Emilio Del Giudice
Cities
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But I think that the separation between town and country should be a thing of the past, in the sense that, on one hand, it is certainly true that human beings need one another, and this is the reason why urban set-ups exist; but these urban set-ups don’t have to be the monstrosities that they are; they can be separated by green belts. So rather than the isolated megalopolis surrounded by disjointed nature, urban centers could have a maximum limit of, let’s say, one or two hundred thousand inhabitants, and with enough distance between them to enable cooperation, exchange, etc., thus avoiding the idiocy of isolated life; and these towns can be set apart from each other by belts of nature, so that, as well as cooperating with each other, human beings can have an easy relationship with nature.
12.06.2007,
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FABRICA
Speaker
A scientist of international renown, Emilio Del Giudice wrote more than 100 scientific publications, which are very popular around the world. In Italy he was a researcher at the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare di Milano (INFN - National Institute of Nuclear Physics of Milan) until 1st December 2006 when he retired. Among his better known studies there are his studies of water and the memory of water, on the dangers of "electro-smog" and the electro-magnetic fields, cold fusion and the Quantum Electro-Dymanics (QED). From 1969 to 1972 he worked at the MIT in Cambridge (USA) and from 1974 to 1976 at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen.