In the interest of social economic well-being, this article is intended for high-level corporate and educational administrators. It describes the logical basis on which new technologies are based, a relevant financing model and new sustainable development policies for business management. These new business innovations are associated with the recent discovery that the previous classification of junk DNA impedes healthy growth and development around the world.
The theories within the German book dealing with the reclassification of non-linearity (fractal logic) of junk DNA, Vernetzte Intelligenz by Grazyna Fosar and Franz Bludorf, have now been validated. The December 13, 2013 issue of Science announced that scientists have discovered a second code hidden within DNA. Science magazine is the publication of the American Science Association for the Advancement of Science and is one of the most recognized scientific journals in the world.
This second code contains fractal logic information that changes the way scientists read the instructions contained in DNA and interpret mutations, to make sense of health and disease. Scientists were surprised to discover that genomes use the genetic code to write two separate languages. One language is written on top of the other, which is why the second language remained hidden for so long. The prevailing quantum mechanical logic prohibits this concept from being associated with quantum biology. This is because scientists have an incomplete understanding of the energies associated with the operation of the second law of thermodynamics.
The 1937 Nobel Prize in Medicine, Szent-Gyorgyi, translated this misunderstanding as a major obstacle to the application of the first principle in cancer research. The reason why quantum mechanics and its complex offspring cannot deduce the essential principles of the first cause of cancer growth and development can be explained. Quantum mechanics was derived from Sir Isaac Newton’s assumption that first cause principles explained gravitational forces as pertaining to the mass of objects in space. He rejected this concept in his 28th Query Discussions, published in the second issue of his magazine, Opticks. Whether Newton was right or not, quantum mechanics was based on a false assumption. Newton’s mechanical description of the universe was completed by his “most natural and profound philosophy of science.”
The linguistic treatise on color perception presented to the Great Darwinian debate in 1877 by Prime Minister William Gladstone, was investigated alongside Wolfgang von Goethe’s theories of color perception. His work anticipated both the recently discovered hidden language of junk DNA and its association with the evolutionary role of stereoscopic color perception theory.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America vol. 101 no. 27, 2004, includes the article Binocularity and brain evolution in primates, ‘The first paragraph states: ‘Primates are distinguished by highly convergent and frontally directed orbits, which are associated with stereoscopic vision. Although stereoscopic vision requires specialized neural mechanisms, its implications for brain evolution are unknown.” However, this is no longer the case.
In 2010, Israeli physicist Guy Deutscher published his award-winning book for that year, titled Through the Language Glass: Why the World Looks Different in Other Languages. His research identified stereoscopic vision as an evolutionary phenomenon. This concept is now central to a crucial new neuroscientific perspective. Artists from all over the world have been working on this theory of color perception for many years. In 2010, two chemists, winners of the Giorgio Napolitano Medal awarded on behalf of the Republic of Italy for their discoveries in quantum biology, merged their research with the emerging science of quantum biology.
The optical theories of ethical creativity of Immanuel Kant and Emmanuel Levinas in the form of an asymmetrical electromagnetic lens on the mind were instrumental in the emergence of the electromagnetic Golden Age of Danish science. In 2002, Harvard University, the University of Massachusetts, and the Royal Danish Consulate held an international symposium to draw the world’s attention to the social significance of this Golden Age. They noted that since their research had been written primarily in Danish and not translated, it had become invisible to English-speaking academics. Enlightenment artists had developed the theories of Kant and Levinas related to the evolution of stereoscopic vision. They found that linguistic theories of color perception could be visibly measured as unconscious activity within the human brain.
The accompanying patent document for the asymmetrical electromagnetic stereo vision glasses noted that when they were used to view certain paintings by Vincent van Gogh and Paul Cezanne, they had unconsciously concealed such images in their work. By looking at works of art over the centuries from the perspective of linguistic color perception, modern artists were able to trace its evolutionary function. This knowledge can now be linked to the recently discovered survival importance of junk DNA.
The justified artistic link between the economy, education, and healthy growth and development can be outlined in terms of a model for ethical science funding. Prior to this, in 1993, the International Journal of Arts, Sciences and Technology LEONARDO published a Model for the Self-Financing of Ethical Science, derived from theories associated with linguistic color perception.
In 2010, the Italian artist Robert Denti, represented in Europe’s national art galleries and museums, realized that such a model could instigate the Renaissance of the 21st century. He linked the aforementioned linguistic research of the 2010 Giorgio Napolitano Medal winners with the theory of color perception by stereoscopic vision developed by enlightened artists. He was joined by artists from around the world, including American science artist and writer Iona Miller, and science artist Chris Degendardt in Australia. Aboriginal elders in Australia, using traditional color perception techniques, inspired Aboriginal artist, Roger Saunders, to establish a successful stereoscopic art school for children, recognized by medical scientists conducting junk DNA research. In light of the first cause principle contained in this article, it is justified that stereoscopic art exhibits generate public funds for cancer research under the name of 21st Century Renaissance.