Discovery of Correlativity

Since Dr Hew was a kid, he had always been a very curious person. He liked to listen to stories of Newton and Einstein and also wondered what or who actually manipulated human being’s luck. This may be some indication about his name being called “Yon Long” which literally means lucky dragon by his parents. His parents always felt that he was a weird kid. He didn’t like to mingle around with friends instead he loved to do research at home including the making of four-wheel wooden car.

When he was sixteen, he made references to the ancient sciences such as palm reading and face-reading. He felt that none of them really addressed the questions that had led him to do research in human behavior. However, such interests took a back seat when he had to concentrate on his studies in the United States on 9 September1984.

During his university days, he majored in Civil Engineering and minored in psychology. From studying psychology, he realized that the left side of our brain control the right side of our body. Similarly, the right-brain controls the left side. Left-brain generates semantic abilities and right-brain generates spatial abilities. He was born left-handed but was forced to use the right hand to write at the age of ten by his primary school teacher. This combination of spatial (right brain) abilities and semantic (left brain) abilities paved the way for his understanding of “morphomatics (morphology) and mathematics.” (The two main aspects of the Theory of Correlativity)

(This had been well proven that he was good in sports, arts and mathematics in his secondary and tertiary education. This led to one of his professors in the University of Tennessee to say: “I have not seen anyone in my life who can use both hands to draw and color simultaneously.”)

It was only in January 1991, while working with the environment company Law Associates in Atlanta, USA, that he indulged thoroughly in his favorite off-work passion – that is predicting human behavior. When he was working in Grady Hospital, Atlanta, his workplace was next to a morgue. The traffic of corpses made him wonder about life and death. He felt that life is short and he swore that he must search for a theory to unveil the secrets of human existence.

The breakthrough came when he returned to Malaysia after his studies. During the financial crisis of 1997 he suffered a career setback as a civil engineer but this also gave him an opportunity to continue his research on the subject.

Finally, somewhere around December 2003 he managed to put the final pieces together when he successfully formulated the Correlativity Theory by unifying the laws and concepts of Isaac Newton’s Gravitational Law, Albert Einstein’s Relativity, Werner Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle, James Watson and Francis Crick’s Universal Genetic Code, Fu Xi’s Yi Jing (I-Ching), and Lü Dong Bin and Chen Xi Yi’s Zi Wei Dou Shu (The Polaris Morphomatics).