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How did today's "Health System" evolve?
To find the answer let us look at how two very important scientists observed
the world they lived in - Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein.
Quite simply put, the Newtonian world sees people as sophisticated biological
machines. The Einsteinian viewpoint goes beyond the limited Newtonian clockwork
universe to comprehend human beings from the perspective of inter-penetrating,
inter-active energy fields.
There is a growing mountain of evidence to support the new Einsteinian way of
thinking. Quantum physics and experiments in high-energy particle physics have
shown us that, at the particle level, all matter is really energy.
If humans are beings of energy, then it follows that we can be affected by
energy. Orthodox medicine has started to use energy methods of treatment.
Therapeutic radiation to treat cancer, electricity to stop pain (TENS machines)
and electromagnetic fields are being used to stimulate the healing of broken
bones.
The reason why this new way of viewing healing is referred to as Einsteinian
relates to Albert Einstein's famous equation given in the early 1900s of E = mc2
or energy equals matter traveling at twice the speed of light. In other words -
all matter is energy at a different frequency. Matter and energy are now known
to be inter-changeable and inter-convertible. This means that one can convert
matter into energy, and therefore it should also be possible to convert energy
into matter. Scientists are currently working on creating this phenomena in
their laboratories.
The Newtonian view is based upon early models of mechanistic
behaviors that
were born from observing nature. The forces of acceleration and gravity were
analyzed by Isaac Newton from his observations of a falling apple. He applied
mathematics to his observations and deduced various laws of motion which he used
to describe what he had seen.
These early Newtonian laws allowed scientists to make predictions on the way
mechanical systems would behave. When it was developed, the Newtonian model was
quite advanced for its time. Through his development of calculus, Newton gave
scientists a tool for probing the observable universe. This led to new
directions in scientific discovery and enabled the birth of many new inventions.
However, Newton's laws dealt primarily with the force of gravity as it acted
upon moving bodies in the Earth's gravitational field. His models were unable to
explain the behavior of electricity and magnetism discovered in later years.
Eventually new models of the universe had to be invented to accommodate these
forces.
Today's scientists are beginning to discover again, forces that do not fit
into the current conventional view of the Newtonian model of reality.
Unfortunately, the majority of biological researchers and physicians are still
working from a Newtonian model of living systems in which the human body is seen
as a cellular mechanism.
Present day Newtonian models of medical thinking see human physiological and
psychological behaviors as dependent upon the structural hardware of the brain
and the body. The heart is a mechanical pump which delivers oxygen and nutrient
rich blood to the organ systems of the body and the brain. Advancement in
biomedical technology have given doctors a wider variety of spare parts to
replace diseased organs, however the greater knowledge of how to actually
reverse or prevent many diseases is still lacking.
Isaac Newton introduced a way of thinking of the universe as an orderly,
predictable yet divine mechanism. It would follow that human beings, like their
Creator, would also be constructed in a similar fashion. Thinkers during this
time saw the universe as a grand clockwork. Doctor's perspectives on the inner
workings of the human beings have changed very little in the evolution of
scientific thought over the ages. Present-day physicians still see the human
body as a complex machine. They have merely become more sophisticated in
studying biological clockwork mechanisms at the molecular level.
Early surgeons worked under the basic premise of the human body as a complex
plumbing system. The present-day surgeon may be seen as a specialized
"bio-plumber" who knows how to isolate and remove a diseased component
and how to reconnect a system so that it may function again.
More recent developments in drug treatments have provided newer ways to fix
the failing body. Although different in philosophy, drug therapy is still
Newtonian in that it operates from the perspective of the body as a complete
biomechanism. Instead of using knives as in surgery, doctors use drugs to
deliver magic bullets to the appropriately targeted area of the body. Different
drugs are used to strengthen or destroy any abnormally functioning cells.
Pharmacological and surgical approaches are incomplete because they ignore
the vital forces which animate and breathe life into the biomachinery of living
systems. This animating life-force is an energy which is currently unaddressed
by today's Newtonian mechanistic thinkers, whose opinions predominate orthodox
medicine. These subtle forces are not dealt with nor discussed by physicians
because there are no currently acceptable scientific models which explain their
existence and function.
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