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Chishima Theory: Eight Principles
Chishima Theory: Eight Principles
The Chisima Doctrine was proposed in 1963 as a view of medicine composed of 8 principles that Chishima published between 1932 and 1959.
1. Red blood cells are the mother of somatic cells (erythrocyte differentiation theory or erythrocyte monism)
The argument that red blood cells are the mother of various somatic cells.
2. Somatic cells and red blood cells differentiate reversibly
The argument that the differentiation of the cells of the body tissue into red blood cells is observed in the case of malnutrition or after massive hemorrhage.
3. Pathogens arise spontaneously
The argument that pathogens, such as bacteria and viruses, arise naturally from the state of decomposition of organic matter even in the absence of a parent.
4. The theory of cell neogenesis
The argument that cells do not proliferate by stepwise cell division, but regenerate in five forms.
5. The organ of hematopoiesis is the villi of the small intestine
The argument that the bone marrow is not recognized as a hematopoietic organ (The myelopoiesis theory is contradictory; the organ of hematopoiesis is the villi of the small intestine.).
6. Acquired traits are inherited, and germ cells are derived from blood cells
The argument that during the lifetime of an organism after its birth, traits nurtured by its environment are inherited by its offspring (affirmation of the inheritance of acquired traits). There is also the argument that germ cells, such as sperm and eggs, are not separate from the tissues of the body, but are formed by changes in red blood cells (the theory that germ cells are derived from blood cells).
7. Denying the conventional theory of evolution and advocating the theory of symbiosis
The argument that the most important factor in the evolution of organisms is not the survival of the fittest, in which strong organisms adapted to the environment survive, but rather the symbiosis phenomenon, in which organisms of the same or different kinds help each other. (Note that this argument is different from the theory of intracellular symbiosis).
8. Dialectics of Life
The argument that the unique dialectic (dialectic of life) used by the person concerned is a continuation and unification of the dialectic of materiality and the dialectic of humanity.


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