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The Science of Homeopathy – page 41

Summary of Emotional Plane Section

 

  1. The emotional plane of the human being is next in importance to the mental one. This plane is ill to the extent that the person maintains within himself, is trapped by, and expresses negative feelings, as envy, jealousy, anguish, fanaticism, sadness. If the individual can free him- self from such “passions,” then he can be healthy on this level.
  2. On this level arise anxiety, anguish, irritability, fears and pho- bias, and depression, so common in our times. Our educational and political systems have never systematically developed the emotional plane which is generally weak, undernourished, and therefore vulner- able.
  3. There is a hierarchy of symptoms within this level that is useful as a measure of progress during therapy.

 

Summary of Physical Plane Section

 

  1. The physical body and its organs constitute the least important plane of the human being; the body also maintains a hierarchy of im- portance as to its organs and functions. An infarct of the brain will be of more importance than an infarct of the heart, and this in turn is of more importance than a thrombosis of an artery in the leg.
  2. The organism will always try to keep disturbances away from important organs.
  3. A disturbance that progresses during any treatment from less important organs to more important ones signifies a deterioration in general health. An opposite direction of progress indicates progress toward a better state of health.

 

Annotated Bibliography for Chapter 2

 

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

p. 150. “Reactions to disease have remained unchanged since the time vertebrates appeared. That is completely contradictory to Mac- Callum’s opinion, that spontaneous defensive reactions of man have developed and improved over the centuries. This is not so: Man has, perhaps, managed to protect himself against disease through external means, more than through internal ones or through immunity. The latter certainly existed in earlier times and may even have been more efficient then: the more primitive a being, the more efficient its defen- sive and recovery mechanisms seem to be.”