Can you move water with a magnet?

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Christianity is loosely based on Eastern Philosophy.

Well it is definitely a mix and a lot of pagan philosophies as well. For example Catholic meaning Universal) religion, the official Roman religion, is a composite of various religious writings which were brought together to form that which is known as the Christian religion. Many of the writings were assembled from various sources, and brought into, and comprised the books of the Bible.
 
The Christian religion is Eastern mythology with a sprinkling of ancient Sumerian traditions.

Well can't forget the Aramaic also such as Zoroastrianism. And some Egyptian although I am sure that can all be traced back to ancient Iraq and or Sumerian. I am sure Christians would kick themselves if they knew they were following Iraqi stories. :ROFLMAO: I do have a feeling we did go into Iraq to get a hold of some ancient knowledge they didn't want revealed.
 
I am not sure what chemistry problems you are having I would have to have a little more information. Notwithstanding I will give it a go. Give me an example of what you are talking about would help a lot.
My original question was can you move water with a magnet. The answer would be yes you can. How do you arrive at a correct answer? You reverse engineer the sentence. Start with the word magnetic. Goggle up and research the different types of magnets.
Magnetism is a class of physical phenomena that are mediated by magnetic fields. Electric currents and the magnetic moments of elementary particles give rise to a magnetic field, which acts on other currents and magnetic moments. Magnetism is one aspect of the combined phenomenon of electromagnetism. The most familiar effects occur in ferromagnetic materials, which are strongly attracted by magnetic fields and can be magnetized to become permanent magnets, producing magnetic fields themselves. Only a few substances are ferromagnetic; the most common ones are iron, cobalt and nickel and their alloys. The prefix ferro- refers to iron, because permanent magnetism was first observed in lodestone, a form of natural iron ore called magnetite, Fe3O4.
Although ferromagnetism is responsible for most of the effects of magnetism encountered in everyday life, all other materials are influenced to some extent by a magnetic field, by several other types of magnetism. Paramagnetic substances such as aluminum and oxygen are weakly attracted to an applied magnetic field; diamagnetic substances such as copper and carbon are weakly repelled; while antiferromagnetic materials such as chromium and spin glasses have a more complex relationship with a magnetic field. The force of a magnet on paramagnetic, diamagnetic, and antiferromagnetic materials is usually too weak to be felt and can be detected only by laboratory instruments, so in everyday life, these substances are often described as non-magnetic
So what this article is saying is that there are lots of particulates the will repeal against a magnet including oxygen, which is very weak if you had iron in the water the force would be greater. Hope this helps.
 
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Your cognitive behaviour is predicated on Dopamine levels up and down. That is in the realm of physiology a different vector then electromagnetism. Good and evil cannot exist at the same time. Although we have a very very weak magnetic field we produce. We cannot increase the field without dire consequences can,t happen.
What you are talking about is Behaviour modification. My Dad use to tell me I was stupid in my younger years, I became over time and acted out , what he stated. I started to believe it. However when I joined the Military at age 18 my IQ was tested at 163. The point being you become what you believe or what you believe what others tell you. Our attitudes can be manipulated by our cognitive thoughts or we can manipulate others with our thoughts we create. To move external objects we would have to have a transformer to increase our own gravitational field to create a force. Technology is simply not there at this time. Hope this helps.
Could I get a little bit of what you're smoking? My batshit quotient has been slipping a little the last few weeks.
 
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You get a pan to put water in. Can,t use distilled water. Get a styrofoam block to float on the water and a glass tube and a magnet. Fill the glass tube up with the water and stick it into the styrofoam block turn it over and let it float in the water. Let it get still then move the magnet close to the glass it will move it slowly.
An experiment! Science in action, so cool.
 
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How so? Since we are mostly water and people who are filled with a lot of hate or sadness they do then to get cancer and die sooner of other aliments. So that would only make sense that thought can change water.

I actually did an experiment once and I focused my thought and energy into giving a bottle of water energy and thinking of it having caffeine it in it. Sure enough I drink it the next day instead of coffee and it woke me up fast. Sure it could have all been in my head but it worked.
Could be the placebo effect. I doubt it is possible to physically change water's properties by thinking really hard.
 
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The way you put all that I really can't argue with you. Very well said. I just want to add to your second paragraph on it is quite interesting how similar the two religions are and even on their own religions they fight each other over who is right. Those 2 religions work well for divide and conquer that is for sure.
Kinda funny how a discussion on the magnetic properties of water turned into a talk on good and evil (not that that is a bad thing- not meant to be offensive)
 
Water has diamagnitic properties. Gravity is a magnetic field. The moons gravitational field creates the tides on earth pushing the water molecules. You can replicate the same effect at home on a smaller scale.
If you were correct, we wouldn't need physics anymore. If gravity was a magnetic field, we'd only have strong force left to unify. Gravity is possibly (we haven't discovered the graviton yet) a field like the higgs field, but it isn't magnetic. As far a physics has figured out, they are different things.
 
