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The Science of Homeopathy – page 37

instance, a sudden disturbance in the laws of attraction and repulsion, or of electromagnetic fields, would create unimaginable destruction in the Cosmos. A fundamental, even momentary, change in the activity of the sun would profoundly disrupt life on the earth. Even small changes in the temperature range of the planet drastically alter the balance of life forms. On a lesser scale, the gravitational force of the moon af- fects life, as do humidity, wind, and local climatic conditions. In all of these phenomena, we can discern a hierarchy of functions and the laws governing their interactions. If a central process of fundamental importance is disturbed even slightly, the effect upon the whole system is much greater than would occur if a lesser process were disturbed to the same degree. As we have already seen, such a hierarchy is evident in the human organism as well, so that a small area of damage to the brain has far more effect on the organism than a similar area of dam- age on the skin.

The idea of hierarchy is actually the idea of the oneness from which all else has been created. All entities and all levels are connected throughout the universe by this concept; therefore it can be considered a universal law.

The concept of hierarchy gains tremendous practical importance to the clinician upon consideration of the center of gravity of action or disturbance in the organism. In our era, it can be said from a practical point of view that every individual (viewed as a totality) at every moment of his life is ill to some degree. The extent of the disease is determined by the totality of the disturbance existing as symptoms on all three levels. A visible disturbance on one level, no matter how minute, simultaneously affects other levels as well, though to a greater or lesser degree. Nevertheless, when the greatest part of symptoms is on one level, we can say that the center of gravity of the disturbance at that moment is on that level. This is a highly dynamic state, of course, but the practitioner can in general discern a basic center of gravity of disturbance upon taking a careful history which includes all three lev- els of the individual.

Let us take as an example a patient who suffers with bronchial asth- ma and chronic constipation as the chief complaints in his physical body. After taking a careful history at all levels, it becomes clear that he is also quite irritable, he has a fear of the dark, a fear of disease, and anxiety about his future. Upon even further inquiry, he admits that he has lived for some time with the fact that his power of concentration has diminished. At this moment, as determined by the intensity of the chief complaint, the clinician perceives that the center of gravity of symptoms is on the physical plane.