Serge Gracovetsky
Published: 1987-12-21
Total Pages: 505
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The Spinal Engine "I found everything perfect! y clear, and I really under stood absolutely nothing. To understand is to change, to go beyond oneself. This reading did not change me." Jean-Paul Sartre Search/or a Method: Comments on Capital and German Ideology by Karl Marx Cybernetics! This is the age of the machine. Everywhere we look, living things are being described in tenns of robotics. The bewildered physician is taken through differential equations, all kinds of Laplace and Fourier trans fonns, rational and irrational operators, and the like. At the end of the discussion, our perplexed man of medicine finds it difficult to contain his frustration and resentment towards such a mathematical cavalry. Alas, in more cases than not, the problem solver loses sight of the initial problem. Like the sorcerer's apprentice, his solutions sometimes develop an autonomy not originally intended. This unwanted by-product is often referred to as a "school of thought." The study of the human spine did not escape this predicament; one look at the literature shows it to be full of diehard concepts. Somehow an idea will survive any kind of experimental annihilation if it is attractive enough. When we ask: ourselves why this is so, we find there are no easy and clear-cut answers.