader quantum view in which healing can occur through both matter (drugs, chemistry) and information (consciousness, vibration, coherence, and water memory). He discusses how the mind, meditation, and even informed water can restore balance by reorganizing the informational patterns within the body’s water matrix.
“Consciousness acts on information. Information shapes water. And water organizes life.”
Through examples ranging from fever and coherence to cancer metabolism, Henry and Dr. Schustereder explore how entropy flux underlies both health and disease. Cancer, for instance, is redefined not as a genetic defect but as a disturbance of entropy flow. Healing, he suggests, requires restoring the correct flow of entropy and coherence within living water.
🧭 A New Medicine of Consciousness
Professor Henry proposes that modern medicine must evolve beyond chemical intervention toward informational and energetic healing, recognizing that consciousness itself is the ultimate source of order and coherence.
“The true healer works not only with matter—but with the information carried by water, light, and consciousness.”
Guest: Professor Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Scientific dialogues on life, energy, water, and consciousness
📘 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration of the intersection between physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. Through vivid dialogue and scientific rigor, Professor Henry reveals a world where consciousness, information, water, and entropy form the foundations of both life, health and helaling.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Consciousness #QuantumPhysics #Thermodynamics #Entropy #QuantumBiology #Water #PhilosophyOfScience #KlausSchustereder #EnergyMedicine #MaxPlanck #QuantumFieldTheory
In this fourth part of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, joins Dr. Klaus Schustereder for a brilliant and often humorous deep dive into one of science’s most misunderstood words—energy—and the concept that quietly governs the universe: entropy.
With clarity and wit, Professor Henry unpacks the centuries-long confusion surrounding “energy.” Everyone talks about it—politicians, scientists, engineers—but few can define what energy truly is. “If you try to define it without an example,” he says, “you cannot. It is undefinable.” From Aristotle’s energeia to Poincaré’s paradox, Henry traces how science inherited a concept that can only be described by examples—mechanical, electrical, thermal, nuclear—none of which capture its essence.
He explains that entropy, not energy, could serve as new foundation of life. Unlike energy—which depends on lists, categories, and exceptions—entropy can be clearly defined: it measures how much space and motion are available to matter at a given temperature. The greater the possibilities, the greater the entropy. From solids to liquids to gases, Henry demonstrates that this single idea explains every state of matter—something energy alone cannot do.
⚙️ Key Insights
🧠 A Journey Through Science and Paradox
Professor Henry retells how Galileo’s telescope, Newton’s laws, and Sadi Carnot’s steam engine led humanity from mechanics to thermodynamics—and to the birth of entropy through the work of Rudolf Clausius and Ludwig Boltzmann. He shows that while mechanics was based on energy conservation, thermodynamics revealed something deeper: every real process produces entropy.
The industrial revolution measured everything in “joules,” thanks to James Prescott Joule, a brewer whose experiments linked mechanical motion to heat. But Joule’s convenient unit blurred the distinction between heat and energy, creating a linguistic illusion that still distorts modern physics, engineering, and medicine.
🌌 From Energy to Entropy to Life
The discussion expands into the philosophy of science itself. Why cling to a concept that cannot be defined when entropy alone explains all change? Henry argues that if science had discovered entropy before energy, our entire worldview—especially in biology and medicine—would be more coherent. Entropy, not energy, describes how systems evolve and self-organize.
He also links entropy to cosmology, suggesting that the expansion of the universe is driven by the unstoppable creation of entropy. “The universe is impatient,” he says, “because entropy can never be destroyed. As it increases, the universe must expand to contain it.”
For Henry, this is the bridge between physics, life, and consciousness itself: the second law of thermodynamics is the true law of evolution. There is no need for the “first law.” The second law alone—entropy always increases—explains motion, time, and life’s direction toward greater complexity.
🔄 Spin, Constants, and the Disappearance of Energy
In the final segment, Henry discusses spin, Planck’s constant, and the six universal constants that define reality: gravitation, light speed, electric charge, Avogadro’s number, Boltzmann’s constant (entropy), and Planck’s constant (spin).
Notice, he says, there is no constant for energy—proving it is not fundamental. Entropy and spin are the true pillars of the universe.
“If you speak of energy,” Henry concludes, “you are a technician. If you speak of entropy, you are a scientist.”
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
📘 Series: Thermodynamics of Life – a six-part dialogue uniting physics, biology, and philosophy to reveal how entropy, water, and consciousness shape the universe.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Entropy #Energy #FreeEnergy #Spin #QuantumPhysics #Boltzmann #MaxPlanck #Clausius #Carnot #PhysicsOfLife #PhilosophyOfScience #Thermodynamics #SecondLaw #Consciousness #KlausSchustereder #ScienceAndSpirit
In Part 5 of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his riveting dialogue with Dr. Klaus Schustereder, exploring how quantum physics, entropy, and water come together to form the scientific foundation for life, consciousness, and healing.
This episode dives deep into the mysteries of water, the fossil concepts that hold back scientific progress, and the quantum nature of coherence and resonance that unites physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. It’s a sweeping conversation that moves from the chemistry of hydrogen bonds to the nature of consciousness itself—showing that life is not made of matter, but of vibration, coherence, and information.
💡 Fossil Concepts and the Need for Renewal
Prof. Henry begins by identifying “fossil concepts”—outdated scientific ideas that prevent real understanding. Many of today’s textbooks, he explains, still rely on 19th-century simplifications such as “entropy equals disorder” or “energy can be consumed.” These ideas, repeated for generations, have become dogma.
To advance science, Henry argues, we must retire these fossilized notions, write new textbooks, and teach coherent physics grounded in entropy and quantum theory. “Science progresses,” he says, “only when we dare to clean house.”
He also warns of oversimplification in science education—the danger of turning complex subjects into easy analogies that harden into myths. When repeated often enough, wrong ideas take root in the mind and become “false truths.” Real progress requires scientists to unlearn before they can learn anew.
🌊 The Quantum Mystery of Water
From here, Henry turns to his lifelong passion: water. Though seemingly simple—two parts hydrogen, one part oxygen—water defies classical physics. It should be a gas, yet it’s liquid at room temperature. Its hydrogen bonds are stronger than theory predicts, and it expands when frozen—defying normal thermodynamic behavior.