During the time of August Caesar, Rome had a college for their priests. The early Christians were already in Rome. The head priest of the college could rule the Roman Empire in the absence of the Caesar and call the shots. The early Christians what we now know as Popes decided they wanted the power. So, in or around 55 AD through political wrangling the early Christians took over the college and prompted their brand of religion which resonated in the ears of the common person and slaves. The Popes started gaining power and wealth over the city states at the time. Exacting a monetary amount from the nations under Roman Control and gradually from the common person. Somewhere around the 16th century the Dioceses made it a law to tithe at the rate of 10 percent exacted from the nation states (kings etc. and the common person).
During the early parts of the 16th century a group of bishops mainly in Germany wanted a piece of the pie and they broke away from the Catholic church and wrote their own bible, King James and as they say the rest is history. All religions are historical fiction if not outright fiction.
Josephus Flavius a first century historian wrote a book called, “Antiquities of the Jews, in the 18th chapter he talks about a man named, Pontius Pilate the crucified a man by the name of Jesus.
Historical fiction will use historical names, places and events and create a fictional account for ulterior motives. Jesus was a common name back in the first century. Not withstanding one would have to believe that the creator of the universe decided one day he was going to walk among mankind. One believes that one would have to believe in the tooth fairy.
I believe in intelligent design of all things (particle physics) by exact mathematical structures in all of the universe. Intelligent design would be the creator that I believe in. The Higgs boson points in that direction.
How does the higgs boson even show intelligent design? Is this facade for creationism intelligent design or sets the rules for the universe and lets it go intelligent design?
 
If you precipitate some magnetic iron oxides that will crystallize with water as part of their structure, you can separate that water with a magnet.
I am not sure what chemistry problems you are having I would have to have a little more information. Notwithstanding I will give it a go. Give me an example of what you are talking about would help a lot.
My original question was can you move water with a magnet. The answer would be yes you can. How do you arrive at a correct answer? You reverse engineer the sentence. Start with the word magnetic. Goggle up and research the different types of magnets.
Magnetism is a class of physical phenomena that are mediated by magnetic fields. Electric currents and the magnetic moments of elementary particles give rise to a magnetic field, which acts on other currents and magnetic moments. Magnetism is one aspect of the combined phenomenon of electromagnetism. The most familiar effects occur in ferromagnetic materials, which are strongly attracted by magnetic fields and can be magnetized to become permanent magnets, producing magnetic fields themselves. Only a few substances are ferromagnetic; the most common ones are iron, cobalt and nickel and their alloys. The prefix ferro- refers to iron, because permanent magnetism was first observed in lodestone, a form of natural iron ore called magnetite, Fe3O4.
Although ferromagnetism is responsible for most of the effects of magnetism encountered in everyday life, all other materials are influenced to some extent by a magnetic field, by several other types of magnetism. Paramagnetic substances such as aluminum and oxygen are weakly attracted to an applied magnetic field; diamagnetic substances such as copper and carbon are weakly repelled; while antiferromagnetic materials such as chromium and spin glasses have a more complex relationship with a magnetic field. The force of a magnet on paramagnetic, diamagnetic, and antiferromagnetic materials is usually too weak to be felt and can be detected only by laboratory instruments, so in everyday life, these substances are often described as non-magnetic
So what this article is saying is that there are lots of particulates the will repeal against a magnet including oxygen, which is very weak if you had iron in the water the force would be greater. Hope this helps.

If you precipitate some magnetic iron oxide particulates they will crystallize with water as part of their structure and you should be able to separate that water with a magnet. Certainly a Frantz Isodynamic separator will do it if it has structural iron... FeOOH.
 

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You have 3 answers to choose from explain your answer if you would.

A. Attracted by a magnet.
B. Repealed by a magnet.
C, Water is non magnetic.
Water can be magnetized, so yes it is possible to move water that has been magnetized with a magnet

A.
You have 3 answers to choose from explain your answer if you would.

A. Attracted by a magnet.
B. Repealed by a magnet.
C, Water is non magnetic.
Water can be magnetized

What Is Magnetized Water?
Water is paramagnetic; in that, it holds a magnetic charge. The molecules of water are also dipolar hence, they tend to attract each other since opposite electrical charges attract. Magnetized water can, therefore, be formed using magnets. When a permanent medical magnet is put in contact with water molecules, the water tends to get magnetically charged and gets magnetic properties. This water tends to form less scale when heated as compared to regular water.

Magnetized water was first used in Russia by three specialists at the Kirov Medical Academy. Their patients drank bipolar magnetized water, and the effects on their bodies studied. It was noted that the water was effective in breaking up gall bladder stones into smaller particles that were later passed through urine, causing no pain to the patient. It also prevented the further formation of kidney stones.
 
... my IQ was tested at 163.
That's awfully high for someone who has trouble with the distinction between "then" and "than".
Your cognitive behaviour is predicated on Dopamine levels up and down.
It's quite obvious that you're trying to use big words to support your claim of 163. Here's what a former Assoc. Prof. (retired) in Cognitive Neuroscience had to say about the phrase cognitive behavior:
"As far as I know, there isn’t such a term and the combination of the words does not make sense. "
 
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