The World of Dr. Strange

    I don't know about you, but sometimes I run across a scene in a movie where I think, "That's it!  That is the piece I couldn't explain to you before!"  And I watch it, sometimes 20 times over, before I am convinced.  I just never knew how to put the concept into words.  

    Dr. Strange is one of those movies where I was captivated. Particularly the scene where Dr. Strange meets the Ancient One.  But why?  Because the Ancient One seems to understand the great concept of partial perception.  She holds up a book to Dr Strange.  Within it are various types of maps of the body.  



    The book the Ancient One holds up has various "maps" of the body.  Some based in science, such as an image of an MRI.  Others are pseudoscience, such as the map for acupuncture or of chakras.  She insists, however, "Each of those maps were drawn by someone who could see in part, but not in whole".  

    Dr. Strange is a scientist.  As am I, dear reader, as am I.  It is often hard for the scientist to accept a viewpoint based in anything other than hard proven facts.  Because that is how we are trained.  It is how Dr. Strange was trained.  Those beliefs serve us well and hold strong in the world of science.  

    The problem we must accept with this is that with our growing confidence in understanding, we are also forgetting that there are many other unknown ways to look at something to understand it.  Just because we don't know the new map or understand it, doesn't mean it is entirely wrong, or without value.  

    Each map, each viewpoint, serves a purpose, thought different from each other. This is why doctors routinely assign different tests, based on symptoms, associated with the body.  One patient may need an MRI, while another an x-ray, and a third, a CT Scan.  Each with pros and cons.  

    Just because you don't understand the map, does that mean it is without value?  

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