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Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense: A New Paradigm of Future’S Medicine
Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense: A New Paradigm of Future’S Medicine
Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense: A New Paradigm of Future’S Medicine
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Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense: A New Paradigm of Future’S Medicine

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One of the main goals of modern physics is to realize a single theory that will be able to unify the various theories and describe the universe with all its known and unknown facets. In order to find a unifying theory we must observe the universe and try to understand the universal laws that regulate all its parts. It becomes obvious that chemistry and physics are not enough to solve the riddle or explain the full complexity of the physiology of the human body. It is only when we add the energetic dimension to chemistry and physics that we understand the full expression of human life in every dimension. In this book the author present a new theory based on seven laws that embrace the universe and unify the forces of physics, biology, physiology, religion and spirituality. A new paradigm that links different cultures and different disciplines, science with philosophy, physics with spirituality and arts with mathematics.
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He compare the quantum realm and spirituality and gives a practical method to develop the seventh sense by which we can have access to the spiritual world and quantum realm in order to obtain information directly from the patient without using our five senses which are limited in space and time. A new definition of the basic concepts in medicine such as homeostasis, well being, malaise and disease and give the basis for a new model of diagnosis and treatment, that increases the awareness of the psychological-physical connection, enhance each persons capacity for self-knowledge and self-care, and promote the development of higher states of harmony and wholeness in the complex mind-energy-body connection in order to feel fulfill and achieve happiness.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 24, 2015
ISBN9781504939218
Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense: A New Paradigm of Future’S Medicine
Author

Nader Butto

Dr. Nader Butto born in Nazareth, Israel. He graduated from Medical school inTorino, Italy in 1983, completed his cardiology specialization in Israel in 1992 and in 1995 completed his training in Advanced Invasive Cardiology in France. Presently he is working in the Rabin Medical Center, his main work at the hospital is invasive cardiology and coronary angioplasty. Since medical school, Dr. Butto has emphasized the importance of the spiritual aspect and has been drawn towards holistic medicine. After specializing in cardiology, he has continued to seek knowledge that will fill the gaps of conventional medicine. He developed a new theory, Unified Universal Theory, which based on seven universal principle to describe physical, energetic and spiritual realms in single unified theory. In his out-patient clinic, he treats a wide spectrum of disorders which are considered incurable using conventional medicine. He developed a new diagnostic method based on the seventh Sense as extra sensorial perception by which he can find the direct relationship between the emotional crises, energetic blockages and physical illness. He has developed new therapeutic methods that combines the three different and related aspects of the human being: psyche, soul, and body that are FEEL (fast emotional Elaboration and Liberation) TTRT (Trans Temporal Regression Technique) and EEW (Energy Emotion Wash-out). The purpose of these techniques to free the body from physical ailments, elaborate the emotional crises to complete the learning process and to permits personal fulfillment and spiritual evolution. Over the past few years, Dr. Butto has been giving lectures and practical workshops to psychologists, physicians, and therapists on his method “Unified Integrative Medicine” in Israel, Italy, and Spain Germany, Switzerland. In October 1998, his book first was published in Italy which become best seller since 1999. Since then he published four more books in Italian and Hebrew.

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    Seven Universal Principles and the Seventh Sense - Nader Butto

    2015 Nader Butto. All rights reserved.

    No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or

    transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.

    Published by AuthorHouse 4/15/2015

    ISBN: 978-1-5049-3920-1 (sc)

           978-1-5049-3921-8 (e)

    Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models,

    and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

    Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

    Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

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    Table of Contents

    Two Models to Describe Reality

    The Energy Paradigm

    The Search for One Unifying Model in Medicine

    Two Realms of Reality

    A New Paradigm Shift

    Soul and Physics

    A Simple Theory Is the Right One

    A Unifying Theory

    The Universal Unified Theory: The Seven Universal Principles

    The First Principle: Unity and Oneness

    Oneness, Cosmic Energy in the Occidental World

    Oneness, God, and Religions

    The Characteristics of Life Energy

    Frequency

    Pulse (Rhythm)

    The Impact of Geometric Shapes

    Energy Flow and Measurement

    Negative Entropy (Negentropy or Syntropy)

    The Quantum Entanglement

    The Importance of the Intuition in Medical Practice

    The Seventh Sense and Quantum Entanglement

    The Biological Qualities of Cosmic Energy

    In Conclusion

    The Second Principle: The Spiral Structure as a Bridge between Energy and Matter

    Change Vibration, Change Matter

    How Is Energy Converted to Matter?

