By Jove! Scientists propose that quantum entanglement those spooky, Einstein-befuddling links, could take root in myelin sheaths and microtubules, and from thence spring our conscious selves. This daring hypothesis dares to rewire the classical neuroscience script with quantum flair. Hypothesis, experiment, expansion, this is hypothesis-driven science at its best: bold, rigorous, and willing to question foundational assumptions. Sure, critics size it up as controversial, and let’s wink about that, but this is precisely the sort of audacious thinking the Anglosphere excels in. Even if it’s a mere curiosity today, it might spark tomorrow’s breakthroughs. Onward, dear fellows, to quantum leaps…
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Great Scott! Physicists at Los Alamos have dusted off and replicated a 1938 experiment by Arthur Ruhlig the first observation of deuterium‑tritium fusion. With modern neutron detection, they’ve reaffirmed Ruhlig’s pioneering insight, confirming that the building blocks for fusion were being handled as early as before WWII. This is history vindicated, connecting past insight to present-day fusion ambitions. It reminds us that breakthroughs often come quietly before their time. Is it a detour? Not at all, it’s a strong foundation under contemporary fusion efforts. Anglosphere science, replete with tradition and tenacity, now has another weapon in its clean-energy armoury. Old,…