
Third Biological Law
Organ (Tissue)
An organ or tissue is the physical "hardware" of the psyche-brain-body biocomputer — the site where the tissue and functional changes of a special biological program take place. Every organ belongs to a specific germ layer, is relayed through a specific brain region, and responds to a specific type of biological conflict in the psyche.
Using the metaphor of an information processing system (a computer), in the psyche-brain-body "biocomputer":
- the psyche is the software and operating system (where the DHS and biological conflict form and exist),
- the brain and nervous system are the CPU and circuitry (translating psychic events into biological instructions), and
- the organ or tissue is the hardware (through which data inputs and physical outputs take place).
You are not your biocomputer. You are the originator, operator, and experiencer of it (including your special biological programs).
Each organ or tissue is a highly specific component of this system. Its location in the body, its embryonic origin (germ layer), its brain relay, and the class of conflict it responds to are all precisely correlated. This is described by the Third Biological Law.
No organ functions in isolation: every tissue change in the body is accompanied by a corresponding change in the brain relay and in the psyche, and vice versa. This is because all aspects of the biocomputer are part of a single information processing system.
Understanding which organ is producing a particular symptom — and which germ layer it belongs to — is one of the key steps in understanding what special biological program is underway in your organism. Diagnostic tools from conventional and alternative medicine can be extremely helpful in this process.
Once the tissue that's producing the symptom is identified, you can use the Germanic New Medicine to determine the general type of biological conflict in the psyche and whether the SBS is in the active or healing phase.
It is important to distinguish the precise tissue involved. Most organs in the body are made up of tissues that belong to different germ layers. The lung, for example, contains both endodermal tissue (the alveoli, relayed through the brainstem, relaying "air morsel"/suffocation conflicts) and ectodermal tissue (the bronchial epithelium, relayed through the cerebral cortex, responding to territorial or belonging fear conflicts).
It is possible for two or more different SBS programs to occur in the same anatomical organ simultaneously, with different conflict content, different brain relays, and different healing patterns. This is how we manifest the thousands of listed diseases and diagnoses when there are actually only:
- approximately 500 brain relays that respond to SBS
- four germ layers
- old-brain versus new-brain conflict themes
- either cold phase or warm phases of the special biological program.
See also