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The Science of Homeopathy – page 130

can disorder the defense mechanism enough to prevent a clear symp- tom picture from emerging.

6. Miasmatic predispositions are not merely the simple inheritance of a well-defined pathological condition, but rather the inheritance of a particular syndrome which corresponds to the influence of the miasm.

7.A miasm is characterized by transmission from generation to generation, and by relief from the corresponding nosode.

8. The predisposition of a child is a combination of the predisposi- tions of the parents. The predisposition transmitted by the parents is a result both of the general state of health and of the specific state of health.

 

Annotated Bibliography for Chapter 9

 

  1. International Agency for Research on Cancer and John E. Fog- arty International Center of the National Institutes of Health, uSA, Host Environment Interactions in the Etiology of Cancer in Man (Ly- ons: International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1973), p. 50. People in cancer families have a 300% increase in incidence of cancer com- pared to the general population. Children with leukemia have a 400% increased incidence in families compared with the general population. Cancer also correlates with diseases arising from chromosomal dam- age in families. Cancer incidence is the highest when familial tenden- cies to cancer or chromosome defect diseases occur at earlier ages. Childhood leukemia shows a 20% concordance rate in identical twins.

 

  1. Jackson, Don, ed., The Etiology of Schizophrenia (New York: Publisher’s Basic Books, 1960). First chapter is on the genetics of schizophrenia. The risk of schizophrenia if one parent is schizophren- ic is 7-15%. If two parents have it, the risk is 40%. Twin studies show a concordance rate of 76-91% for monozygotic twins, and a 10-17% rate for dizygotic twins. P. 413: Studies show a higher incidence of various diseases in families of schizophrenics, including obesity, ul- cerative colitis, peptic ulcer, asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, hyperten- sion, prolonged convalescence from injury or surgery, acute leukemia, carcinoma, diabetes, scleroderma, and tuberculosis (the last doubtful).

 

  1. Dubos, René and Jean, The White Plague: Tuberculosis, Man, and Society (Boston: Little, Brown, 1953), pp. 33-43, pp. 124-125. Tuberculosis families described; definitely higher incidence in twins, even when separated into foster homes.