Today’s problem of mankind associated with the oncological pandemic lies at the basis of a misunderstanding of the field and energy nature of living things. This statement can cause a wave of objections, where objective, positive arguments for medical science will abound. Most of them we can certainly agree with. But the essence of this problem is not what medicine has already achieved, but what it cannot achieve yet, due to the specific features of its foundation.
It so happened that a person is unable to see nature as a holistic phenomenon, which could then be decomposed into puzzles. The past division of sciences into specializations, today has created a problem where it is difficult to determine the end of the field of biochemistry and the beginning of the field of physics, mathematics, and even more so astrophysics.
For example, the existence of a science like astrobiology is limited to the simple questions of whether there is life elsewhere and whether humans can survive in deep space. But we cannot understand the informational density of such a phenomenon as psychosensory. We could not see and understand the relationship between the astrophysical determinant and its quantum transformation in the biological environment.
So, one of the main reasons for the misunderstanding of the nature of the oncological process is precisely the basis for the isolation of medical science in the dimensions of optical analysis technologies. Since vision is a powerful instrument of emotion, its binocular basis largely determined the physiological, orbital dependence of the brain on the total integration of substantial objects. That is why an emotional image, as an object of a neural matrix, is poorly written mathematically when creating artificial intelligence.
Therefore, all of today’s advances in medical science are determined by the rational advances of what is clearly visible, or observable within a binocular microscope. Today it already observes and fixes quantum transformations of matter in a non-linear biochemical manifestation. But medicine, in principle, does not understand the biological relationship, in the context of mathematics, biotopology and physics.
The purpose of this short article is to point out the scientific failure of medicine to create, in the next decade, a technological pipeline to help millions of today’s and tomorrow’s cancer patients. Cancer medicine, unfortunately, is still only an island of hope and the biggest church in the world today.