Using quantum physics, Henry explains why: water is the most cohesive substance in the universe relative to its size and electron count. Its structure depends on gravitational confinement, meaning that the chemical bonds we observe on Earth exist because of the planet’s gravitational field. Take a drop of water into deep space, and the bonds dissolve—the water vaporizes.
This revelation transforms the way we understand chemistry: bonds are not intrinsic to atoms but depend on their environment—their “container.” On Earth, that container is gravity; in the universe, it’s the ether itself.
⚛️ Entropy, Containers, and the Scale of the Universe
Energy, Henry insists, cannot be defined without a container—while entropy exists everywhere. On the cosmic scale, entropy alone explains why everything tends toward the gaseous state: gases occupy the maximum number of possible configurations. Energy is local; entropy is universal.
He expands this idea to explain how liquids, solids, and life are “pockets of lower entropy,” possible only in small, confined systems like planets. In the vastness of the universe, everything is gas—the ultimate expression of entropy.
🧬 Coherence Domains and Water Memory
Henry introduces the revolutionary concept of coherence domains—regions in water about 100 nanometers across, containing roughly ten million water molecules vibrating in perfect quantum synchrony.
When coherent, they behave like a single quantum entity capable of storing and transmitting information. This is the physical foundation for what Henry calls morphogenic water memory—not pure water memory, but memory that arises when water interacts with another phase, such as a membrane, gas bubble, or lipid layer.
“If you take water by itself, it cannot remember. But as soon as you let it touch something not itself—life begins to remember.”
This insight links biology, physics, and information theory: cells store information not in molecules but in phase boundaries, where water meets something else.
🎵 Resonance, Amplification, and Healing
Coherent domains can resonate with electromagnetic fields, allowing information transfer through vibration rather than matter. Healing, Henry suggests, occurs through resonance and entropy flux—a temporary increase in entropy that unblocks stagnation, restoring natural flow and coherence.
He compares this to breaking a dam: by increasing the entropy flux, the system resets to a higher order. This principle explains how vibrational medicine, phototherapy, and even the laying on of hands may work—not through energy transfer, but through resonance with the body’s coherent water domains.
“Small is not nothing. If you have resonance, small can be big.”
This amplification through resonance, he explains, is the physical basis of homeopathy and information medicine, where tiny signals can produce large effects in nonlinear systems like living cells.
🎶 Music, Consciousness, and the Physics of Life
Everything vibrates, resonates, and harmonizes. Matter itself is a temporary standing wave—created and destroyed constantly within the ether, yet maintained through coherence.
He extends this view to psychology and healing: traumatic memories, he says, are “frozen information fields” that can be changed by interacting consciously with their coherence. Healing, whether physical or emotional, occurs when new coherence replaces the old.
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
University of Strasbourg – Department of Chemistry
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Scientific dialogues on life, water, coherence, and consciousness
📘 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration uniting physics, biology, and philosophy—revealing how entropy, coherence, and consciousness shape both the universe and the healing process.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #QuantumPhysics #Water #Entropy #Coherence #Resonance #Homeopathy #InformationMedicine #QuantumBiology #PhilosophyOfScience #EnergyMedicine #KlausSchustereder #HealingPhysics #MorphogenicWater #EntropyAndLife #QuantumFieldTheory #VibrationAndConsciousness
In the concluding episode of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, joins Dr. Klaus Schustereder one final time to deliver a passionate reflection on the future of science, medicine, and consciousness. After five episodes tracing entropy, water, and quantum physics, this conversation brings everything together—asking what kind of science humanity needs for the 21st century and beyond.
🌍 Cleaning the House of Science
Prof. Henry begins by stating there is no “next step” in science—because the crucial steps were already taken more than a century ago. Entropy was clarified by Boltzmann in the 19th century, and quantum mechanics by 1930. The task now, he says, is not to invent new theories but to clear away fossil concepts—matter, energy, and reductionism—that block understanding. “The next step is not forward,” he says. “It is to clean the house.”
Physics has already done much of this work; chemistry is halfway there; but biology and medicine remain trapped in outdated paradigms. True medicine, he insists, must be rooted in physics, because life is a thermodynamic and quantum phenomenon, not merely a biochemical one.
⚖️ Science vs. Belief
Henry laments that in recent years science has regressed—confusing belief with observation. “When people say ‘Science says,’ that is not science,” he warns. “Science observes; it never believes.” He distinguishes genuine science, which questions and refines, from technological dogma that claims mastery over nature. Real science, he reminds us, accepts that the visible world is only the shadow of interacting fields—not the full reality.
🧬 Viruses, Evolution, and the Role of Change
Challenging conventional medicine, Henry argues that viruses are not enemies but agents of evolution. They modify DNA, helping species adapt and progress. Illness, he suggests, appears when we resist change—when entropy flow is blocked. “Viruses appear when you refuse to evolve,” he says. “They are messengers of transformation.” From thermodynamic view, evolution is not random mutation but entropy-driven reorganisation toward higher consciousness.
🧠 Technology Is Not Science
Henry distinguishes science—the search for understanding—from technology, which applies knowledge for utility. “Technology needs science to exist,” he says, “but science does not need technology.” Since 1930, conceptual breakthroughs have slowed while machines have advanced. Humanity confuses more powerful tools with more knowledge. “We have computers and rockets,” he says, “but not more wisdom.”
💊 Rehabilitating Homeopathy and Informed Water
In the most provocative part of the discussion, Henry defends homeopathy and the concept of morphogenic (informed) water. He explains that homeopathy’s power lies not in chemical molecules but in information stored within coherent water domains—microscopic regions where millions of molecules vibrate together in quantum harmony. Through dilution and vigorous shaking (succussion), toxic matter is removed but its informational spectrum is imprinted into water. The gas microbubbles formed during shaking create coherence domains capable of carrying that information to living tissues.
“Matter can disappear,” he says, “but information and coherence remain.”
Henry traces this idea back to Paracelsus and Samuel Hahnemann, noting that the latter unknowingly practiced quantum physics two centuries before its birth. For centuries, homeopathy was the medicine of nobles and intellectuals—from the British royal family to John D. Rockefeller—because it worked.
