Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 5

exhaustive description of the different phases through which medicine has passed in its development, but we can at least review some well- known generalities. one would have thought that as Western man pro- gressed from his primitive state toward higher and higher civilizations, medicine would naturally have kept pace in its own evolution. Yet the facts do not verify this assumption. Despite the strides made by hu- manity in many fields over many epochs in Western history, medicine has never kept pace with the general progress in thought.

For example, when Greece, having progressed beyond all other Western primitive civilizations during the sixth, fifth, and fourth cen- turies before Christ, reached a state of inner evolution unsurpassed perhaps even today, humanity nevertheless was forced to continue the most primitive and unreliable methods to recover its health. The great insights and deductions that permitted those giants of thought to plunge into unparalleled philosophical and spiritual speculation did not help them to unravel the secrets governing health and disease.

Again, during the Christian era, when a massive and profound spiri- tual evolution took place, medicine remained in the dark. As humanity proceeded further to reach new heights of religious and artistic expres- sion during the eras of the Byzantine and renaissance, medicine was busy developing and applying bloodletting and cathartics.

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the scientific spirit made tremendous leaps in discovery, yet that spirit sanctioned the use of healing methods that were more than primitive, and on a massive scale. It is during this time, significantly, that a German doctor, Samuel Hahnemann, formulated for the first time in the history of medicine the complete laws and principles governing health and disease, and proved them in actual clinical experience. Yet nobody listened to him. Apparently, his ideas were too advanced for the primitive state of mind in which his colleagues lived. They seemed unable to make the leap necessary to grasp an idea century in advance of their thinking.

Instead, the more materialistic concepts put forward by Louis Pas- teur were widely accepted. His concepts fit more adequately the need for a concrete Newtonian conceptualization. Pasteur’s theories and research into the nature of microbes led everyone to believe that the cause of illness had been explained. As the modern science of bacteri- ology has advanced, however, it has come to the conclusion that both the microbe and constitutional susceptibility are necessary to initiate the disease process. Yet modern physicians seem to have closed their eyes to this fact. They continue to hunt down new microbes, bacteria, viruses, etc., and then develop powerful drugs with which to kill them. Witness the massive effort to explain the “cause” of the recent Legion-