Saturday, November 19, 2011

Saltpetre ~ glycine ~ Salpetriere ~ melatonin…

What's In Kay's Mind?: Because glycine is mainly neuro-inhibitory…revised

…there may be some confusion with saltpeter and something going on at the Salpetriere regarding the inhibition of sexual activity.   The pineal had long been discovered and was likely being studied.  Was this when they actually discovered melatonin and its activity that may have been the actual cure for some forms of hysteria which led to other neuroleptics?

This also has a relationship to people of the night, the so called succubus and incubus, who robbed the mind in more modern language, writers and artists who are sometimes the objects of the night time projections of others.   Did Archimedes really discover displacement of water by the presence of his body or was he merely the object on which the discovery was projected possibly by someone possessed of another from an earlier period in history?

Did he himself displace this knowledge from another by his presence as some sort of an authority and his “eureka” was really nothing more than his own experience of an earlier or someone else’s discovery?   Just as I have surmised above that the melatonin might have been studied at the Salpetriere but was never made public or was it simply the result of mixed up history?   Was a lack of appetite the result which caused numerous deaths?

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