The Nature of Nature: The Discovery of SuperWaves and How It Changes Everything
By (Author) Irving Dardik
By (author) Estee Dardik Lichter
Rodale Press Inc.
Rodale Press Inc.
1st May 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
Biophysics
Quantum physics (quantum mechanics and quantum field theory)
530.12
Hardback
352
Width 157mm, Height 234mm, Spine 25mm
626g
What is everything made of How do things change and how do they work What is life In The Nature of Nature, visionary scientist Irv Dardik tackles these questions by introducing his discovery of SuperWaves, a singular wave phenomenon whose design generates what we experience as matter, space, time, motion, energy, and order and chaos. Simply put, the SuperWaves principle states that the fundamental stuff of nature is waves-waves waving within waves, to be exact. Dardik challenges the rationality of accepting a priori that the universe is made of discrete particles. Instead, by drawing from his own discovery of a unique wave behavior and combining it with scientific facts, he shows that every single thing in existence-from quantum particles to entire galaxies-is waves waving in the unique pattern he calls SuperWaves. The discovery of SuperWaves and the ideas behind it, while profound, can be intuitively grasped by every reader, whether scientist or layperson. Touching on everything from quantum physics to gravity, to emergent complexity and thermodynamics, to the origins of health and disease, it shows that our health, and the health of the environment and civilization, depend upon our understanding SuperWaves. The Nature of Nature is an absorbing account that combines Dardik's contrarian look at the history of science with philosophical discussion, his own groundbreaking research, and hope for the future.
Irving Dardik is a former vascular surgeon at Montefiore Medical Center for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, founding chairman of the U.S. Olympic Sports Medicine Council, scientific iconoclast and pioneer, and the creator of the SuperWave Principle. He was featured in Making Waves, published in 2005 by Rodale.