Synopsis
Systems Health is a trilogy comprising of The Science of Everything, Your Body Your System and Your System Your Life.In the first volume, The Science of Everything, Dr. V.A. Shiva provides his journey as a scientist to discover a core scientific foundation that allows you to understand any system in the world. That discovery emerged from his interconnecting the knowledge systems of eastern medicine with modern control systems theory.In the second volume, Your Body Your System focuses on your body as a system to reveal how you can use systems principles to not only support your health but also, and more importantly to use your body as a laboratory to understand the principles all systems in the universe.The final volume in the trilogy, Your System Your Life focuses on using systems principles to not just support your health but to use the "science of everything" to achieve any goal in life.
About the Author
Dr. V. A. Shiva Ayyadurai, the inventor of email and polymath, holds four degrees from MIT and is a world-renowned systems scientist. He is a Fulbright Scholar, Lemelson-MIT Awards Finalist, First Outstanding Scientist and Technologist of Indian Origin (STIO), Westinghouse National Science Talent Honors Award recipient, and U.S. National Medal of Technology and Innovation nominee. As a child, he was inspired by his grandmother's practicing Siddha, India's oldest system of traditional medicine, which led him to a major breakthrough: Systems Health, an integrative framework linking eastern and western medicine. His most recent invention, CytoSolve® is a technology that enables rapid discovery of multi-combination therapeutics without animal testing. In 1978, as a precocious 14-year-old, he was accepted to a special program in computer science at New York University. Later, at the University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey (UMDNJ) as a Research Fellow, he developed the first electronic system to replicate the entire interoffice mail system (Inbox, Outbox, Folders, Address Book, Memo, etc.), which he named "email," defining email we all use and experience today. In 1982, the United States government officially recognized him as the inventor of email by awarding the first U.S. Copyright for "Email," when copyright was the only protection for software inventions.
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