Guest guest Posted October 27, 2006 Report Share Posted October 27, 2006 List, Moran is an Australian surgeon and active member of Quackwatch. For many on the list this would make him Satan incarnate. I don't see him that way. He is a vigorous defender of his faith. I can say the same thing about many on this list. If you take a objective look at healthcare from, let's say the probable future, it will be hard to distinguish the conventional from alternative medicine. You will see a pitiable and often willful ignorance, a blurred and narrow focus, amazing fantasy, overweening little minds, and group-think not unlike schools of fish. And don't forget that both philosophies are huddled under the same capitalistic umbrella, so one eye is always on the money. It is only a matter of time till we see cancer as nothing more than a locally corrupted phenotype and all we have to do is reboot. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 27, 2006 Report Share Posted October 27, 2006 > It is only a matter of time till we see cancer as nothing more than a > locally corrupted phenotype and all we have to do is reboot. We would have to reboot our civilization, all of its goals, all of its methods, and all of its ideology, especially its perilous, disastrous, and erroneous idea of " progress. " Cancer is nature's response to what we think of as " progress, " i.e. a _rapidly_ and _drastically_ changing environment with an exponential rate of change. Cancer is the only way nature is hardwired to respond to " progress " -- cancer is a desperate attempt to get creatures exposed to too many new things too fast and all at once to try to evolve in a hurry if there's no other options left, if there's no adapting to the new environment via old phenotypical organs and functions. Evolving in a hurry is a very bad idea, biologically speaking. In the past, when changes were suddenly introduced into the environment at a rapid rate (e.g., as the result of a massive meteor striking the planet and abruptly changing the climate), they typically resulted in mass extinctions of species rather than evolution. Cancer is the extension or, rather, the outcome of the misused/overused innate capacity for evolution, hardwired into everything live on this planet, a capacity to respond with new/different growth to new/different environmental circumstances. When these new circumstances are TOO new and TOO different and TOO numerous and keep changing TOO fast, making the rate of environmental change exceed the rate of possible adaptive responses, we get cancer, a haphazard, erratic, frantic " let's do it differently " attempt of the body to find an adaptive way to handle too much. If we keep the rate of alterations to the environment the same or even higher (as we've been doing for the past several decades, with no precedent in the whole history of life on this planet), cancer will be there no matter how we tweak with our phenotype for as long as we keep doing what we're doing. In fact, the more we tweak, the more cancer we'll get. If we speed it up, if our " progress " becomes even more rapid, the rate of cancer will exceed the rate of non-cancerous adaptive responses left available to the body, and we will be a 100% cancer rate species for a while, just like those lab mice strains we selectively breed to develop cancer in 100% of cases for our experiments. We're in the course of the same kind of experiment on ourselves. Its outcome, however, is so predictable that it isn't really worth bothering to carry out to the final outcome, extinction. Elena Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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