    Matter Formation

    The logarithmic spiral

    Golden Ratio

    The Golden Ratio in Art

    The golden ratio in nature

    The Action of Energy on Matter

    In Conclusion

    The Third Principle: The Universal Trinity and the Law of Stability

    Three Embryological Germ Layers

    Three germ layers and three parts of the brain

    The Three Types of Infection Agents and Their Connection to the Embryonic Layers

    The Trinity of the Soul in Religions and Philosophies

    The Universal Trinity and Ayurvedic Medicine

    The Trinity of Soul in Chinese Tradition

    The Three Treasures

    Three Parts of the Soul According to Buddhism and Hinduism

    The Hindu Trinity

    The Soul According to Judaism

    The Cosmic Trinity in Christianity

    Soul trinity in Islam

    The Fourth Principle: The Bipolarity

    The Dynamics of Polar Change

    The Polar Force in Chinese Medicine

    Bipolarity in Particle Physics

    The Fifth Principle: The Universal Energetic Model

    Complex Matter Formation

    The Energetic Model and Magnetoelectric Field

    The Sixth Principle: The Four Phases of Life

    Four Phases and the Beginning of Life

    The Cell and the Four Stages in Life

    The Heart and the Four Phases of Life

    The Four Stages of Stress

    Stress and the Four Levels of Fear

    Illness and the Four Phases of Life

    The Four Phases of Life and the Four Elements

    The Four Elements and the Four Physiological Energies

    The Seventh Principle: The Universal Code

    The Quantum States

    The Universal Code and the Genetic Code

    The Universal Code and I Ching

    The Universal Code and the Seven Frequencies

    The Code of Time

    Unified Theory and Psychospirituality

    The Biomagnetic and Animal Soul

    The Vegetative Soul—Male and Female

    Animal Soul and Science

    The Animal Soul and the Brain

    The Human Soul

    Human Soul and the Brain

    The guiding spirit

    The Brain as a Wave Processor

    Soul and Psyche

    The Three Components of the Psyche

    So What Is Health?

    The Universal Code and Homeostasis

    The Human Code for Personalized Medicine

    How to determine the animal soul code

    The Code of Food for Correct Nutrition

    Redefine the Basic Concepts in Medicine

    A Paradigm shift of the Medical System

    About the Author

    Endnotes

    A human being is part of a whole, called by us the ‘Universe’. He experiences himself, his thoughts, and feelings, as something separated from the rest—a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circles of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.

    — Albert Einstein

    Ever since I was a little boy, I wanted to study medicine. The mystery of the human organism enchanted and attracted me. I wanted to heal people, but studying medicine seemed like a distant dream in my family. I have childhood memories of times when the entire family gathered around a single bowl of lentils. Still, my family was blessed with two things: love and spirituality. It was this love and support that eventually helped me fulfill my dream and earn a medical degree.

    I have always asked myself a question that became more obvious when I took anatomy lessons and saw inert bodies on tables. Does the soul really exist? And if so, where does the soul go after death?

    Already as a student, with these questions in mind, I decided to search for the spiritual, fully absent in modern science, and thus, step by step, I started practicing hypnosis. Hypnosis confirmed to me that medicine was neglecting something deep and important. Indeed, it was difficult to explain how the mere hypnotic suggestion of a contact with a lit cigarette could create a burn on the back of the hand, while I was only grazing the hand with a pencil rubber. Therefore, if a fact of such kind were possible, why could the opposite not happen (i.e., to cure a common wart on the back of the hand by means of hypnotic suggestion)? Thus, I cured many warts by means of hypnotic suggestion, until one day when a young man came to see me with an incredible number of warts on his hands; all attempts to have them surgically removed had been in vain.

    This young man asked me to help him using the hypnotherapy, but it was not easy, for he was too tense and frightened. Finally, however, I asked him to close his eyes, and putting my hand over his without touching him, I transmitted him the suggestion that in ten days the warts would disappear. Two weeks later, we met by accident, and he told me, full of joy, that the warts had completely disappeared.

    It was clear to me that this was a placebo effect, but I failed to understand what this effect actually was, or which was the mechanism capable of transforming the force of the word either in physical damage or, on the other hand, in something capable of healing a viral disease such as warts. Furthermore, I did not understand how he could be cured without hypnosis. After this episode, I have cured warts using merely tap water, which for the patient was a highly efficient medicine against his disease.

