After years and years of sending my theorems regarding this question off to various publications such as The New England Journal of Medicine, as well as assorted professionals in the medical community, I have decided to publish here. The reason? Christ, who gifted me with insight, and is the true owner.
The immune system is actually quite simple. It is a combination of harmonics passed down from the mother and father. What this means is that every person has their own set harmonic - or rate at which they "vibrate", encoded into their DNA from their parents, into which everything within their body must fall. That harmonic is further encoded into each and every cell in a persons system, and elicits a response of "get out of here" to anything it detects with a harmonic that doesn't fit. Say a sliver, or heart transplant. The sliver will elicit a localized response due to its small size, and smaller harmonic difference. A heart - or any other transplanted organ, will get a massive response. The reason a close relatives organ will work "better", is due to the nearness of harmonic compatability. Problem is, it is not an exact match, and will still be rejected - just a little slower.
Try to think of it - the immune systems harmonic, as a finely tuned electrical circuit. You cannot throw just anything into it, and expect it to work properly. When anything within the circuit goes bad, it must be replaced with exactly the same part in order for it to function. Unfortunately, there is no assembly line for body parts that go bad. No way currently, to grow internal organs that are a match for a persons specific harmonic.
Admittedly this is a simplified explanation of what an immune system is - and how it works, but it gets at the "heart" of the matter.
For questions or comments, e-mail: chris@cjs.us
Chris J Spangler
October 13, 2003 - publish date into this area.
Theorem dated from March 12, 1977
This is copyrited material, and as such cannot be taken or used without written permission from it author, Chris J Spangler