A new science appears in Moldova under the guidance of academician Teodor Furdui. In the first volume of a series of four books, the academician informs that a new science called sanocreatology was founded and is developed at the Institute of Physiology and Sanocreatology of Moldova. According to the academician, this is the science about controlled health building.
Teodor Furdui said our lifestyle is stressogene. To understand the conditions in which we live, the academician gives the example of the Moscow metro in the morning: “If you try to go by metro in Moscow at your pace, this is impossible as you must go at the pace given by the whole society there.”
The academician’s forecasts for the future are pessimistic. That’s why the science he suggests will study how to solve the problem of human health. “There is a paradox. The greater society develops, the higher is the number of factors that are unfavorable to human health,” Teodor Furdui stated for IPN’s reporter.
As a result of studies carried out at the Institute of Physiology and Sanocreatology, the academician reached the conclusion that the man’s genetic potential can ensure a length of life of several hundred years. “Society is proud that in Japan or Sweden, the length of life is 84 or 86 years. But this is a shame if taking into account our genetic potential,” he stated.
Teodor Furdui noted that the man and society created a lot of artificial conditions around them, but studied insufficiently the method of conception and adjustment. “People continue to be born spontaneously. We must work out the theory and practice of maintaining health in a controlled way,” he said, adding that he does not challenge the special results achieved in medicine, but noted we have a society with sick people.
Academician Teodor Furdui has worked at the Academy of Sciences all his mature life. He is a specialist in stress physiology, adjustment and functional disorders, endocrinology and child physiology. He was preoccupied with the issue of stress, being a leader in the related research in the ex-Soviet Union.