ABSTRACT
Over the long history of humankind, various techniques have been
tried to mitigate the effects of various illnesses and diseases. In
ancient times it was widely thought good health and harvests,
and by some life itself, came from the sun and stars. Generally
medicinal therapies were painstakingly built up at the communal
level, for example, by trying plants and other flora-what worked
and what did not. Two ancient examples are herbal medicine and
acupuncture, while homoeopathy is a more recent method. As
knowledge of chemistry and biology grew, traditional therapies
were shelved, while the East and indigenous populations retained
them. No basis was found for many methods by modern science. In
1927 quantum theory was widely adopted across science, including
chemistry and biology. Einstein, the most eminent scientist of
the 20th century, considered quantum theory incomplete, along
with its probabilities. But no other solution was available in this
period when quantum theory dominated. Now, a new description of
physics and biophysics, the mathematics of self-field theory (SFT),
suggests re-examination of many alternative therapies since SFT
shows quantum theory is indeed incomplete. In our modern era
there are concerns and opportunities with electromagnetic (EM)
exposures. Technological exposures can be many times natural
levels, while ‘frequency medicine’ involves exposures to EM or
acoustic fields. Major advances have emerged since 1927, including
physiological, immunological and genetic understanding and how
human life develops from a macroscopic embryo; but chemistry
is incomplete without the photonic layer of structure. Quantum
theory has inadvertently masked the perspective of this unknown
layer of photonic structure beneath atomic chemistry. Using this
new mathematical physics we review recent scientific history. This
knowledge refocuses us on the sun, the galaxy and cosmology. SFT
adds much to our understanding of biology at the electric (E) and
magnetic (H) field level, including cell division. Other possible areas
of application of SFT, such as intelligence, memory, cognition and
emotional health, currently remain scientific mysteries.