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Dan...'s avatar

A friend of mine, a neurology researcher and a clinical physician, told me once how writing papers for medical journals works. According to him (an insider), you need something new, but based on known material, something controversial, but not strong enough to cause opposition, something unique, but leaving space for others to carry over. Contributing such a paper will help the whole scientific system to continue. You don’t want to write something that will disrupt the system. Even if you are right and it shows from the abstract, and it will save the whole universe.

A different story is with open-market books. There, you go after $$$ and you want to carve out a niche for yourself. You have to create new theories or provide new solutions. You won’t be ok if you recommend taking commonly available and cheap vitamin XX. Repack the vitamin, reframe its preparation, add a blender, add a fruit or two, and you are on the right track. You can even make your own formula from this, advertise it on the back of your book, and become a renowned authority.

So, it’s not about discovering the real, verifiable laws of the nature. It’s about the system. In general, obviously, as certainly there are dedicated, hard-working researchers whose thinking goes outside all boxes. We just don’t hear about them a lot because promoting them is not in the best interest of the system.

Scientists are also suffering from one-word disease. They develop one-word concepts, try to build a small world around it (which may be reasonable and justified), and then sell it as an airtight remedy. Protected against penetration from the outside, it will survive. Critical thinking and asking questions are two major external threats to these airtight worlds. Attempts to explain this small world in the context of broader systems or across disciplines are unwelcome. To some extent, it is justifiable - understanding a mechanism within its own boundaries is easy, and may be a good stepping stone for further research.

The other side of the story is that scientists (or professionals in general) suffer from a huge complex of not being an authority. They always try to present themselves as all-knowing, ready to flood you with answers to all your questions, juggling weird terminology and relating complicated theories and processes. “I don’t know” is out of question. You won’t hear “I haven’t thought about it, it may be interesting.”

The problem is that they will never be an authority. First, there are too many of them. Secondly, there are too many of them working on the same subject and competing. Thirdly, all their knowledge is based on sources written in millions of volumes, freely available for anyone to study. And finally, all their research may be cut off and closed down with a single phone call from the sponsor.

Revisiting (probably) all established concepts is a great way to open a new age of understanding the nature we are only a small part of.

Thank you for a great article about a mysterious word used millions times every day. I have never stopped to think about it, yet, what a surprise.

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Tami Berman's avatar

One thing to add. I have been a follower of the Weston Price Foundation and have been very appreciative of the work they have done in educating the public about pasture based farming and ancestral diets and wisdom. The part they have left out is that non-native EMF's have changed our ability to regulate our hormones and so for some people it doesn't matter what they do. They will never be able to be healthy if they don't remediate the EMF's they are exposed to, and that can be from geopathic stress as well as cell towers and wifi.

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