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The Science of Homeopathy – page 90

takes a culture of the throat in the hope of finding an organism which responds to antibiotics; this approach assumes that the “cause” is the microbe. The homeopathic practitioner, on the other hand, is relatively uninterested in the nature of the microbe. He sees the symptoms as a manifestation of disturbance on the dynamic plane which can never be “cultured.” The homeopath, therefore, studies carefully the symptoms themselves in their totality, especially searching for individualizing traits which represent the “resonant frequency” that can be used for cure. He searches for a substance which reflects as closely as possible the total picture of symptoms. In this example, such a substance is belladonna; the patient is given belladonna in a single, minute dose, the fever drops rapidly to normal, and the child falls into a peaceful sleep. By morning, the child is completely well, and any throat culture taken at that time may well show disappearance of whatever microbe had been found. This story may seem difficult to believe, but every homeo- path can cite innumerable such cases from routine daily practice.

In the above description, it should be noted that the symptoms described were not merely gross descriptions of “fever, sore throat, adenopathy, and delirium.” The symptoms of importance to the ho- meopath are those which are the most highly individualized to that patient. Ten people with “strep throat” are likely to show ten different pictures of the totality of symptoms, once the individualizing quali- ties are determined. often, in homeopathic practice, the most valuable symptoms of all are what are called strange, rare, and peculiar symp- toms. It is obvious why this is so, because only by such refinement is it possible to approach with precision the true resonant frequency which can lead to cure.

The principle of resonance is also the basis for the insistence of homeopathy upon the totality of symptoms. If only a partial image of the total symptom picture is acquired, the effect of the therapeutic substance on the organism will be limited only to that vibrational level. If a patient comes to the homeopath complaining of arthritis, for instance, and the only symptoms noted are those relating to the joints while ignoring the rest of the physical plane, the emotional plane, and the mental plane, the prescription can be expected only to act on the joints. Such a procedure is unlikely to produce a cure, and moreover may well result in degeneration on deeper levels.

To find the resonant frequency of the entire organism and therefore strengthen the entire dynamic plane of action, one must record the to- tality of all deviations from normal on all three levels, in all details of their individualizing character. As an example, the following are just a small sample of the types of questions the homeopathic practitioner