The theories of traditional Chinese medicine, the doctrine of yin and yang and the five elements, have been rendered speechless by the impact of modern biologization, molecular, cellular and genetic science, which are at the forefront of life science. It does seem impossible to paraphrase these latest scientific discoveries with traditional theories, not impossible, but unnecessary. Chinese medicine was originally a worldview, built on the basis of a broad understanding of the world, simply learn medical theory, but not learn the other, can only make our understanding of Chinese medicine more and more narrow. Classical physics, mechanical, electromechanical, chemical; tissue-level, cellular and even molecular physiology research and development, indeed, let the Chinese medicine a little caught off guard. However, the development of the wave-particle duality of light, the principle of inability to measure, the theory of relativity, and quantum mechanics, as well as the modern theory of the universe of black holes, again beat classical physics to death. People’s understanding of the world from fuzzy to seemingly clear, and then back to respect uncertainty, perhaps in the future will come out again a self-righteous “right” With the further improvement of the observation ability, there will always be a number of unknown new factors jumped into the main factors, and then overturned the original conclusions, and so on and so forth, endlessly. This endless error, right, right, wrong, all stem from a problem, is the vastness of the world and the limited power of human observation between the contradiction. And without examining the conclusions, just the fact that this process itself is a phenomenon that helps aid in the understanding of Chinese medicine is worthy of our incessant contemplation of why? For a long time, our modern scientific research means can be said to be all finite element modeling method The so-called finite element modeling is artificially extracted from the self-observable, or self-considered the right factors, with these factors to build a simplified model of the real world. What is Chinese medicine? Chinese medicine is also a model, but Chinese medicine is a black box law. Instead of extracting some factors, it packages all the explorable and unexplorable factors, and what comes out of the package is a black box, which we can call a “holographic system”. We don’t know how the inner workings of this black box work, but we do know the “in” and “out” of the information about the box. This way of thinking is prudent, and each black box is a system, without eliminating any elements, but only vaguely packaged. This is a cautious way of thinking. This is a kind of infinite phenomenon induction method, you can say it is a kind of incompetence or helplessness, but it is a very comprehensive thinking method. Gold, wood, water, fire, earth, is a system, and each individual item is also a system, all representing a functional rest of an infinite elemental construct, rather than a specific reference to a substance. This high degree of generalization has achieved a kind of rogue effect ——- is “put in all corners of the world”, really “rogue”? Or is it an accidental “brilliant”? We can also think about it. Chinese medicine, “five” “six” functional expression, “Wei Qi Ying blood” definition, seems to be an ancient misconception of anatomy. However, due to the nature of this particular way of thinking, these expressions happen to objectively conform to a functional box definition model. The essence of the difference between Chinese and Western medicine lies in whether it is infinite element holography or finite element analysis. The basic theory of Chinese medicine cannot be proved, because it is the lowest level of induction, and can only be perceived and then superstitiously believed. Just like “the shortest straight line between two points” in geometry, who can prove it? Who can prove it? No, because it is a generalization, the very essence of geometry, and all other theories exist because of it, and cannot be circularly disproved. We can only sense and fetishize it in order to erect the edifice of geometry. The theory of Chinese medicine extends to a worldview, and physics is a methodology for observing the world. Physics did not exist in ancient China, but the observation of “common sense” made Chinese medicine what it is now, and in the future it will be necessary to generalize the latest knowledge and understanding of physical phenomena.