Antagonistic AI vs common sense (6)

By: James V. Kohl | Published on: February 13, 2025

The 1947 Nobel Prize in Medicine was presciently awarded for linking food energy from the physiology of reproduction in soil bacteria and plants to humans via biophysically constrained protection from the replication of viruses in species from insects to cancer-free African elephants and 20 copies of p53 in the elephants.

See for comparison: Disinformation vs. Misinformation: What’s the Difference? 1/16/25

“The earliest known written instance of disinformation, by contrast, is from 1955…”

Google AI provides this historical perspective:

In 1947, Carl Ferdinand Cori and Gerty Theresa Cori won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their work on carbohydrate metabolism. Gerty Cori was the first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
What they discovered

The process of glycogen’s catalytic conversion The enzyme that starts the breakdown of glycogen into glucose How to create glycogen in a test tube

Other contributions

Their work revolutionized the scientific understanding of carbohydrate metabolism
Their work had a profound impact on medicine and human health
Their work paved the way for future generations of researchers, particularly women in science

xAI limits all subsequent claims to reports on a “scientific consensus” that is based on theories and data-driven models.

The data-driven models link the failure of theorists to prevent the virus-driven degradation of mRNA from being linked to all pathology across kingdoms and from breast cancer metastasis to liver cancer. See: Tumor-derived miR-9-5p-loaded EVs regulate cholesterol homeostasis to promote breast cancer liver metastasis in mice 12/3/24

A friend who received two injections of modified mRNA in 2021 was diagnosed and treated for breast cancer with the microtubule inhibitor Docetaxel. After finishing her treatment, she waited two weeks to learn she must now be treated for liver cancer 5 days each week for 5 weeks.

For comparison, a next generation sequencing panel show that 3 mutations caused my overproduction of red blood cells (polycythemia) and fixation of one amino acid substitution limited the potential pathology so that I could donate a unit of usable blood every two to three weeks, before my glipizide-induced heart attack. I asked for a GLP-1 receptor agonist prescription, and my VA practitioner doubled my dose of glipizide. If more people knew how glycosylation and oxidative phosphorylation link biophysically constrained replication of viruses to healthy longevity, I would not have suffered a dramatic decline in my health and mental well-being.


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