He argues that today’s evidence-based medicine has confused proof with healing. “Medicine is not about proving,” he insists. “It is about making people feel better.” Double-blind trials may satisfy academic minds, but ethically they divide the sick into groups of hope and hopelessness—an unacceptable act when consciousness exists in all living systems, from humans to bacteria.
🌊 Water Memory and Information Medicine
Henry illustrates that water memory is not fantasy but grounded in quantum field theory: water interacts with light and gas to form dynamic coherence domains that store electromagnetic patterns. If Disney’s Frozen II can show water recalling the past, he jokes, then surely scientists can acknowledge the same principle with rigor.
He calls for a new medicine of information, where light, vibration, and consciousness become legitimate healing tools alongside chemistry. Drugs, he says, are one tool among many; others include water, electromagnetic fields, and even the informational power of words and intention.
“Whatever the method—chemical, energetic, or conscious—what matters is that people recover health.”
🔭 Toward Science Reborn
In his closing reflection, Prof. Henry calls for humility, integration, and courage. True science must reconnect with entropy, coherence, and consciousness—its forgotten roots. Healing the planet begins with healing science itself.
“We are here,” he concludes, “to increase the consciousness of the universe—each at our own level.”
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
University of Strasbourg – Department of Chemistry
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Dialogues on life, entropy, coherence, and consciousness
📘 Series: Thermodynamics of Life – A six-part journey revealing how physics, biology, and information merge to form a living, conscious universe.
✨ In Tribute
This series is dedicated to the memory of Professor Marc Henry (1947–2024) — a brilliant mind, a generous teacher, and a fearless explorer of the boundaries between physics, biology, and spirit. His legacy continues to inspire all who seek to understand the living universe.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Homeopathy #WaterMemory #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #InformationMedicine #Consciousness #Healing #PhilosophyOfScience #QuantumBiology #EnergyMedicine #MorphogenicWater #EntropyAndLife #KlausSchustereder #ScienceAndSpirit #PhysicsOfLife
In this in-depth episode of Doctor's Talk, internal medicine specialist Dr. Klaus Schustereder speaks with California chiropractor and craniosacral practitioner Dr. Richard Gerardo, D.O., about one of the most overlooked health problems of our time: chronic sympathetic overload. Drawing on more than 20 years of clinical experience, Dr. Gerardo explains how trauma, pain, media-driven fear and the COVID-19 crisis have locked millions of people into a permanent fight-or-flight mode, with profound consequences for sleep, breathing, hormones, digestion, mood and long-term regeneration.
He describes how his work originally began with TMJ and clenching problems, and gradually expanded into a broader protocol for down-regulating the autonomic nervous system. Using hands-on chiropractic and craniosacral techniques to normalise the craniosacral rhythm and cerebrospinal fluid flow, he helps patients "reset" the nervous system so that parasympathetic functions like rest, repair and digestion can finally switch back on. Because many patients are exhausted after years of stress, he also integrates targeted herbs and nutritional strategies to lower night-time cortisol, support the brain and endocrine system and rebuild resilience.
Together, the two doctors discuss concrete clinical pictures they now see every day: insomnia, anxiety, asthma flare-ups, chronic pain, digestive issues, menstrual disturbances, chest pain and delayed inflammatory reactions after COVID-19 infection or vaccination. Dr. Gerardo shares real-life cases where addressing spike-protein-driven inflammation, balancing the craniosacral system and supporting weakened organs led to significant improvements, even when symptoms appeared many months after the shot. Both doctors emphasise that true healing is never about suppressing symptoms, but about bringing the whole system back into balance so that the body can heal itself.
The conversation then widens to the role of fear and the media in driving sympathetic overload. Dr. Gerardo and Dr. Schustereder reflect on how 24/7 crisis messaging, conflicting narratives and the censorship of dissenting voices have damaged not only public trust, but also people's nervous systems. They contrast mainstream, pharmaceutically driven approaches with hands-on "physical medicine" - chiropractic, osteopathy, craniosacral work and physiotherapy - which help patients literally discharge tension, export "entropy" and reorganise themselves from the inside out. Dr. Schustereder connects this with thermodynamics and recent research on plants, vibration and protein resonance, suggesting that well-applied manual and vibrational therapies support the body in re-establishing coherence.
Finally, Dr. Gerardo speaks candidly about the challenges and opportunities for practitioners who refuse to simply repeat the official script. He explains why his practice has become a refuge for patients who no longer trust standard answers, why posture and core stability are essential to ageing well, and how chronic pain, structural instability and environmental stressors all feed into sympathetic dominance. Both men see a clear task for the future of healthcare: to move away from fear-based, centralised control and towards approaches that respect biology, decentralise power and help patients recover their innate capacity for adaptation, rest and healing. This episode is an invitation to rethink stress, illness and "nervous system health" at the deepest level - and to rediscover the body's own wisdom.
In diesem außergewöhnlichen Gespräch verlässt Dr. Klaus Schustereder bewusst die gewohnten Pfade von Medizin, Recht und Politik und spricht mit einem Künstler, der die Corona-Zeit mit schonungsloser Offenheit verarbeitet hat: dem deutschen Maler Rolf Lukaschewski.
Am Genfersee in Montreux erzählt Lukaschewski von seiner Corona-Serie mit 16 Aquarellen, die er bewusst „fies“ gemalt hat – als künstlerische Antwort auf Angstkampagnen, Maskenpflicht und den massiven Druck zur Impfung. Er beschreibt, wie er die Atmosphäre als diktatorisch, manipulativ und von Angst gesteuert erlebt hat und warum er sich entschloss, diese Zeit nicht schönzufärben, sondern radikal zuzuspitzen.
Im Mittelpunkt steht unter anderem sein Bild „Der Corona-Schrei“, das den Menschen am äußersten Rand seiner Belastbarkeit zeigt – kurz vor dem Zusammenbruch, bedroht von einer riesigen Spritze in grellen, aggressiven Farben. Ein anderes Werk zitiert die Freiheitsstatue, ersetzt die Fackel jedoch durch eine Spritze und stellt die Frage: Was ist aus Freiheit geworden, wenn Gesundheits- und Impfpolitik zur neuen Religion werden?
