Only the right science can save us!

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readJul 6, 2020

Question from the Internet:

“Is it true that most scientists agree that it’s almost a certainty that we will blow ourselves up someday? Why? How soon is the recovery time? Isn’t nuclear war the biggest threat to humanity, by far?”

1.One doesn’t need to be a scientists to predict, that if we continue on our present path we will send-destruct in a very short time. By this we would follow the usual pattern of recurring, vicious historic cycles, civilizations being built on the ruins of the previous, only to repeat the same mistakes and run into dead end themselves.

2.With all due respect to our serious, classical sciences, when Nature challenges us like with the Coronavirus now, it turns out that we have no comprehension of the system we exist in. With all our theories, Nobel prizes, technological abilities we are hardly scratching the surface. This is not surprising, since our inherent perception of reality, observing, research ability is totally egocentric, subjective. This is why all leading sciences are becoming theoretical, philosophical, and all our “solutions” cause only more problems.

3.Whenever a civilization runs into problems - financial, economic collapse, societal breakdown, environmental issues - the “historic solution” leaders turn to is war. In our global world where everything is integrated and everybody is armed to their necks with weapons of mass destruction such a war will probably be nuclear, devastating on an unprecedented scale.

4.If we have such a war, I don’t know if we can talk about any recovery.

5.On the other hand we have a different, unique and purposeful scientific method, which instead of studying, manipulating Nature (in a limited, distorted manner) studies, corrects, upgrades Human beings. With the help of this science we can first of all change our consciousness, perception of reality and also find true solutions for our mounting problems, by that safeguarding our collective Human survival.

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Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.