    But after all these facts, I was plagued by the following idea: if one could cure a wart using this method, why was it impossible, in the same way, to cure an ovarian cyst or breast cancer, for example?

    Radiesthesia was the first step toward the world of energy. The word radiesthesia means perception by the senses or the capacity for feeling or sensation. By using the pendulum, I could detect radiation within the human body. According to the theory, all human bodies give off unique or characteristic radiations, as do all other physical bodies or objects. Such radiations are often called aura. However, I was not at all convinced as to the use of the pendulum as a means to seize this mysterious radiation, for I was lacking in a convincing theoretical basis.

    When I already was a full-fledged physician, I attended a conference on complementary medicine. One of the speakers at the conference was Mr. Rafi Rosen, who spoke of bioenergy and described a technique of energy perception through rapid blinking of the eyelids. Most of my colleagues were skeptical, but I felt that this was a key to an issue that had troubled me a lot over the last years. I approached Mr. Rosen and later joined a class he gave on this technique.

    Having developed extrasensory perception through the blinking technique opened a gate to a new world for me. I started developing another sense—the seventh sense—that helped me step beyond the boundaries of the physical and reach a level on which I could detect and understand energy. This opened new horizons for me in both my studies and practice.

    There, in the world of tests and machines, I had countless opportunities to put it to the test. Using the energy-sensing (blinking) technique, I could establish whether the patient suffered from a heart condition even before he underwent a scintigraphy test. I could even predict which part of the heart was affected and which artery had narrowed. The strict medical tests almost always corroborated my findings. Realizing that energy perception helped me obtain a correct diagnosis, I gained confidence and was encouraged to examine other areas that were not directly associated with cardiology.

    Little by little, as I gained more awareness of the energy body medium, the spiritual aspect seemed increasingly clear, and I could better understand the difference between mind and spirit and between individual spirit and the universal spirit (God) and the difference between both.

    In order to be able to answer these questions and many others, I started studying cosmic energy and its characteristics according to the absolutely scientific description given by Wilhelm Reich, and then I have added some of my own clinical experiences using the seventh sense as a means of going deeper into the human being’s true essence.

    When dealing with this argument, it is essential to understand the passage through and the conversion of energy into matter, and vice versa, and with this aim in mind, I had to go back to quantum physics in order to understand the origin of the atom and its minuscule particles.

    Enriching my knowledge in this field, I found myself involved, in an interesting discovery that describes the structural energy model of the quark, which is the most elementary particle known, constituted by a proton and a neutron, and which was unknown until now. However, it explains the way in which the three quarks are linked, but also describes the existing connection between proton and neutron, which simply and clearly explains the origin of polar forces and magnetism.

    A quark is an energy particle with a minuscule mass. It is considered precisely the point where the energy without mass is transformed into matter.

    I have drawn up a functional dynamic energy model, a relatively simple one, which ultimately explains the various physical universal principles guiding our lives at a physical, mental, and spiritual level. One of these principles is the bipolarity, which allows us to understand the interaction between human beings. In the same time, I decided to expand my knowledge in holistic medicine and studied the principles of traditional Chinese and Japanese philosophy, as well as Indian medicine, known as ayurveda. An enchanted world of Oriental culture opened up before me.

    Two Models to Describe Reality

    At this point, I realized there are two major approaches through which we can understand life and the world, each offering a different observation and comprehension model:

    (1) the Western material and mechanistic model

    (2) the Oriental energy-oriented model

    Speaking of the first, we can state that the material-mechanical model has served as the basis for scientific research since the times of Newton and Descartes. According to this model, we live in an objective universe where only things that can be seen by the physical eye and empirically measured are real. We can study anything by examining its components and everything has a cause and a result. In this view, the brain is studied separately from the body and, is believed to control it. Western medicine is based on this rigorous and scientific model, which is based on Galileo’s inductive-experimental method and on the Cartesians’ deductive-mathematical approach. This approach was guided by the Greek-Latin logic that is experimental by nature. It suggests that reality can be studied logically, directly or not, using a language that leaves no room for lack of understanding or ambiguity. All the world’s phenomena can be mathematically or statistically studied, based on assumptions or suppositions proven through a series of experiments and tests that can be repeated to obtain the same results. Based on the test results, a series of generalized statements (i.e., laws) is made, which leads to a theory that rationally explains the various phenomena.

