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CTNM Preface

CTNM Theory of the Red Blood Cells

CTNM Conclusion

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Deng Chun Mei

 

Deng Chun Mei, Shanghai-based Chinese editor of Scientia Press, has a B.A. in Chinese literature from Nanchang University. Ms. Deng has experience in business development, marketing, and export and import trade. She is responsible for contacts with Chinese government, business, and academic organizations as well as for marketing Scientia Press's books throughout East Asia. Ms. Deng edited the Chinese version of Close-to-Nature Medicine.

 

Kenneth J. Dillon

 

Kenneth J. Dillon is the publisher of Scientia Press.

Dillon has a B.A. in history from Georgetown University and a Ph.D in history from Cornell University. After working for several years as an academic historian, he entered the Department of State, where he served in Turkey and in various positions in Washington, D.C.--in particular, as an intelligence analyst. Since leaving the foreign service, Dillon has pursued a career as a theoretical scientist and entrepreneur.

In a kind of scientific detective work, Dillon applies certain qualitative and conceptual techniques drawn from his experience as an historian and intelligence analyst (and described in Apprentice to Paracelsus and in Intriguing Anomalies: An Introduction to Scientific Detective Work). Among his scientific contributions are theories of the original immune system, of the role of red blood cells in consciousness, of biophysical pharmacology, of common mechanisms of various natural remedies, and of transdermal micronutrition. He has also formulated an 18-point proof that the red blood cells constitute the animal magnetoreceptor. Dillon's work has led to new insights regarding Biophotonic Therapy, the leading phototherapeutic treatment of infectious diseases.

In the field of intelligence, Dillon has identified the al Qaeda terrorist who was the most likely perpetrator of the anthrax mailings. There is telling circumstantial evidence that FBI considers this terrorist the Mailer and is pursuing the investigation. In a parallel manner, Dillon has shown that CIA appears to have learned, most probably from a defector, that the KGB arranged for the assassination of John F. Kennedy. He also has a psychological theory of the responsibility of the Bush Administration's top leaders in the run-up to the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

Dillon has also contributed several concepts in the social sciences, including a theory of the relationships between Trojans, Etruscans, and Romans that solves major riddles of ancient history. He has also devised a cognitive therapy of depression named Fruitful Matching. Dillon is the author of six books on science, medicine, and history. He teaches European history part-time, and he is a student of the Middle East, with special knowledge of alternative livelihoods to poppy-growing in Afghanistan.

The father of two sons, Dillon is a hiker and jogger, student of international affairs and psychology, and amateur linguist, poet, and musician. Dillon is a member of Stop TB, the executive committee of the Health & Wellness Foundation, the American Historical Association, the American Political Science Association, and the Afghan-American Chamber of Commerce.