THE NATURE OF THE CAUSE OF DISEASES
18. For disease to manifest, two prerequisite conditions
must exist: the first is the sustaining cause of disease, the second is an exciting or triggering cause.
The first condition pertains to the predisposition of the organism and the second to the stressor or stimulus. Both these conditions must be present in order for certain symptomatology to manifest.
In this Model it is understood that the "exciting" causes of disease are not material but always dynamic (energy-like) in nature, whether they be bacteria, viruses, fungi or an influence such as grief.
It is true that disease is induced only as a consequence of a stress upon the organism. It has been increasingly evident that stressors are not only specific bacteria, viruses or pathological microorganisms, but also any type of mental or emotional upset (received from the environment) that creates a new situation with which the organism finds difficulty in coping. The bibliography on the subject of stress is vast and too long to be listed here, but I will mention that Hans Selye has focused a whole treatise upon the subject of stress called The Stress of Life.
As far as the organism is concerned, information or a specific pathological microorganism have similar capacities in initiating diseases. Therefore, when we talk about stimuli or stressors (stresses), we mean information that has significance for the organism and that is immediately recognized. Such stimuli we call the "exciting causes" of disease, whereas the inherent predisposition we call the "sustaining cause" of disease.
19. Information or stimuli can be received through:
a. The mental-spiritual plane
b. The emotional-psychic plane
c. The physical-instinctual plane