Rogers'
theory is known as the Science of Unitary Human Beings. Its primary tenets include the following: • Nursing is both a science and art; the uniqueness of nursing, like that of any other science, lies in the phenomenon central to its focus. • Nurses’ long-established concern with the people and the world they live is a natural forerunner of an organized abstract system encompassing people and their environments. • The irreducible nature of individuals is more than the sum of the parts. • The integralness of people and the environment that coordinate with a multidimensional universe of open systems points to a new paradigm: the identity of nursing as a science. • The purpose of nursing is to promote health and wellbeing for all persons wherever they are. A form of
energy medicine, the Science of Unitary Human Beings is based on the idea that "human beings and environment are energy fields" that are characterized by "four-dimensionality", a "nonlinear domain without spatial or temporal attributes"; postulates that physicist
Alan Sokal describes as "pseudoscientific verbiage" and "perfectly meaningless".
Jef Raskin wrote that Rogers' writings were filled with contradictions, "fuzzy physics," and vagaries. "Unlike science, nursing theory has no built-in mechanisms for rejecting falsehoods, tautologies, and irrelevancies." == Publications ==