Lukaschewski spricht offen darüber, dass er und seine Frau ungeimpft geblieben sind, es aber lange verheimlichten, um berufliche und soziale Konflikte zu vermeiden. Er berichtet von Ausgrenzung, moralischem Druck und der Erfahrung, dass der „Freund von heute der Feind von morgen“ werden kann, wenn man nicht konform ist.
Das Gespräch weitet sich schließlich auf größere Themen aus:
Dr. Schustereder stellt nach und nach Fragen aus der Perspektive eines Arztes, der anderen eine Plattform geben möchte – ohne deren Aussagen zu zensieren, aber auch ohne sie automatisch zu übernehmen. Die geäußerten Ansichten sind zum Teil hoch umstritten, spiegeln jedoch authentisch die persönliche Wahrnehmung und den Zorn eines Künstlers wider, der sich von Politik und Medien tief enttäuscht sieht.
Dieses Interview richtet sich an alle,
Hinweis: Die in diesem Gespräch geäußerten Ansichten liegen beim Interviewgast und sind keine medizinische oder politische Empfehlung, sondern ein künstlerisch-subjektives Zeitzeugnis der Corona-Jahre.
In this in-depth conversation, host Dr. Klaus Schustereder speaks with Bishop Richard Williamson, traditional Catholic bishop and founder of the St. Marcel Initiative. Recorded in Switzerland, the interview ranges from the crisis in the Church after Vatican II to the COVID-19 response, the state of modern medicine, and the deeper spiritual roots of today’s political and cultural upheavals. What begins as a discussion about one man’s biography becomes a wide-ranging reflection on faith, truth, and the future of civilisation.
Bishop Williamson reflects on his 1988 episcopal consecration, his expulsion from the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX), and why he believes the post-conciliar Church has lost much of its integrity. He traces the timeline from the Second Vatican Council through the suppression of the traditional Latin Mass, the founding of the SSPX, Rome’s sanctions, and the 1988 consecrations. In his view, fidelity to the old Mass and doctrine is at the heart of preserving the Catholic faith in a modern world that has largely rejected God, embraced subjectivism, and built what he calls a “new church” aligned with the spirit of the age.
The discussion then turns to COVID-19 and the medical system. Drawing on his long-standing critique of the “New World Order,” Bishop Williamson explains why he quickly came to see the pandemic response as part of a wider anti-human project aimed at control and depopulation. He links the crisis to earlier historical events and official narratives he believes were manipulated, arguing that a godless elite now wields media, politics, and institutions against the true good of mankind. Dr. Schustereder, an internal medicine specialist, shares his own journey from conventional training in Vienna through years of clinical experience in Europe and Central Africa, where he confronted extreme poverty, violence, and death, and unexpectedly rediscovered the living reality of faith.
From there the conversation opens onto the question of healing. Dr. Schustereder describes how serious illness, personal suffering, and listening deeply to patients led him to realise that there is no real healing without a spiritual dimension. He explains how modern materialistic paradigms reduce the human person to a molecular machine and treat drugs as the main solution, while ignoring the mystery of life and the action of grace. Bishop Williamson agrees that without God and the soul, medicine can only silence symptoms rather than address their deeper causes. They speak about responsibility, risk, and the way crises—personal and societal—can become moments of conversion.
Together they explore subjectivism, materialism, and the loss of common sense in universities, medicine, and public life. Bishop Williamson revisits the warnings of Pope St. Pius X about modernism and explains why, in his view, corrupt philosophy leads directly to corrupt theology, corrupt education, and eventually a corrupt society where evil appears “normal.” Dr. Schustereder contrasts the solidarity he experienced in African communities with the isolation and purposelessness so common in the West, where many people can survive alone but quietly lose contact with family, responsibility, and meaning. Both men insist that the human person cannot be understood, or truly helped, when the spiritual soul is denied.
In the final part of the interview, Bishop Williamson offers his reading of the times: a world that has largely expelled God, a Church infiltrated by error, and a medical profession pressured to conform to political and media narratives. They discuss the pressures on doctors during COVID-19, the role of fear and intimidation, and the moral weight of decisions about treatment. Bishop Williamson speaks about courage, martyrdom, and the possibility of a severe divine chastisement if humanity does not repent—drawing parallels with the Flood and modern Marian warnings—while still pointing to hope: prayer, especially the Rosary, fidelity to truth, and trust in God’s justice and mercy. Dr. Schustereder underlines that every encounter with a patient is also an encounter with mystery and a call to humility, compassion, and deeper faith.
Dedication: This video is dedicated to the memory of Bishop Richard Williamson, who passed away in January 2025. Whatever one’s agreement or disagreement with his analyses and language, we offer this interview as a testimony to his unwavering conviction, his love for the traditional Catholic faith, and his concern for the spiritual and physical health of souls. May he rest in peace, and may this conversation inspire deeper reflection, honest examination of conscience, and a sincere search for the truth in both Church and medicine.
Dans cet entretien, le Professeur Michael Esfeld, philosophe des sciences et professeur ordinaire à l’Université de Lausanne, revient sur son rôle de chercheur : examiner de manière critique les prétentions à la connaissance, quelle qu’en soit la source. Il raconte comment ses prises de position publiques sur la gestion de la crise du COVID-19 lui ont valu l’étiquette de « professeur rebelle », tout en rappelant que la mission de l’université est de garantir la liberté académique, le débat argumenté et la remise en question des évidences apparentes.
Au fil de la discussion, Michael Esfeld analyse l’usage de la notion « d’état d’urgence » et les mesures comme les confinements et la campagne de vaccination. Selon lui, limiter les droits fondamentaux n’est justifiable que sur la base de faits solides, et non de simples modèles ou scénarios catastrophes. Il insiste sur le fait que la science ne doit jamais être confondue avec l’autorité : ce qui compte, ce ne sont pas les titres ou les statuts, mais la qualité des arguments et des preuves avancées.
Le professeur met également en cause le rôle des médias, du monde politique et de certains milieux scientifiques dans la création d’un climat de peur, ainsi que les violations du consentement éclairé dans la pratique vaccinale. En établissant des parallèles historiques, notamment avec l’eugénisme, il met en garde contre l’instrumentalisation de la science pour légitimer des mesures politiques lourdes de conséquences. Cet entretien invite chacun à réfléchir aux critères permettant de distinguer une véritable situation d’urgence d’une urgence proclamée, et à l’importance de préserver le débat public et la responsabilité individuelle.
