Збережено в:
| Автор: | |
|---|---|
| Формат: | Recurso digital |
| Мова: | Англійська |
| Опубліковано: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Предмети: | |
| Онлайн доступ: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18258995 |
| Теги: |
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Зміст:
- <p>This paper is part of the Universal Resonance Model (URM) project and develops its linguistic and conceptual foundation. It argues that when disease is understood as a dynamic process—characterized by feedback, delay, instability, phase transitions, and loss of resilience—traditional medical language becomes insufficient.</p> <p>Built within the URM framework, the paper treats language as cognitive infrastructure: what clinicians and researchers can observe, analyze, and test depends on what they are able to say. It shows how dynamic clinical phenomena are routinely flattened by static terminology, leading to conceptual and methodological distortion.</p> <p>The text presents URM not only as a theory of disease dynamics but also as a project in building a language for dynamic medicine—a way of speaking that preserves motion, coupling, memory, and timing in clinical reasoning. A new medical theory, it argues, does not only need data; it needs a language capable of carrying what it sees.</p>