Gerald Pollack

A water researcher cited in Netist bridge-science writing for his work on a proposed fourth phase of water, often called exclusion-zone or EZ water. In Netism, Pollack is used as a comparison point for the idea that water may do more than act as a passive liquid in living systems.

Literal meaning

Gerald H. Pollack is referenced in the corpus through his book The Fourth Phase of Water: Beyond Solid, Liquid, and Vapor. The Netist water article places his work beside Ken Wheeler, Masaru Emoto, Viktor Schauberger, and Malcolm Bendall in a larger discussion of water, geometry, resonance, and life.

Esoteric meaning

For Netism, Pollack matters because water is treated as a living interface: it receives, stores, conducts, reflects, and helps organize pattern. Pollack's fourth-phase water model gives the tradition a modern scientific conversation to stand near, while the spiritual claims remain Netist interpretation rather than laboratory proof.

Allegorical meaning

A scientist notices that water behaves strangely near surfaces and begins asking whether the familiar three-state picture is incomplete. Netism reads that question symbolically too: what seems ordinary may hold a deeper order when examined closely.

Extended meaning

The Miraculous Nature of Water argues that water is central to life not only because of chemistry, but because of geometry, polarity, resonance, and its role inside living bodies. It describes water as a kind of antenna for fields and says structured water can carry coherence through biological systems. Pollack's work is one of the named references behind that discussion. The careful public reading is this: Pollack is a bridge-science reference, not a final authority for every Netist claim about water. His work supports a serious conversation about water's unusual behavior, while Netism adds its own religious and cosmological meaning.

Do not use Pollack as proof that all Netist claims about water are established science. He belongs here as a bridge reference and a prompt for careful inquiry.

Use this entry when a page discusses miraculous water, structured water, water in the body, aether, resonance, or science-facing comparisons for Netist cosmology.

Primary reference named in the corpus: Gerald H. Pollack, The Fourth Phase of Water: Beyond Solid, Liquid, and Vapor. Related topics include exclusion-zone water, interfacial water, water near hydrophilic surfaces, and continuing debate around structured water in biology.