In Part 5 of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his riveting dialogue with Dr. Klaus Schustereder, exploring how quantum physics, entropy, and water come together to form the scientific foundation for life, consciousness, and healing.
This episode dives deep into the mysteries of water, the fossil concepts that hold back scientific progress, and the quantum nature of coherence and resonance that unites physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. It’s a sweeping conversation that moves from the chemistry of hydrogen bonds to the nature of consciousness itself—showing that life is not made of matter, but of vibration, coherence, and information.
💡 Fossil Concepts and the Need for Renewal
Prof. Henry begins by identifying “fossil concepts”—outdated scientific ideas that prevent real understanding. Many of today’s textbooks, he explains, still rely on 19th-century simplifications such as “entropy equals disorder” or “energy can be consumed.” These ideas, repeated for generations, have become dogma.
To advance science, Henry argues, we must retire these fossilized notions, write new textbooks, and teach coherent physics grounded in entropy and quantum theory. “Science progresses,” he says, “only when we dare to clean house.”
He also warns of oversimplification in science education—the danger of turning complex subjects into easy analogies that harden into myths. When repeated often enough, wrong ideas take root in the mind and become “false truths.” Real progress requires scientists to unlearn before they can learn anew.
🌊 The Quantum Mystery of Water
From here, Henry turns to his lifelong passion: water. Though seemingly simple—two parts hydrogen, one part oxygen—water defies classical physics. It should be a gas, yet it’s liquid at room temperature. Its hydrogen bonds are stronger than theory predicts, and it expands when frozen—defying normal thermodynamic behavior.
Using quantum physics, Henry explains why: water is the most cohesive substance in the universe relative to its size and electron count. Its structure depends on gravitational confinement, meaning that the chemical bonds we observe on Earth exist because of the planet’s gravitational field. Take a drop of water into deep space, and the bonds dissolve—the water vaporizes.
This revelation transforms the way we understand chemistry: bonds are not intrinsic to atoms but depend on their environment—their “container.” On Earth, that container is gravity; in the universe, it’s the ether itself.
⚛️ Entropy, Containers, and the Scale of the Universe
Energy, Henry insists, cannot be defined without a container—while entropy exists everywhere. On the cosmic scale, entropy alone explains why everything tends toward the gaseous state: gases occupy the maximum number of possible configurations. Energy is local; entropy is universal.
He expands this idea to explain how liquids, solids, and life are “pockets of lower entropy,” possible only in small, confined systems like planets. In the vastness of the universe, everything is gas—the ultimate expression of entropy.
🧬 Coherence Domains and Water Memory
Henry introduces the revolutionary concept of coherence domains—regions in water about 100 nanometers across, containing roughly ten million water molecules vibrating in perfect quantum synchrony.
When coherent, they behave like a single quantum entity capable of storing and transmitting information. This is the physical foundation for what Henry calls morphogenic water memory—not pure water memory, but memory that arises when water interacts with another phase, such as a membrane, gas bubble, or lipid layer.
“If you take water by itself, it cannot remember. But as soon as you let it touch something not itself—life begins to remember.”
This insight links biology, physics, and information theory: cells store information not in molecules but in phase boundaries, where water meets something else.
🎵 Resonance, Amplification, and Healing
Coherent domains can resonate with electromagnetic fields, allowing information transfer through vibration rather than matter. Healing, Henry suggests, occurs through resonance and entropy flux—a temporary increase in entropy that unblocks stagnation, restoring natural flow and coherence.
He compares this to breaking a dam: by increasing the entropy flux, the system resets to a higher order. This principle explains how vibrational medicine, phototherapy, and even the laying on of hands may work—not through energy transfer, but through resonance with the body’s coherent water domains.
“Small is not nothing. If you have resonance, small can be big.”
This amplification through resonance, he explains, is the physical basis of homeopathy and information medicine, where tiny signals can produce large effects in nonlinear systems like living cells.
🎶 Music, Consciousness, and the Physics of Life
Everything vibrates, resonates, and harmonizes. Matter itself is a temporary standing wave—created and destroyed constantly within the ether, yet maintained through coherence.
He extends this view to psychology and healing: traumatic memories, he says, are “frozen information fields” that can be changed by interacting consciously with their coherence. Healing, whether physical or emotional, occurs when new coherence replaces the old.
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
University of Strasbourg – Department of Chemistry
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Scientific dialogues on life, water, coherence, and consciousness
📘 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration uniting physics, biology, and philosophy—revealing how entropy, coherence, and consciousness shape both the universe and the healing process.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #QuantumPhysics #Water #Entropy #Coherence #Resonance #Homeopathy #InformationMedicine #QuantumBiology #PhilosophyOfScience #EnergyMedicine #KlausSchustereder #HealingPhysics #MorphogenicWater #EntropyAndLife #QuantumFieldTheory #VibrationAndConsciousness
In Part 3 of Thermodynamics of Life, Professor Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his profound dialogue with Dr. Klaus Schustereder—this time exploring one of the most challenging and inspiring ideas in all of science and philosophy:
Does consciousness come before matter?
Building on the previous episode’s revelation that life and water are universal properties of the cosmos, Professor Henry expands the discussion to the quantum origins of consciousness, the structure of matter, and the thermodynamic foundations of health and disease.
According to Henry, the modern scientific worldview has been shaped by a deep misunderstanding: that matter gives rise to consciousness. Drawing from quantum physics, relativity, and thermodynamics, he turns this assumption upside down—showing that consciousness precedes matter, giving form and meaning to everything that exists.
He explains that the “vacuum” of quantum physics is not empty, but a field of potential—a universal ether or “quantum vacuum” that generates both matter and energy. Matter, he says, is not a substance in itself but a visible manifestation of invisible fields interacting through vibration. Everything we experience—the table, our bodies, the stars—is ultimately a pattern of coherent fields structured by information.
🌌 Key Concepts & Themes
💫 The Physics of Life and Healing
Professor Henry goes further to explore the link between consciousness, information, and medicine. Drawing on Ilya Prigogine’s thermodynamics of irreversible processes, he explains that life depends on a continuous flux of entropy—an ongoing flow of energy and information that sustains dynamic order.
When this flow is blocked or reduced, illness appears. Health, therefore, is not a static state but a balanced exchange of entropy and information between body, mind, and environment.
Henry contrasts modern medicine’s material approach—which treats only the body—with a broader quantum view in which healing can occur through both matter (drugs, chemistry) and information (consciousness, vibration, coherence, and water memory). He discusses how the mind, meditation, and even informed water can restore balance by reorganizing the informational patterns within the body’s water matrix.
“Consciousness acts on information. Information shapes water. And water organizes life.”
Through examples ranging from fever and coherence to cancer metabolism, Henry and Dr. Schustereder explore how entropy flux underlies both health and disease. Cancer, for instance, is redefined not as a genetic defect but as a disturbance of entropy flow. Healing, he suggests, requires restoring the correct flow of entropy and coherence within living water.
🧭 A New Medicine of Consciousness
Professor Henry proposes that modern medicine must evolve beyond chemical intervention toward informational and energetic healing, recognizing that consciousness itself is the ultimate source of order and coherence.
“The true healer works not only with matter—but with the information carried by water, light, and consciousness.”
Guest: Professor Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Scientific dialogues on life, energy, water, and consciousness
📘 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration of the intersection between physics, chemistry, biology and medicine. Through vivid dialogue and scientific rigor, Professor Henry reveals a world where consciousness, information, water, and entropy form the foundations of both life, health and helaling.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Consciousness #QuantumPhysics #Thermodynamics #Entropy #QuantumBiology #Water #PhilosophyOfScience #KlausSchustereder #EnergyMedicine #MaxPlanck #QuantumFieldTheory
In this fourth part of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, joins Dr. Klaus Schustereder for a brilliant and often humorous deep dive into one of science’s most misunderstood words—energy—and the concept that quietly governs the universe: entropy.
With clarity and wit, Professor Henry unpacks the centuries-long confusion surrounding “energy.” Everyone talks about it—politicians, scientists, engineers—but few can define what energy truly is. “If you try to define it without an example,” he says, “you cannot. It is undefinable.” From Aristotle’s energeia to Poincaré’s paradox, Henry traces how science inherited a concept that can only be described by examples—mechanical, electrical, thermal, nuclear—none of which capture its essence.
He explains that entropy, not energy, could serve as new foundation of life. Unlike energy—which depends on lists, categories, and exceptions—entropy can be clearly defined: it measures how much space and motion are available to matter at a given temperature. The greater the possibilities, the greater the entropy. From solids to liquids to gases, Henry demonstrates that this single idea explains every state of matter—something energy alone cannot do.
⚙️ Key Insights
🧠 A Journey Through Science and Paradox
Professor Henry retells how Galileo’s telescope, Newton’s laws, and Sadi Carnot’s steam engine led humanity from mechanics to thermodynamics—and to the birth of entropy through the work of Rudolf Clausius and Ludwig Boltzmann. He shows that while mechanics was based on energy conservation, thermodynamics revealed something deeper: every real process produces entropy.
The industrial revolution measured everything in “joules,” thanks to James Prescott Joule, a brewer whose experiments linked mechanical motion to heat. But Joule’s convenient unit blurred the distinction between heat and energy, creating a linguistic illusion that still distorts modern physics, engineering, and medicine.
🌌 From Energy to Entropy to Life
The discussion expands into the philosophy of science itself. Why cling to a concept that cannot be defined when entropy alone explains all change? Henry argues that if science had discovered entropy before energy, our entire worldview—especially in biology and medicine—would be more coherent. Entropy, not energy, describes how systems evolve and self-organize.
He also links entropy to cosmology, suggesting that the expansion of the universe is driven by the unstoppable creation of entropy. “The universe is impatient,” he says, “because entropy can never be destroyed. As it increases, the universe must expand to contain it.”
For Henry, this is the bridge between physics, life, and consciousness itself: the second law of thermodynamics is the true law of evolution. There is no need for the “first law.” The second law alone—entropy always increases—explains motion, time, and life’s direction toward greater complexity.
🔄 Spin, Constants, and the Disappearance of Energy
In the final segment, Henry discusses spin, Planck’s constant, and the six universal constants that define reality: gravitation, light speed, electric charge, Avogadro’s number, Boltzmann’s constant (entropy), and Planck’s constant (spin).
Notice, he says, there is no constant for energy—proving it is not fundamental. Entropy and spin are the true pillars of the universe.
“If you speak of energy,” Henry concludes, “you are a technician. If you speak of entropy, you are a scientist.”
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
📘 Series: Thermodynamics of Life – a six-part dialogue uniting physics, biology, and philosophy to reveal how entropy, water, and consciousness shape the universe.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Entropy #Energy #FreeEnergy #Spin #QuantumPhysics #Boltzmann #MaxPlanck #Clausius #Carnot #PhysicsOfLife #PhilosophyOfScience #Thermodynamics #SecondLaw #Consciousness #KlausSchustereder #ScienceAndSpirit
In this fascinating and deeply insightful interview, we sit down with Professor Emeritus Marc Henry, a world-renowned chemist from Strasbourg University, author of 10 books, over 160 scientific papers, and cited more than 12,000 times in the scientific literature. Professor Henry joins us to discuss his groundbreaking article “Thermodynamics of Life”—an exploration of entropy, energy, and the philosophical and scientific foundations of what it truly means to be alive.
With his trademark humor and humility, Professor Henry begins by apologizing for his “spicy French accent,” then dives into a sweeping intellectual journey that bridges physics, chemistry, biology, and the very nature of consciousness itself. Drawing from more than 40 years of scientific research, he challenges the way modern biology and medicine interpret fundamental concepts—arguing that they’ve been on the wrong track for more than a century due to a deep misunderstanding of entropy.
He explains that entropy has been simply equated with “disorder”—a subjective and misleading interpretation that has shaped generations of scientists, educators, and physicians. Instead, Professor Henry restores the original meaning introduced by Ludwig Boltzmann and refined through Max Planck’s revolutionary insights: entropy is a precise physical quantity that measures how matter and energy explore space and motion. It’s not about chaos, but about possibilities.
