The video linked below is located at YouTube.
The Worm View of the Human Body Video 01
A webpage duplicate of the video follows for those that prefer reading to viewing a video.
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The Worm View of the Human Body
Darwin’s theory of evolution says that human beings evolved from a single cell floating in the ocean. The single cell evolved into a fish, an amphibian, a bird, a reptile, an insect, a mammal, and then a human being.
According to Happeh Theory, the modern human body retains characteristics of all of the creatures on the path of evolution. The modern human body shows characteristics of a single cell, a fish, an amphibian, a bird, a reptile, an insect and mammals.
That means that the human body must also display the characteristics of a worm,
because a worm is one of the creatures on the path of evolution.
A worm is basically a cylinder with a hollow tube in the center penetrating it lengthwise as shown in this picture. One end of the hollow tube is the mouth.
The other end of the tube is the waste disposal opening.
The structure of the body of a worm provides corroboration for the claim that the human body retains the characteristics of all creatures on the path of evolution. A human being also has a hollow tube penetrating the torso lengthwise as shown in this picture.
One end of the tube is the mouth,
while the other end of the tube is the waste disposal opening.
This picture shows what the Worm View of the Human Body looks like.
The cylindrical body of the worm is superimposed over the torso with the mouth of the worm aligned on the mouth of the human being,
and the waste disposal hole of the human being aligned on the waste disposal hole of the worm.
The Worm View of the Human Body is similar to the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body. According to the The Single Cylinder View of the Human Body, the rib cage, pelvic bones and associated musculature, can behave like a cylinder that is located on the human body as shown in this picture.
This cylinder encloses the torso the same way the cylindrical body of the worm encloses the torso.
Comparison of the Worm View of the body and the Single Cylinder View of the body,
suggests that the Worm View of the body is an improvement on the Single Cylinder View of the body.
While both the Worm View of the body and the Single Cylinder View of the body consist of a vertically oriented cylinder,
the cylinder of the Worm View of the body has a tube penetrating the center of the cylinder lengthwise,
with holes at either end.
This addition or improvement to the Single Cylinder View of the body means that the Worm View of the body can be used to model more behaviors of the human body, and more complicated behaviors of the human body, than the Single Cylinder View of the body is capable of modeling.
The Worm View of the Human Body is superior to the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body, because the construction of the Worm View of the Human Body more closely resembles the construction of the real human body, than the construction of the Single Cylinder View of the Human Body does.