    Likewise, the external world is seen as a set of separate objects and events: the natural environment is seen as comprising a large number of fragments to be exploited by interest groups as they wish. The results can be easily seen: air, water, and food pollution due to chemical-radioactive substances, contamination of the mind through rumors and excess information, contamination of our emotions due to solitude, and destruction of the family sense. This non-unitary vision first applied to man and later generalized to include society—which is thus divided into different nations, races, religious, and political groups and the conviction that all these fragments are really separated. Maybe this can be considered the main cause of all political, social, ecological, and cultural crises we are suffering at present.

    Based on this model, Western medicine developed and proved to be highly successful. The rules of hygiene almost completely eliminated untimely death. The use of antibiotics and vaccines made the mass epidemics a thing of the past. Insulin gave diabetics their lives back. Thrombolytic therapy, coronary angiography and angioplasty, bypass surgery, and heart valve replacement improved the quality of life and prolonged life expectancy. Surgery corrects now defects that were previously untouchable; reanimation techniques have transformed some near deaths into simple, technically controllable events; organ transplants have become a daily practice, and artificial organs are at a most advanced implementation stage; and we have even get to biological engineering to manipulate life’s laws and structure with therapeutic, industrial, and even warmongering aims. Furthermore, cancer is being fought unceasingly, while AIDS, the most recent challenge, shall be undoubtedly defeated sooner or later. According to modern medicine principles, the accepted indices for examining the level of health are life expectancy and infant mortality. Indeed, life expectancy has risen because of the significant decline in mortality due to serious illnesses, such as infectious diseases and heart attacks, thanks to lifesaving treatments and operations.

    However, medicine’s fragmentary approach toward the human body leads to medical sub-specialization, which brings the physician’s attention on separate organs and get him ever further from considering the patient as a psycho-spiritual entity, which has brought about a conflict between conscious will and involuntary instincts.

    It becomes obvious that chemistry and physics are not enough to solve the riddle or explain the full complexity of the physiology of the human body. It is only when we add the energetic dimension to chemistry and physics that we understand the full expression of human life in every dimension. This spiritual essence does not intend to override scientific laws but rather expands our point of view to include very-high-frequency physical reality.

    The Energy Paradigm

    On the other end, we find the paradigm of energy on which in the millenary Oriental civilization all aspects of life are based and of which China is the perfect model. Throughout its long story, China has developed a culture of maximum sophistication and productivity based on energy and in which any science or spiritual practice are but energy manifestations.

    What is a paradigm of energy? It refers to the entire scientific approach that is based on the concept of energy, from which all the basic assumptions, theories, rules, and concepts are following. This model is at the same time creative and objective. In the traditional Chinese culture, this energy is called qi. The concept of qi (or chi) is fundamental to the Chinese medical thought: all symptoms, all illnesses, all patterns of disharmony are a result of imbalances in qi. Qi is a vital force whose quantity, distribution and flow determine the health of the individual. The purpose of the treatment is to restore the balance of qi within the individual, hopefully resulting in the restoration of health.

    The objectivity of the energy paradigm is shown at the various development stages of the history of Western medicine, which goes from Mesmer to Wilhelm Reich and Alexander Lowen, passing through Freud and Jung. The clinical-theoretical and even experimental masterpiece of Reich is particularly interesting, because in his work, either at general or specific level, he arrives—even if not completely—to the same conclusions as the Chinese. This trans-cultural and trans-temporal confirmation of the principles and effects of the energy paradigm proves to be a final confirmation of the objectivity of energy.

    Scientists have given this same energy different names as for example Energy of the thousand names, as well as zero-point energy, quantum field, dark field, or Higgs field. Though there was initially no experimental confirmation for the theory, over time, it came to be seen as the only explanation for mass that was widely viewed as consistent with the rest of the Standard Model. As strange as it seems, the Higgs mechanism (as the Higgs field is sometimes called) is generally widely accepted among physicists, along with the rest of the Standard Model.

    One consequence of the theory was that the Higgs field could manifest as a particle, much in the way that other fields in quantum physics manifest as particles. This particle is named Higgs boson.

    The energy model offers a view in which the patient, considered as a complete entity and not merely a collection of symptoms or a disease carrier, is given holistic treatment.

    Research shows that the consultation process and the holistic approach adopted by practitioners of complementary medicine make patients feel more in control of their illness.¹

    The energy model allows us a holistic approach towards patients. It takes into account their constitution, energy aspects, psychological, psychosocial, socioeconomic, and spiritual aspects and their environment and diet.

