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The Science of Homeopathy – page 104

 

Acute Disease Influence

 

As we discussed in the Introduction, virtually everyone has some degree of chronic disease tendency influencing his or her health throughout life. In some people, the constitution is relatively strong, while in others it is quite weak. In the absence of curative therapy or major shocks to the system, the vibration rate in a given individual will vary within a certain range of disease susceptibilities. Depending on nutrition, amount of rest and sleep, emotional stress, environmental stimuli, etc., there will be variation from hour to hour and day to day within a certain spectrum of susceptibility, but the organism will not jump major levels upward or downward without the impact of pow- erful influences. Thus, a person may vary in susceptibility to colds, minor skin eruptions, and transient moodiness; but the same person is very unlikely to jump major levels and become suddenly psychotic. Or conversely, a psychotic individual is unlikely to spontaneously become mentally and emotionally clear, and then maintain symptoms on more peripheral levels only.

One of the major influences which can adversely alter the health of an individual is the acquisition of an acute illness to which the individ- ual is at that moment very susceptible. Every experienced clinician has encountered patients who complain of arthritis for many years after suffering from a severe influenza, who develop chronic relapsing bron- chitis after a severe pneumonia, or who never quite regain the same level of vitality experienced prior to mononucleosis or hepatitis. Major changes in health would not occur by minor illnesses to which the patient is only transiently susceptible, but when the system has been weakened at a particular level of susceptibility, such major changes can occur, and then the individual will not be able to return unaided to the original level. Such are circumstances in which homeopathy produces very dramatic results.

Samuel Hahnemann was a particularly astute observer of the in- teractions which can occur between different disease states. Suppose a person has a given chronic disease predilection, and then acquires another disease to which he is strongly susceptible. What will be the result of such an interaction for the health of the individual? Hahn- emann describes the possibilities in the following aphorisms:

Aph. 36: I. If the two dissimilar diseases meeting together in the human being be of equal strength, or still more if the older one be the stronger, the new disease will be repelled by the old one from the body and not allowed to affect it. A patient suffering from a severe chronic disease will not be infected by a moderate autumnal dysentery or oth-