From ovens and blackbody radiation to quantum mechanics, relativity, and the crisis in modern medicine, Professor Henry connects the dots between the smallest particles and the largest galaxies. He reminds us that quantum physics governs the micro-world of atoms and molecules, while general relativity governs the cosmos—and that humanity exists somewhere in between. But the key question, he says, is: What scientific language should we use to describe life itself? His answer: quantum mechanics, because life is fundamentally a quantum phenomenon.
Professor Henry talks about his understanding life as a dynamic, self-organizing process that continually interacts with its environment while maintaining order through the increase of entropy in the universe. In his view, life doesn’t oppose entropy—it depends on it. The entire biological and medical paradigm must be rethought accordingly.
He argues that the medical crises we see today—chronic illness, degenerative disease, and the limits of pharmaceutical approaches—stem from this mistaken view of entropy and energy. By ignoring the true thermodynamic nature of living systems, medicine has lost its connection to the physical laws that govern all matter. “We cannot truly heal in the medical professions,” he says, “if our science is built on a misunderstanding of what life is.”
This conversation is far more than an academic discussion. It’s a philosophical meditation on science, time, and human responsibility. Professor Henry reminds us that writing—unlike speaking—endures. It’s a message meant not only for today’s scientists but also for future generations who may read his words centuries from now. As he eloquently puts it, “We are citizens of the universe.”
If you are interested in:
● The deep connection between physics and biology
● Entropy, biology and medicine
● Why quantum mechanics matters for understanding life
● The crisis in modern medicine
● And how science must evolve to meet the challenges of the 21st century
…then this interview will expand your mind and challenge your assumptions.
🔬 Featured Guest:
Professor Emeritus Marc Henry
Department of Chemistry, Strasbourg University
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎙️ Host: Klaus Schustereder
Scientific discussions on life, energy, and consciousness
📘 Topics Covered:
● Entropy vs. Disorder: The historical misunderstanding
● Boltzmann, Clausius, Carnot, and Planck: The roots of thermodynamics
● Quantum Physics and Relativity: Two languages of nature
● How thermodynamics connects life to the universe
● Why biology and medicine need a paradigm shift
● The concept of Homeodynamics of Life
🧠 Key Ideas:
● Entropy is not disorder—it’s a measure of possible states.
● Medicine and biology must realign with 21st-century physics.
● Life follows the second law of thermodynamics, not against it.
● True understanding of entropy connects us to the cosmos.
#ThermodynamicsOfLife #MarcHenry #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #Thermodynamics #Boltzmann #MaxPlanck #QuantumBiology #PhilosophyOfScience #Homeodynamics #ScienceAndConsciousness #MedicineCrisis #PhysicsOfLife #KlausInterview
In the concluding episode of Thermodynamics of Life, Prof. Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, joins Dr. Klaus Schustereder one final time to deliver a passionate reflection on the future of science, medicine, and consciousness. After five episodes tracing entropy, water, and quantum physics, this conversation brings everything together—asking what kind of science humanity needs for the 21st century and beyond.
🌍 Cleaning the House of Science
Prof. Henry begins by stating there is no “next step” in science—because the crucial steps were already taken more than a century ago. Entropy was clarified by Boltzmann in the 19th century, and quantum mechanics by 1930. The task now, he says, is not to invent new theories but to clear away fossil concepts—matter, energy, and reductionism—that block understanding. “The next step is not forward,” he says. “It is to clean the house.”
Physics has already done much of this work; chemistry is halfway there; but biology and medicine remain trapped in outdated paradigms. True medicine, he insists, must be rooted in physics, because life is a thermodynamic and quantum phenomenon, not merely a biochemical one.
⚖️ Science vs. Belief
Henry laments that in recent years science has regressed—confusing belief with observation. “When people say ‘Science says,’ that is not science,” he warns. “Science observes; it never believes.” He distinguishes genuine science, which questions and refines, from technological dogma that claims mastery over nature. Real science, he reminds us, accepts that the visible world is only the shadow of interacting fields—not the full reality.
🧬 Viruses, Evolution, and the Role of Change
Challenging conventional medicine, Henry argues that viruses are not enemies but agents of evolution. They modify DNA, helping species adapt and progress. Illness, he suggests, appears when we resist change—when entropy flow is blocked. “Viruses appear when you refuse to evolve,” he says. “They are messengers of transformation.” From thermodynamic view, evolution is not random mutation but entropy-driven reorganisation toward higher consciousness.
🧠 Technology Is Not Science
Henry distinguishes science—the search for understanding—from technology, which applies knowledge for utility. “Technology needs science to exist,” he says, “but science does not need technology.” Since 1930, conceptual breakthroughs have slowed while machines have advanced. Humanity confuses more powerful tools with more knowledge. “We have computers and rockets,” he says, “but not more wisdom.”
💊 Rehabilitating Homeopathy and Informed Water
In the most provocative part of the discussion, Henry defends homeopathy and the concept of morphogenic (informed) water. He explains that homeopathy’s power lies not in chemical molecules but in information stored within coherent water domains—microscopic regions where millions of molecules vibrate together in quantum harmony. Through dilution and vigorous shaking (succussion), toxic matter is removed but its informational spectrum is imprinted into water. The gas microbubbles formed during shaking create coherence domains capable of carrying that information to living tissues.
“Matter can disappear,” he says, “but information and coherence remain.”
Henry traces this idea back to Paracelsus and Samuel Hahnemann, noting that the latter unknowingly practiced quantum physics two centuries before its birth. For centuries, homeopathy was the medicine of nobles and intellectuals—from the British royal family to John D. Rockefeller—because it worked.
He argues that today’s evidence-based medicine has confused proof with healing. “Medicine is not about proving,” he insists. “It is about making people feel better.” Double-blind trials may satisfy academic minds, but ethically they divide the sick into groups of hope and hopelessness—an unacceptable act when consciousness exists in all living systems, from humans to bacteria.
🌊 Water Memory and Information Medicine
Henry illustrates that water memory is not fantasy but grounded in quantum field theory: water interacts with light and gas to form dynamic coherence domains that store electromagnetic patterns. If Disney’s Frozen II can show water recalling the past, he jokes, then surely scientists can acknowledge the same principle with rigor.
He calls for a new medicine of information, where light, vibration, and consciousness become legitimate healing tools alongside chemistry. Drugs, he says, are one tool among many; others include water, electromagnetic fields, and even the informational power of words and intention.
