Reinventing Medicine Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Reinventing Medicine Book

Cue the theme song to the Twilight Zone: Research shows your plants won't grow as well when you're depressed as when you're happy. Praying for someone else will improve your own health, too. The growth of E. Coli bacteria is inhibited when a group of people merely think about stopping the growth. And qi gong practitioners in San Francisco can kill cancer cells in other peoples' bodies--by willing the cells to die. These ideas surely sound ludicrous, but these and other similarly mind-boggling studies have been commissioned and replicated by researchers at Harvard, Duke, McGill and other esteemed universities. Larry Dossey is known as the father of mind-body medicine and perhaps best known for his advocacy of the role of prayer in healing in 1995's bestselling Healing Words: The Power of Prayer and the Practice of Medicine. He admits that working on such seemingly impossible projects a few years ago would have ruined a researcher's career with "ATF" or "the anti-tenure factor". But things are changing. He wrote Reinventing Medicine to present proof that "the mind can literally change the external world" and how this "non-local mind" will change health care in the future. His argument for the existence of this non-local mind is as convincing as it is eloquently conveyed. Doubters, he says, merely need to examine their own dreams for proof this is true. When was the last time you had a conversation or found yourself in a situation you dreamed about the night before? Studies from as early as the 1960s "strongly suggest that dreams are an avenue of non-local communication between separate, distant persons". Dossey's support of the non-local mind is sure to draw pooh-poohs from cynics, including MDs, but, he warns, health-care workers are bound to experience this force firsthand: "Doctors can experience their patients' symptoms non-locally and this can be unpleasant". He cites the example of psychiatrist Mona Lisa Shulz, a medical intuitive, who "began to grow increasingly uncomfortable, feeling hot and flushed", while speaking over the phone with a feverish patient. Dossey says this telesomatic event, extreme empathy, or whatever you want to call it, is dangerous, but that "empathic balance" is something that will be taught in medical schools in the future to ensure accurate diagnoses of ill patients. Dossey was one of the first vanguards of mind-body medicine, which is basically accepted as fact today; he's again presenting the future of medicine, as otherworldly as it seems. --Erica JorgensenRead More

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  • 0062516442
  • 9780062516442
  • Larry Dossey
  • 1 September 2000
  • HarperCollins
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 271
  • 1
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