Hierarchic Organization
By Atom Bergstrom
Atom’s Blog
The human body is a Russian Nesting Doll.
Progress “toward higher entities is accomplished by an increase in complexity rather than only in size,” according to Dr. Emanuel Revici.
Hierarchic Organization and Succession are only vague concepts to mainstream chemists, pharmacists, and doctors.
That’s why medical lab tests are so misleading and hazardous to our health.
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1) A proton is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called an electron field — similar to a person living in a house.
A proton plus an electron field is called an ATOM.
2) An atom is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself by forming chemical bonds — similar to a house on an acre of fenced property.
Atoms group together to create a MOLECULE.
3) A molecule is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called nitrogen-carbon-nitrogen-carbon bonds — similar to a property in a neighborhood.
Molecules group together to create an N-C-N-C BOND.
4) An N-C-N-C bond is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called an alkaline amino acid — similar to a neighborhood in a town.
N-C-N-C bonds group together to create an ALKALINE AMINO ACID.
5) An alkaline amino acid is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a histone — similar to a town in a county.
Alkaline amino acids group together to create a HISTONE.
6) A histone is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a deoxyribonucleoprotein — similar to a county in a state. (By now you get the idea, so I’ll stop before getting to nations, continents etc.)
Histones group together to create a DEOXYRIBONUCLEOPROTEIN.
7) A deoxyribonucleoprotein is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a gene.
Deoxyribonucleoproteins group together to create a GENE.
8) A gene is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a chromomere.
Genes group together to create a CHROMOMERE.
9) A chromomere is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a chromonema.
Chromomeres group together to create a CHROMONEMA.
10) A chromonema is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a chromosome.
Chromonemata (plural of chromonema) group together to create a CHROMOSOME.
11) A chromosome is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a cellular organelle.
Chromosomes group together to create an ORGANELLE (Period 5 of the Periodic Table).
12) An organelle is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a cell.
Organelles group together to create a CELL (Period 4 of the Periodic Table).
13) A cell is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a tissue.
Cells group together to create a TISSUE (Period 3 of the Periodic Table).
14) A tissue is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called an organ.
Tissues group together to create an ORGAN (heart, liver, spleen, pancreas, kidney, gall bladder, etc.)
15) An organ is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called an organism.
Organs group together to create an ORGANISM (human, monkey, bear, lion, dog, etc.).
16) An organism is vulnerable to outside forces, so it creates a wall around itself called a community.
Organisms group together to form a COMMUNITY (tribe, flock, herd, school, pride, gaggle, etc.)
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Emanuel Revici, M.D. (Research in Physiopathology As Basis of Guided Chemotherapy: With Special Application To Cancer, 1961) wrote …
“In progressive organization, each new entity thus is composed is of parts which are entities from the level immediately below, and the new entity itself serves as a part for the immediately superior entity. We call this relationship ‘hierarchic,’ one entity being inferior to that which it forms and superior to those which have formed it. So conceived, each new organizational entity can be identified not only through the nature of the parts forming it and the manner in which they are bound, but also through its level of hierarchic succession.”
According to the same source …
“According to the holistic approach, an entity exists only through its own qualities. It must have characteristics other than those of its constituents. It is the relationship between the constituents, in the new entity, largely resulting from the operation of quantum forces, that characterizes the entity.”
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Re: Can you give a practical example of the benefits of hierarchic organization?
Fungi are associated with the Fourth Period of the Periodic Table.
Bacteria are associated with the Fifth Period, one level below fungi.
Viruses are associated with the Sixth Period, two levels below fungi.
Fungal-based antibiotics kill bacteria, the “floor” immediately below fungi, but don’t kill viruses, two “floors” below and more difficult to reach.
If you live in a multi-storied apartment building, and stomp on the floor, your neighbor one floor below may hit their ceiling with a broom handle to retaliate, while the neighbor two stories below will be blissfully unaware of the drama.
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