    The Search for One Unifying Model in Medicine

    Modern medicine is based on the mechanical principles. This approach is made to obsessive search of the concrete, materialistic cause of the disease in microbial or gene mutation. This approach describes the majority of the chronic diseases like arthritis, colitis, ulcers, heart disease, epilepsy, cancer, asthma, depression, and schizophrenia without real solution or effective cure. Instead, it is based on clinical pharmaceutical drugs that we cannot call curative but only to have a palliative effect with a non negligible danger of side effects.

    I could perceive from the very beginning of my studies in the faculty of medicine that medicine has no model to follow or theory to apply, and that in the existing method, there are many missing points and many confusing issues, about which I was seeking intuition and illumination from a higher-dimension source of knowledge.

    The unifying model was born out of more than twenty-five years of experience, real dedication, study, close observation, and constant meditation on many challenging problems for which conventional medicine could not give clear answers.

    Western medicine has evolved in many fields, especially in technology and in biochemical study. Nevertheless, this progress was not going along with a better understanding of the human being as a whole, therefore it does not cause the rapidly increasing frustration related with chronic diseases to reduce. This is one of the major reasons why people are desperately searching for real alternatives to what conventional medicine is proposing and the reason why alternative therapies become popular.

    Eventually, after intensive research, study, observation, and application, many important pieces found the right place in the puzzle, and the whole picture started to become clearer, and many missing links, one by one, began to be illuminated.

    With time, I concluded that in order to describe the human nature, we must take into consideration the three components that constitute the whole human kind—physical body, psyche, and soul—and the environmental factors that influence those three parts.

    In order to do that, we needed a new theory that was able to describe our reality in its facets, a theory of everything that is based on systems thinking, which is a holistic approach to analysis, that focuses on the way that a system’s constituent parts interrelate and how systems work over time and within the context of larger systems.

    It did not take me long to understand that physics is indispensable, especially quantum physics, in order to understand the relationship between energy and matter and to define the soul’s nature, its interaction with the body to generate life, and its interaction with the brain to produce the psyche.

    When I started to study physics in order to better understand the laws of physics, I realized that many of the main questions have no answer in the actual theories of physics. In very short time, I found myself interested in research and real dedication, trying to solve challenging problems in physics and to clarify basic issues in order to have a whole picture that could help me better understand health and disease and effectively ensure the state of well-being.

    I was fortunate not being a physicist and to be free of fixed models accepted in physics and programs that limit the imagination and block intuition and innovation. Nevertheless, I was unlucky, because I could not deal with the mathematical part of physics, and this prevented me from communicating with physicists with the same language. That pushed me to better understand the relationship between the universal laws and mathematics, and finally, I concluded that the real essence of God, which is not separated from the laws that guide everything in the universe, is mathematics.

    I found myself implicated in searching for a theory of everything, a theory that should be complete, able to describe a vast amount of phenomena using few arbitrary data and being able to predict future results. One of the greater philosophers of modern science, Karl Popper, defined a simple theory.

    There is one universal principle that guides the function and the structure of the universe as a whole and its parts in detail. My research led me to understand that we can describe the whole universe and its different parts with only seven principles; I named these the universal principles. These principles are applicable to all levels of any existence, from the macro to the micro, from the (subnuclear) particles to spirituality.

    From these principles or laws, a unifying theory was born, which is called Universal Unified Theory. This theory unifies science with philosophy, mathematics with religion, modern technology with ancient wisdom.

    Finally, when we apply this theory to medicine, we convert it from a medicine based on empirical data and experimental results to a medicine based on general laws and principles that support the empirical data and experimental results.

    The purpose of this book is to better understand the nature of the human being by applying the universal principles on the human nature, and by doing so, to redefine its three components: body, psyche, and soul. Basing on these three components, we could better define health and the states of well-being, homeostasis, and disease. A model of unified integrative medicine was born.

    Integrative unified medicine, that will be described in my next book, focuses on the interactions between the brain, the psyche, the body, and the behavior and the powerful ways in which emotional, mental, social, spiritual, and behavioral factors can directly affect health. When treating a patient using this approach, the healer enquires in the patient’s general, energetic, psychological, psychosocial, and socioeconomic situation while examining his environment and nutrition, as well.

    Our purpose in our new model of diagnosis and treatment is to increase the awareness of the psychological-physical connection, enhance each person’s capacity for self-knowledge

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