1. Summary: This text discusses the concept of "easy water" or liquid crystalline water found in living organisms, which is a coherent structure between random liquid water and rigid ice. It explains that this form of water was discovered by different labs simultaneously, leading to various names, and that its acceptance in mainstream science was delayed until it could be experimentally reproduced. The text also mentions the challenges of observing water molecules due to their small size.
Moreover, we actually discovered that water in living organisms also exists in what they call the fourth form of water, they called in this case, it called the easy water. This easy water is extremely coherent. It occupies an intermediate state between water where each molecule is completely random. It's about water and they turn in all directions. And then you have ice. This is a completely rigid, transparent chunk basically like a rock. So in the living organisms, the water, the liquid water adopts extremely coherent structure. This is called liquid crystalline water. And there's a couple of other names you might hear that coherent domains, you may hear that liquid crystalline easy. There's a lot of different names because different labs around the world were discovering it at the same time in terms of finding a way to finally show it experimentally like under a microscope and these kind of things because if you look at a water molecule, it's very small. So they've not actually been able to -- they've known about it for a long time. But until they could actually do it in the lab and it be reproduced, it had a lot of trouble getting accepted in mainstream science. So just to add that little piece about why I get all these different names.