A paradigm is
a sort of cultural, consensual pattern of thought or model of
something. For example the ‘current consensus in scientific
medicine’. Paradigms change, like the impact of Galileo’s
work on disproving the flat-earth theory or Copernicus’
heresy that the Earth moves round the Sun. New ideas meet a great
deal of resistance from orthodox philosophy but eventually give
rise to a changed perception of the world we live in.
We live now in a time of ‘paradigm shift’
which creates fundamental changes in our assumptions about the
world, and even this contributes to modern stress! Although our
physical sciences have discovered new fields of quantum reality,
medical science is lagging far behind. Philosophy has traditionally
been an important part of medical practice since the medieval
days of Paracelsus, even Hippocrates, an ancient Greek (and originator
of the Hippocratic Oath).
How we perceive the world and our part in it
is central to how we perceive the role of dis-ease and our reaction
to it. One of the present problems of finding effective cancer
treatment within Western scientific medicine is a ‘paradigm
gap’. There are different perceptions of the world at work
speaking incompatible languages. These have deep roots in our
philosophy. This gap is presently condemning millions of people
world-wide to suffer treatments for cancer that are often as destructive
as the disease itself.
Paradigm 1: The mechanistic view
This can be traced back to Descartes and other
scientists such as Sir Isaac Newton. The universe is a vast machine
and we are all cogs, all with our part to play in its function.
The healthy body is a well made clock and if it goes wrong we
simply take it apart and tinker with the insides until it goes
again. If it breaks it doesn’t really matter because there
are plenty more where that came from. Nothing exists unless it
has been proven through logical methods.
cancer: something had gone wrong with this body,
it has a lump. Cut it out and throw the lump away.
Paradigm 2: The anthropomorphic view
This paradigm is central to the philosophy of
Darwinism and others who helped set humans as ‘apart and
above’, or at the head of other life forms. Humanity is
the supposed crown of creation, we are created to lord it over
every other creature as ‘head of the food chain’.
The planet is ours to dominate and exploit to our own demands.
We must conquer every mountain and battle against disease. We
are the most evolved and dominant species in a process of natural
selection. We exist for no purpose and have just evolved through
sheer luck. In this world our media fantasy industries create
pigs and fish that can talk human. Animals are anthropomorphised
through culture to have the same needs, desires and dreams as
humans. The animals, forests, oceans and environment around us
exist purely for our convenience. This paradigm is human self-centred
and exploitative to everything including ourselves.
cancer: something has gone wrong with this body,
it has grown an enemy inside it. I will root it out and battle
with it.
Paradigm 3: The Gaian view (an emerging paradigm)
This paradigm started with Einstein and the science of energy.
Its inception combines an age when we saw the first images of
the Earth as a whole entity from space. James Lovelock and his
search for life on Mars is a central figure in its development
through his identification of the Gaia Hypothesis regarding Earth.
This planet we inhabit is a self-balancing, homeostatic
system similar to our own as single biological entities. It maintains
the optimum conditions for life despite our best efforts to pollute
it. Our bodies are a miracle of biology, constantly flexible and
adaptive but easy to harm. Anything we do to it or each other,
we do to ourselves as we are part of the same ‘web’
or ‘circle’ of life. We exist for a purpose but do
not yet know what it is. We are part of an evolving cycle of life,
a happening miracle.
cancer: something has gone wrong with this body,
it is trying to tell me something. I will listen to it and get
help to understand why it has happened and what I need to learn
and do to get better.
This is an extract from 'Don't Get Cancer'a new
ebook available only at: http://www.simonthescribe.co.uk/don'tget1.html
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