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The Science of Homeopathy – page 78

 

beneficial, the first event which occurs is an alteration of the vibration rate on the dynamic plane. For most routine stimuli, to which we all are exposed constantly, the dynamic plane is able to respond and adjust with no noticeable effect on the mental, emotional, or physical levels.

If, however, the strength of the stimulus is stronger than the strength of the vital force, the defense mechanism is called into play to coun- teract the stimulus. If this were not so, any powerful stimulus would alter the state of the entire organism without defense, and death would rapidly ensue. There is a certain threshold in any given individual be- low which the dynamic plane handles stimuli without visible changes, and above which the defense mechanism generates processes which are perceived by the individual as symptoms on one or more levels.

Before actual symptoms develop, there is a latent period during which the defense mechanism begins to adjust to the effect of the stim- ulus. The change on the dynamic plane, of course, is instantaneous, but varying amounts of time may pass before the defense mechanism gen- erates symptoms expressed on physical, emotional, or mental levels. Depending on circumstances, this latent period may be hours, days, weeks, or even months. In an acute illness, the latent period is known as the “incubation period,” which ranges from hours or days for influ- enzas and bacterial infections, to several weeks in gonorrhea, and up to three months for rabies and infectious hepatitis.1 Less widely recog- nized is the occurrence of a latent period in chronic disease. A person may undergo an emotional stress and then develop asthma after six months, or cancer after an even longer period of time.

The initial instantaneous change in vibration level also alters the person’s susceptibility to further noxious influences of the same type. For example, if a person is exposed to a virus, the vibration rate is im- mediately altered, and the person will then not be susceptible to inva- sion by other viruses of similar type and virulence; symptoms may not emerge until the latent period has passed, but the organism neverthe- less is “immune” to other similar viruses during the latent period. This phenomenon occurs because the resonant frequency has been changed by the initial stimulus, rendering the organism susceptible only to new morbific influences on the new resonant frequency.


Such a change in susceptibility can occur, of course, not only by ex- posure to viruses and bacteria, but also by emotional shocks, changes in environmental temperature or humidity, and especially by treatment with allopathic drugs.

  1. In the instance of latent periods of infectious disease, it might be argued that the time lapse is merely during the cultivation and growth of the microorganisms. This is correct, but it gives only a superficial explanation of the entire phenomenon. In reality, if the organism does not maintain a susceptibility to the microorganism, it will not be allowed to thrive in the body.