1. Introduction
Already at this point the foundation stone is laid for all following chapters. The interested reader should therefore take a close look at all the passages that do not agree with his worldview. Contradiction is a good way to question the existing and to open new perspectives.
In order to do justice to the purpose of this book, namely to find a common superstructure for different views, it is important to point out controversial points of view and to address the critical points. This does not just apply to medicine.
t is enough to look at the events in the world, to know that we belong to no high culture, but still inhabit our huts in the jungle. This is not deceived by the enormous technical development, which is falsely called progress. We are just at the beginning of the long road to becoming HUMAN.
The true progression is always about the consciousness, but only in small steps. The technology age was far too fast for that.
We can not be proud of the achievements of our time, because what makes us technically admiration astonishing goes hand in hand with the evolution of humanity, and this is anything but beneficial. For example, an atomic bomb should never have existed.
Awareness lags behind, although it should actually provide the motivation. It is running partly backwards again. Thinking often comes after doing, and the emotional world comes too short anyway. In many areas we are reminded of the middle Ages. This manifests itself in the coexistence of people, but also in re-emerging religious wars.
The big concern of this book is UNIFICATION. It would be a misconception, however, to aim for this target only for certain groups. Medicine will only reunite ifall humanity succeeds. Impossible? Pure utopia? Not at all, but the goal must first be formulated in this clarity, and it takes patience.
End quarrels; fill in ditches and the integration of all rejected areas – that is the big goal.
What sounds very utopian here is thecommon thread that runs through this book. For we are pursuing an intention that is already anchored in the primal ground of humanity and has since been rediscovered by science:Everything that has been separated from one another remains eternally connected with one another and strives for (re) union.
But this only happens 'effortlessly' or in a 'superfluid state', as scientist Bernd Zeiger puts it. So, whenever we let things that are together be as they are and donot force, imbalances can be lifted. We can observe this phenomenon in nature as often as in experiments. Everything strives for balance. This represents a more stable order, while saving energy.
In quantum mechanics one speaks of the"return to the quantum mechanical ground state", namely by"reducing the excitation of the system". Thus, the third law of thermodynamics becomes effective in its reversal, according to which automatically (!) a higher order is established. In principle, this (according to B. Zeiger) is the basis of every cure, because it is based on reunification (in the Unified Field).
If, therefore, the trench fights were ended in medicine, this law would automatically lead to a merger.
The better or more effective one gets through, without dogma or ideological background.
It is therefore a matter of consciousness, whether there will be a union in medicine or not, but in no case a factual dispute about the better methods! And because that is so, a broad space is given to the consciousness, the mind, our beliefs, the intellect, emotions and our origins, spiritual and ideological questions.
Analytically we are usually very good. We split up, cut off, but in the end we often do not know how everything gets together again.
In medicine it is no different. The human being is (imaginary) divided into parts, without even