Let there be light.
Week
three of photophoresis starts tomorrow.
I drive to Boston, sit in the comfy chair, take a deep breath and suspend
my power of disbelieve for three hours.
No one knows how this procedure works, but the data are encouraging : 80%
of those thus treated markedly reduce their prednisone dose.
It must work: Aetna is
willing to pay $4000 a treatment.
I am eager to reduce my steroid dose as I battle skyrocketing blood sugars and
dissolving bones. The process doesn’t kill or directly affect all my T cells causing
havoc. This suggests the treated T cells secrete cytokines that
instruct the other rogue white cells to lay off the GVHD.
My
willingness to undergo this uncomfortable procedure requires a leap of faith,
the acceptance that I will improve, undergoing a procedure that requires two days a week and leaves my swollen, sore arms with livid marks where the IV is placed.
Light
therapy has me thinking of faith, and faith and light reminds of religion.
And let there be light. And God saw the
light and saw it was good. And then Aetna contested the charges because, after
all, there exists three constants in the universe: Death, Taxes and insurance refusal notices.
Atheists
amuse me. They are certain of one
fact: There is no God. They are people of pure science and can’t believe
anything that can’t be explained through logic and observation. I suspect it’s not God they
reject, they reject the notion of a benign, bearded
Santa Claus on high, lurking amidst the clouds. They don’t believe in the kindergartener’s version of the Deity, an all knowing being
who records every detail of our lives, knows who has been naughty and who nice, who makes sure
the loss of a sparrow feather
doesn’t go unnoticed , unplanned
of unmourned.
They
believe in science. As do I . Up
to a point.
What
they don’t realize is that the ANSWER TO EVERYTHING as Steve Hawkins would
phrase it, is so bizarre and incomprehensible
that belief in a benign, throned deity would be easier to accept. Or understand.
We
scientists believe the Big Bang, the sudden appearance of a universe from an inconceivably dense source of proto matter, through
fluctuations in the quantum
foam. According to the Big Bang
Theory, something ness evolves from nothingness and the suddenly -formed universe then flings itself into space -time. Fourteen billion years later, some guy battling leukemia
writes a blog. And so it goes.
Here’s
the problem. It couldn’t have occurred
like that because of something Einstein called the cosmological constant. Einstein realized he had calculated
the existence of the Hand of God
but was too much of scientist to
call it the God constant. He threw in a constant he couldn’t explain
but was needed to make his
equations balance. He had faith
that someday someone would understand
the spooky constant.
Here’s
the paradox. If the universe flies apart too
quickly, its components disperse
too fast, not allowing the
galaxies to coalesce, not permitting
the formations of suns and subsequently of molecules and the heavier
elements.
If
the universe flies apart too
slowly, the hydrogen atoms
will close back in on themselves,
and the universe will collapse long before the galaxies can form. The Cosmologic constant ensures
the universe will evolve as it has, resulting in our world.
Who
calculated the cosmological constant?
Perhaps universes form every billion years or so, and finally, on the
billionth try, blind luck generated
the “correct” constant .
More
likely, Dark matter formed first. Dark matter has never been seen directly. Its existence is suggested by the movement of the galaxies as they pass each other
http://www.damninteresting.com/the-dark-tale-of-colliding-superclusters/
and by the way
the galaxies keep spinning
.
Most likely , dark mater formed first,
exploded, and pulled the light
matter behind it. When we look into the night sky, we can see only 4% of the
universe. We see only the light matter , in the way we only see the snow
covering a snow-draped mountain. We only see surfaces, not the supporting dark matter
scaffold. Without Dark matter ,
the universe would collapse, as the snow layer
would after the
mountain disappeared.
This explanation is far more bizarre than
any Bible story. Most of the
universe is hidden from us. But
there’s more. Einstein described entanglement, the conservation of
data, that seems to
ignore the laws of physics. When
two particles are created, they are
entangled, so that if one changes
its rotation, the other particle instantly changes its rotation as well, regardless of its location in the universe. The change is instantaneous, outpacing the speed of light
Data
is always preserved, a force exists that
“knows” that as one particle falls into a black hole, its twin remains
to record the event. This is the basis of Hawking radiation,
the universal and instantaneous conservation of data.
In
the beginning was darkness, and god said let there be light. And the light became divided from the darkness.
Add “Matter” to Light and Dark and we have just derived the “scientific”
proposed creation of the universe.
The conservation of data suggests a system in which nothing is
forgotten. Sounds like a cosmic consciousness. This
force is not some bearded guy but a force, nonetheless beyond our understanding,
The
Bible’s first letter is Bet, in the word Bresheet, in the beginning.
Why
is Bet the first letter? Because it implies the existence of Aleph, the first letter
in the Hebrew Alphabet. The aleph represents the dark universe, the space time that existed before light matter. Within the Aleph universe, the cosmologic
constant was devised. By whom or
how is anyone’s guess.
Entanglement sounds bizarre, impossible,
otherworldly. It can be both predicted and has been observed. Its implications are staggering. In another scenario, the two entangled particles
are bound close together in space time , suggesting that three dimensional
space is an illusion. The
actually universe is somewhere else, where all particles directly and
immediately interact, making our perceived universe a
mere hologram, a projection
from a place else where all particles are linked. I can more readily believe that throne Guy story than the possibly that our entire world is an illusion, a matrix.
What’s
the point? The point is that accepting
water into wine, Mohammed’s moving
mountains, Moses’ red sea antics, or Entanglement, all require
some article of faith in events that can’t be explained.
Undergoing
photopohoresis requires faith. Without it, I would accept the fact I will never be better, my mouth will throb until, the day I die, and that I will take prednisone until I am
asked to play the body double in the re-remake of “The Blob”
Even the atheist needs faith. And the good oncologist said, “let
there be light, 1.5 joules/cell .”
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