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From Anthropocentrism to Intelligence-Centrism

For most of human history, we assumed we sat at the center of everything. This mindset— anthropocentrism —held that human minds were fundamentally different from, and superior to, the awareness found in animals or nature. It treated human reason as the ultimate yardstick for truth, and viewed the world as a stage built for human ambition. This made sense given what we knew. When the only intelligence around was biological, and humans clearly out-thought every other creature, it seemed obvious that we represented the peak of consciousness. Religion, philosophy, and science all echoed this idea in their own ways: humans as made in God's image, as the " rational animal ," as evolution's crowning achievement. Even as we built machines that could calculate and perceive, we saw them as tools—extensions of our will, not participants in thinking itself. Early AI didn't challenge this view much. Machine learning systems learned from human data and mimicked human patterns...

From Climate Threat to Meteosensitivity: Why WHO’s Call Demands a Shift to Individual Weather‑Related Health Care

The World Health Organization ’s declaration that climate change is “the greatest threat to global health in the 21st century” frames climate as a systemic hazard that is already reshaping patterns of disease, mortality, and health‑system burden. At the same time, the emerging field of meteosensitivity shows that weather and atmospheric changes do not affect all bodies equally, but act through vulnerable subgroups whose physiology, illnesses, and life circumstances render them uniquely sensitive to the changing atmosphere. Bringing these two perspectives together—global climate threat and individual meteosensitivity—reveals a crucial missing layer in contemporary climate–health policy and clinical practice. WHO’s 2015 Call to Action explicitly names the main health pathways of climate change: more heat‑waves and extreme weather, shifting infectious disease patterns, water and food insecurity, and rising burdens of cancer, respiratory, cardiovascular and other non‑communicable disease...

The Biological Brain as a Transition Point: The Reflexive Turn in Natural Intelligence

   The emergence of the human brain marks not merely another step in biological evolution , but a fundamental shift in how evolution itself is enacted. This shift can be understood as a “ reflexive turn ”—a moment in which natural intelligence becomes capable of recognizing, modeling, and applying the very principles that have always governed it. At the center of this transformation lies what may be called the Principle of Optimality : a universal tendency for systems to organize, adapt, and persist in ways that maximize functional coherence within constraints. This principle has operated since the earliest formations of matter and life. Molecules assemble, cells regulate, and ecosystems stabilize without awareness of the laws they embody. The principle does not require observation to function; it is intrinsic to the dynamics of physical and biological systems. However, with the emergence of the human brain, something qualitatively new appears. For the first time, a system ar...

Pyotr Anokhin’s Systems Approach in the Digital Era

At first glance, the Theory of Functional Systems (TFS), developed by Pyotr Anokhin , belongs to the realm of "old" physiology. In reality, it proves to be closer to modern artificial intelligence, control theory, and cybernetics than to classical textbooks on reflexes. We regard TFS not as a historical curiosity, but as a rigorous model of how a system acts purposefully—specifically, how it achieves a result and maintains its stability. This model is inherently scalable: the same logic applies to an individual neuron, an entire nervous system, an artificial network, a hospital, a city, or a planetary network. In other words, we can describe a hospital or a city using the same conceptual apparatus as a single neuron. The Rejection of Linear Determinism For a long time, the primary framework of neurophysiology and its application to other sciences was the reflex —the " stimulus-response " mechanism. There is a stimulus, followed by a response; it appears simple and e...

Stress Systems Across Time: From Continuous Trauma to Habits of Day and Night

  Preface This book begins with a simple but increasingly necessary claim: the language we commonly use for trauma is no longer enough for the worlds many people who do not live after danger, but inside it. In war, occupation, forced displacement, chronic violence, social collapse, corruption, institutional betrayal , and digitally amplified threat, human beings often live not in the aftermath of trauma but in conditions where the next blow remains possible, and where the nervous system is not mistaken to stay on guard. Throughout this book, the term trauma refers primarily to the psychological expression of prolonged threat rather than only to bodily wound or physical destruction. The central question is how continuous danger reorganizes stress systems across time—altering reference points, internal models, and action-learning loops—until these changes appear in daytime distress, disturbed sleep, nightmares, and chronified habits.  Classical posttraumatic frameworks rema...

Meteorological Factors: How the Air Changes, How Bodies Respond

  Weather is not a fixed set of numbers on a forecast. It is a moving environment in which temperature, pressure, humidity, wind, light, and even subtle atmospheric forces change continuously, often unevenly, and sometimes abruptly. What matters most for the human body is rarely the daily average; it is the size, speed, duration, and direction of change. The same weather pattern may feel mild for one person and exhausting for another, depending on age, fitness, body composition, and chronic disease. This is why meteosensitivity cannot be understood only through static measurements. A body reacts to transitions, not just states. Rapid warming, sharp cooling, falling pressure, dry air, gusty winds, unstable light, and seasonal shifts can all create physiological stress, especially in infants, older adults, and people with cardiovascular , respiratory , or kidney disease . Temperature: Level, Direction, and Speed Temperature is the most familiar weather factor, but its biological eff...

Stroke Temperature, Inflammation, and the Missing Mechanism

A recent stroke study found that early temperature rise in the first 24 hours is a strong predictor of poor outcome , but it did not fully explain what that rise means biologically. In our book, the same phenomenon can be understood as a sign that stroke healing has moved away from eureactive optimality and toward a more complicated, hyperreactive inflammatory course .  What the article shows The article demonstrates that a single admission temperature is not very useful, while a rise in temperature during the first day is much more informative for predicting 3-month outcome in both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke . That is an important practical finding, because it supports repeated monitoring rather than reliance on one baseline measurement. The study also suggests that antipyretic treatment should be guided by dynamic temperature change rather than by admission temperature alone. What the book adds Our book proposes a deeper interpretation : stroke is not simply necrosis, but ...