NUTRITIONAL
BALANCING, A UNIVERSAL SCIENCE
by Dr. Lawrence Wilson
©
June 2011, L.D. Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All
information in this article is for educational purposes only. It is not for the diagnosis, treatment,
prescription or cure of any disease or health condition.
Nutritional
balancing science is what is called a universal science. This is an unusual term that means that this method
of healing or correction of health incorporates, and can be understood in terms
of, many or even all the sciences.
Nutritional
balancing incorporates and integrates them into a coordinated package. It can also enhance oneÕs understanding
of all of these sciences.
Stated
differently, nutritional balancing goes to the core of how a human body
works. To do this, it draws upon
modern physics, physiology, medical sciences, biochemistry, and other sciences.
MEDICAL
SCIENCES INCORPORATED INTO NUTRITIONAL BALANCING
1.
Conventional Western biological and medical sciences. The chief among these are basic
physiology, biochemistry, and mineral analysis by mass spectroscopy and
induction-coupled plasma technologies.
However, nutritional balancing also relies upon a deep understanding of
aspects of toxicology, histology, microbiology, molecular and cell biology,
anatomy and other Western sciences.
2.
Basic traditional Oriental healing sciences. These include
acupuncture and the Taoist concept of yin and yang. The latter is actually a physics concept that is applied to
human bodies since they are mechanical and biochemical machines, as it were.
Nutritional
balancing also incorporates aspects of Ayurveda,
Macrobiotics, zone therapy or reflexology, and other non-Western healing
sciences.
3.
Traditional naturopathy. Nutritional
balancing utilizes many concepts such as increasing vitality, nutritional
principles, and many other aspects derived from and utilized in traditional
naturopathy. Some of these have been abandoned by modern naturopathy, which is
more about the use of remedies.
4.
Metabolic typing. This is a
fascinating concept used in both traditional Western and Oriental healing
science, but not in conventional allopathic medicine. It is a way to classify or understand human beings at a
systems level that yields a great deal of information quickly and usually very
accurately.
5.
Wellness, predictive medicine, preventive medicine, homeopathy, biochemical
individuality orthomolecular and other uses for vitamins, minerals and other phyto-nutrients, herbs, plants, glandular products and
more.
6.
Teleology. This is the
study of the healing intent of the body and other living organisms. It has to do with the role of the soul
or perhaps better said, the wisdom of the body.
7.
Agricultural sciences. This may sound
odd, but in fact many concepts in nutritional balancing were drawn from the
work of William Albrecht and Andre Voisin, among other
twentieth century agricultural scientists who explored mineral bioavailabliltiy, how plants take up and use minerals,
effects upon animal species of different soil minerals, and much more.
8.
Materials sciences. This is the
study of minerals and other materials, examining their properties and
composition. The body is made of
many materials that are used for various functions, such as the hardness of the
bones and the flexibility of the artery walls.
Basic sciences:
1.
Physics. Nutritional balancing is
about directionality, chemical bonding, holography, and other physics
concepts. Yin and yang is an
Oriental physics concept that is most important in nutritional balancing
science.
2.
Mathematics, including fractals, vector mathematics, calculus and other
advanced mathematical sciences.
3.
Systems theory. This, and many
other concepts in this article, are described in an article called the Theory Of Nutritional Balancing.
4.
Stress theory in engineering and in disease causation.
5.
Cybernetics, which is information science and communication and control
science used in computers, modern servo mechanisms, automatic weapons control
systems, and the like.
Social And Mental Sciences:
1.
Sociology.
2.
Mental programming and deprogramming sciences.
3.
Life planning sciences, which some call karmic science. This is related to what is called movement patterns, or how a person is
responding to his environment in carrying out his appointed life tasks.
4.
Trauma release theory.
5.
Psychology and psychiatry.
These are
just a few of the most important modern sciences, insights from which are all
incorporated into and can help one understand nutritional balancing
science. They are all integrated
and synthesized in unique ways so they work together in a beautiful and
harmonious fashion.
For more
information, see the textbook, Nutritional Balancing And Hair Mineral
Analysis (2010 edition).
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