:33:00
Oh-- [ Muttering ]
:33:06
- [ Train Departing ]
- [ Gasps ]
:33:34
[ Woman ] Our subway exhibit comes to us
from Japan and Mr. Masaru Emoto.
:33:39
Mr. Emoto became
terribly interested...
:33:42
in the molecular structure
of water and what affects it.
:33:47
Now, water is the most receptive
of the four elements.
:33:52
Mr. Emoto thought perhaps
it would respond to nonphysical events.
:33:56
So he set up a series of studies,
applied mental stimuli...
:34:01
and photographed it with
a dark field microscope.
:34:04
This first picture is a picture
of water from the Fujiwara Dam.
:34:12
And this picture
is the same water...
:34:15
after receiving a blessing
from a Zen Buddhist monk.
:34:24
Now in this next
series of pictures...
:34:26
Mr. Emoto printed out words,
taped them to bottles of distilled water...
:34:32
and left them out overnight.
:34:34
This first photograph is the picture
of the pure distilled water--
:34:39
just the essence
of itself.
:34:41
These subsequent photographs,
as you can see, are each different.
:34:44
This is the
''Chi of Love.''
:34:49
And we move along here
to ''Thank You. ''
:34:53
And you can see where he taped that,
uh, to this bottle here.
:34:56
But if you read Japanese,
you already knew that. [ Chuckles ]