We are living through a period of change that will profoundly shape our lives. History reminds us that this is neither new nor unusual: humanity has always moved through cycles—sometimes dramatic—driven by the need to restore balance across interconnected domains, including health. Yet regaining harmony today will not be easy or painless, given the scale of the transformations we have imposed on the planet. These shifts are so profound that we now speak of the ‘Anthropocene’.
It is increasingly clear that we must shift to a systemic perspective: one that places humans within nature, not outside or above it. No longer as ‘dominators’, but as ‘guardians of nature’. This calls for a new Renaissance with a renewed vision for the future of health and medicine. A systemic approach means moving beyond reductionism and symptom-based treatment toward a complex understanding of disease, prompting us to rethink pathophysiology, physiological states, and physiological actions.
