Medicine doesn’t have cures for every disease, so of course finding the root cause isn’t always going to be able to help you. Failing to find the real root cause is a trap when that failure causes you to miss out on a cure.
Many times—probably most times—damage is closer to random than recurring, and looking for causes outside the body has marginal gain compared to just fixing the body.
I mentioned GERD in my post. That’s 20% of the population walking around with a curable, externally-caused disease, almost all of whom have no idea. GERD exploded in prevalence over last few decades, so of course it’s not some randomly caused genetic disorder. 20% is a big number. There are many other diseases that follow a similar pattern. I don’t see how it could be true most of the time that disease is just random.
Medicine doesn’t have cures for every disease, so of course finding the root cause isn’t always going to be able to help you. Failing to find the real root cause is a trap when that failure causes you to miss out on a cure.
I mentioned GERD in my post. That’s 20% of the population walking around with a curable, externally-caused disease, almost all of whom have no idea. GERD exploded in prevalence over last few decades, so of course it’s not some randomly caused genetic disorder. 20% is a big number. There are many other diseases that follow a similar pattern. I don’t see how it could be true most of the time that disease is just random.