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The Science of Homeopathy – page 86

DYNAMIC PLANE

OR VITAL FORCE

OR

 

e

M

DEFENSE MECHANISM

 

 

P

 

 

 

Figure 8: A diagram illustrating the interaction of mental, emotional, and physical planes as governed by the dynamic plane. The dynamic plane permeates the entire organism on all levels; it is the intelligent mediator of all three levels, creating the best possible response of the entire organism once a stimulus is received on one of the receptor levels.

Note that the arrows connecting each level point in both directions. Also note that there are no arrows connecting directly the mental, emotional, and physical levels.

 

German physician who discovered and developed the science of home- opathy. In Aphorism 11 of his monumental masterpiece, The Organon of Medicine, Hahnemann writes:

“This vital force is the one which is primarily deranged by dynamic influences upon it of a morbific agent.” 1

For any therapy to be effective, it is obvious that the practitioner must cooperate with this process and must not deviate from it at all. Since the defense mechanism is already responding with the best pos- sible response, any deviation from the direction of its action must in- evitably be of a lesser degree of effectiveness. This is why therapies which are based upon intellectual theories and partial comprehension of the totality can only inhibit the process of cure, and often produce actual harm to the organism through suppression.

Since the activity of the defense mechanism originates on the dynamic plane, the most logical therapeutic approach would be one which enhances and strengthens this level, thus increasing the effec- tiveness of the organism’s own healing process. In general, therapeutic measures can accomplish this in two ways:

  1. Samuel Hahnemann, Organon of Medicine, Sixth Edition, translated by William Boericke (New Delhi: B. Jain Publishers, 1974).