“Whatever the method—chemical, energetic, or conscious—what matters is that people recover health.”
🔭 Toward Science Reborn
In his closing reflection, Prof. Henry calls for humility, integration, and courage. True science must reconnect with entropy, coherence, and consciousness—its forgotten roots. Healing the planet begins with healing science itself.
“We are here,” he concludes, “to increase the consciousness of the universe—each at our own level.”
🎙️ Guest: Prof. Marc Henry
University of Strasbourg – Department of Chemistry
Author of Thermodynamics of Life
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
Dialogues on life, entropy, coherence, and consciousness
📘 Series: Thermodynamics of Life – A six-part journey revealing how physics, biology, and information merge to form a living, conscious universe.
✨ In Tribute
This series is dedicated to the memory of Professor Marc Henry (1947–2024) — a brilliant mind, a generous teacher, and a fearless explorer of the boundaries between physics, biology, and spirit. His legacy continues to inspire all who seek to understand the living universe.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Homeopathy #WaterMemory #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #InformationMedicine #Consciousness #Healing #PhilosophyOfScience #QuantumBiology #EnergyMedicine #MorphogenicWater #EntropyAndLife #KlausSchustereder #ScienceAndSpirit #PhysicsOfLife
In this second chapter of the six-part series Thermodynamics of Life, Professor Marc Henry, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at the University of Strasbourg, continues his extraordinary conversation with Dr. Klaus Schustereder. Together, they dive even deeper into the nature of existence and give a fascinating view of life, water, and consciousness.
Building on the foundation laid in Part 1, this discussion moves from physics and thermodynamics into the heart of cosmology and philosophy. Professor Henry challenges the long-held idea that life on Earth is merely an improbable accident. Instead, he proposes a breathtaking hypothesis: life is an inherent property of the universe itself—as natural and inevitable as gravity, light, or time. Through the lens of thermodynamics, astrophysics and chemistry, he explains how the same universal principles that govern the birth of stars also give rise to consciousness within living beings.
Henry retraces the historical evolution of scientific thought—from Aristotle’s Earth-centered cosmos, through Galileo’s heliocentric revolution, and onward to the quantum and relativistic models that shape our understanding today. Yet, he warns, our minds still cling to outdated paradigms that separate humanity from the cosmos. True science, he argues, demands humility: to recognize that we are not the masters of nature, but expressions of it.
🌌 Key Themes & Ideas
A Scientific Synthesis:
Professor Henry unites the physical sciences and the metaphysical quest for meaning. The same thermodynamic laws that drive the stars also drive the evolution of life and mind. When hydrogen burns in stellar furnaces, it gives rise to helium, oxygen, and carbon—the essential ingredients of life. Hydrogen and oxygen then combine to form water, the cosmic medium that enables organization, memory, and awareness. From this union emerges biology, emotion, and thought.
In this framework, life is not random—it is the universe learning to know itself through living systems.
Henry challenges both reductionist biology and conventional medicine to adopt a broader, holistic vision that honors this unity. When science returns to its true foundation in thermodynamics and the physics of information, it can once again serve the well-being of humanity and the planet.
“We are not accidents of chemistry,” Henry explains. “We are the expression of the universe’s own consciousness—its desire to perceive, to evolve, and to understand itself.”
🎙️ Guest: Professor Marc Henry
🎧 Host: Dr. Klaus Schustereder
📚 Series Overview:
Thermodynamics of Life is a six-part exploration of science, philosophy, and spirit—bridging quantum physics, thermodynamics, water, and consciousness to reveal a unified understanding of existence through one of France’s most original scientific thinkers.
#MarcHenry #ThermodynamicsOfLife #Entropy #QuantumPhysics #Water #Consciousness #Astrophysics #PhilosophyOfScience #Hydrogen #Life #Universe #Homeodynamics #ScienceAndSpirit #KlausSchustereder #QuantumBiology #Thermodynamics
In diesem eindrucksvollen Gespräch zwischen Dr. Klaus Schustereder und der Journalistin und ehemaligen TV-Moderatorin Milena Preradovic spricht Preradovic offen über ihren Weg vom etablierten Fernsehen hin zu ihrem unabhängigen YouTube-Kanal „Punkt Preradovic“. Sie schildert, wie sie im Zuge der Corona-Krise durch ein Interview mit Dr. Wolfgang Wodarg ins Zentrum der medialen Kritik geriet. Ihr Interview ging viral, aber gleichzeitig begann eine massive Diskreditierungskampagne gegen sie und ihre Gäste – mit Wikipedia-Manipulationen, medialem Ausschluss und sogenannten „Google-Bombings“.
Im Gespräch analysieren Preradovic und Schustereder die Rolle der klassischen Medien während der Pandemie. Preradovic beschreibt aus ihrer Erfahrung, wie sich Journalismus zunehmend in eine systemstabilisierende Blase verwandelt hat, in der alternative Meinungen keinen Platz mehr haben. Sie kritisiert die enge Verflechtung von Medien, Politik und Pharmaindustrie sowie die gleichförmige Berichterstattung, die durch Abhängigkeit von Drittmitteln und Agenturmeldungen geprägt ist. Für sie wurde durch diese Entwicklung der Journalismus von einer kontrollierenden vierten Gewalt zur verlängernden Hand politischer Interessen.
Abschließend diskutieren die beiden auch Themen wie die Verantwortung von Ärzten, die gesellschaftliche Spaltung durch politische Narrative und den zunehmenden Verlust an demokratischer Kultur und Meinungsvielfalt. Preradovic betont ihre kompromisslose Haltung gegenüber Wahrheit und Integrität – auch wenn sie dafür persönliche und berufliche Konsequenzen tragen musste. Ihr Appell: Mehr Eigenverantwortung im Denken, Offenheit für verschiedene Sichtweisen und Mut, gegen den Strom zu schwimmen.
Sind sie auch besorgt über die Rechtsverletzungen im Kontext von SARS-CoV-2 ? Verpassen Sie nicht dieses exklusive Interview mit Rechtsanwalt Philipp Kruse und Dr. Klaus Schustereder. Informieren Sie sich jetzt und schützen Sie sich.
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