Luc Montagnier

Luc Montagnier is world-known for discovering the HI Virus (HIV).[4] for which he won in 2008 the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the human immunodeficiency virus.
In his work he discovered as well that Water has a memory - e.g. highly diluted DNA from some pathogens emits electromagnetic waves. He invoked the notion of "Water memory", arguing and prooving that the water is altered by the DNA in a way that retains some properties of the molecules even when they have been heavily diluted.
This concept of water memory has already been championed by French immunologist Jacques Benveniste in a 1988 Nature paper.                                      -> Documentary Video "Water Memory":  Documentary Water Memory

Mam Nature Particle Filter

Biography

  • 1932:
    Montagnier was born on 18 August 1932 in Chabris, France.
  • 1957:
    Montagnier was inspired to become a virologist after learning of the discovery that RNA from the tobacco mosaic virus could transmit infection.
  • 1972:
    Montagnier worked in several laboratories before landing at the Pasteur Institute in Paris in 1972, building up his virology expertise along the way. He specialized in retroviruses — RNA viruses that can insert a DNA copy of their genetic material into the genome of their host.
  • 1983:
    This, along with advances in culturing immune cells and his use of reagents that block antiviral proteins called interferons to awaken dormant retroviruses in cells, came in handy in 1983. A colleague sent him lymph node tissue taken from a French fashion designer thought to be in the early stages of AIDS.
  • 2008:
    Luc Montagner wins the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the HI virus (HIV).
  • 2010:
    At the age of 78, Montagnier left France to lead a research institute at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China, to study the matter.
  • 2014:
    Luc Montagnier passes away and leaves a huge loss in the community of real indepedent science.