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The Science of Homeopathy – page xxi

Foreword

 

A COUPLE OF centuries ago, before science began to single- minedly focus its attention on the purely physical aspect of Na- ture, homeopathy and allopathy walked hand in hand to serve the health needs of humankind. As the physical sciences became more successful, its tolerance for ideas that could not be tested by the same criteria diminished and homeopathy began to feel the pressures of sec- ond-class citizenship. Physical science became more and more quan- titative and predictably powerful, and homeopathy began to fall out of favor with practicing physicians. only a small enclave of physicians faithfully persisted in the practice of homeopathy into this century, but now the number is growing because the serious flaws of allopathic medicine are becoming apparent to us all.

One might say that it was the emphasis on disease rather than on health that split apart allopathic and homeopathic practice. The physi- cal body reveals the obvious materialization of disease while the relationship to the more subtle aspects of man are not so easily dis- criminated. Conventional allopathic medicine deals directly with the chemical and structural components of the physical body. It can be classed as an objective medicine because it deals with Nature on a purely four-dimensional, space-time level and thus has had much di- rect laboratory evidence to support its physicochemical hypotheses. This has occurred because reliaxible sensing ability for both humans and instrumentation presently operates on this level.

Homeopathic medicine, on the other hand, deals indirectly with the chemistry and structure of the physical body by dealing directly with substance and energies at the next, and more subtle, level. It must be classed as a subjective medicine at this time, in part because it deals with energy that can be strongly perturbed by the mental and emo- tional activity of individuals and in part because there has not been any diagnostic equipment to support the homeopathic physician. That