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The Science of Homeopathy – page 8

Thus, the human spirit is intimately connected with the physical or- ganism in a single integrated totality. This concept is a fundamental tenet which will be expressed again and again throughout this book. Despite modern trends to the contrary, this holistic perspective has been understood very clearly throughout history, as illustrated by the following quotation from a very ancient Sumari text, The Sacred Script of the Covenant:

Honor your body, which is your representative in this universe. Its magnificence is no accident. It is the framework through which your works must come; through which the spirit and the spirit within the spirit speaks. The flesh and the spirit are two phases of your actuality in space and time. Who ignores one, falls apart in shambles. So it is written . . .

 

Summary of Introduction

 

  1. There are laws and principles according to which a disease or a series of diseases arise in a person.
  2. There are also laws and principles governing a cure, and every therapist, no matter which therapeutic method is being used, should know and apply these laws and principles.
  3. A human being’s main and final objective is continuous and un- conditional happiness. Any therapeutic system should lead a person toward this objective.

 

Annotated Bibliography to Introduction

 

  1. Janssens, Paul A., Paleopathology (London: John Baker, 1970),

p. 150. Documents the presence of many chronic diseases into prehis- toric times. Studies of bone repair, metastasis in skeletons, remains of mummies, etc., show that basic defense and repair mechanisms have changed little throughout history. It might have been expected that evolution would have made protective mechanisms more efficient, but the evidence suggests that modern man possesses less efficient defense and repair mechanisms than primitive beings. Whatever protection we have occurs because of external means rather than because of internal immunity.

 

  1. Henschen, Folke, The History of Diseases (London: Longmans, Green, 1966). Extensive and well-documented review of evidence for various diseases in ancient history; for example, tuberculosis found in