Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 47

and weakness, and areas of numbness develop. If it were possible to construct the diagram with precise accuracy, we would see that the center of gravity of disturbance has moved toward the periphery (to- ward the physical) but on a level which is nevertheless just below the corresponding level of the previous emotional symptoms. With further treatment, the neurological symptoms subside, but the patient, though still no longer psychotic, becomes very irritable and difficult to live with; the center of gravity has moved again toward the center (emo- tional plane), but at a still lower level of correspondence compared to the initial totality of symptoms. With further treatment, the irritability subsides, and the patient then develops a liver dysfunction of moderate intensity. Finally, after still more treatment, the liver problem disap- pears, and a skin eruption manifests itself, remains a few months, and then disappears. After such a progression, the practitioner can confi- dently expect the patient to remain cured for quite a long time, if there are no extreme shocks to the system or interferences by inappropriate therapies.

In this example, if viewed by the diagrams presented in Chapter 2, the practitioner might well have become confused at the point in the case when irritability replaced the neurological symptoms; this might have been interpreted as a degeneration of health, and drastic mea- sures might have been taken to try to correct the problem. Utilizing his three-dimensional construction, however, it is possible to see that progress in this case was always in a positive direction when viewed with knowledge of correspondences from one level to another.

Although this construction appears complex and requires a tre- mendous amount of confirmation by clinicians all over the world, it is nevertheless a useful image to keep in mind while evaluating cases. Such an image helps the practitioner to sort through the morass of seemingly random and confusing changes with some confidence as to what is actually occurring in the patient. In future decades, systematic observations by careful interviewers will refine the details of these correspondences and hierarchies so that future clinicians will have a precise tool for evaluating clinical progress, with even greater accu- racy than laboratory tests – a tool derived solely from symptoms given by the patient.

Modern physiology and psychosomatic medicine have documented quite well the fact that correspondences exist between the emotional and physical planes. EEG and biofeedback studies confirm that in- tense mental concentration or meditation increase circulation to the brain while producing relaxation of the musculature and lowering of the blood pressure. A state of fear creates palpitations, dry mouth,