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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 16

that it was simply a derangement in the life force in man. The transition from life to death takes no time at all, is not measurable in time, not gradual; yet it is the most radical transition there is. It ends all activity of the body and decomposition follows. This dynamic force which makes the difference between a corpse and a human being Hahnemann called the ‘vital force’. In Aphorism 9 he describes its qualities:
In the healthy condition of man, the spiritual vital force (autocracy), the dynamism that animates the material body (organism), rules with unbounded sway, and retains all the parts of the organism in admirable, harmonious, vital operation, as regards both sensations and functions, so that our indwelling, reason-gifted mind can freely employ this living, healthy instrument for the higher purposes of our existence.
The mind must be extremely free and perceptive to comprehend so clearly something which is neither visible not material. No- body can deny that some force holds the universe together sim- ply because this force is invisible or immeasurable. All of us ex- perience this vital force in our daily lives when under stress – a change in climate, travel, change of diet, unusual exertion, a grief, a momentary illness. In all of these instances, we observe in ourselves a resiliency, a flexibility, an ability to adapt to cir- cumstances. As this ability is most dramatically evident only in living things, we call it vital force.
Today we have at our disposal the means of recognizing a force by its qualities alone and that is how we recognize the existence of such things as magnetism, electricity, the force of gravity, and so on. The usual definition of electricity is that it is a movement of electrons, but we know nothing about the force which makes that movement possible. The very essence offeree or energy has always eluded us and we have never been able to perceive it or comprehend its nature through the senses. Similarly, the vital force which animates the body is not something we can expe- rience directly; its presence can only be recognised through its qualities.
James Tyler Kent, one of the most illustrious American physi- cians of the nineteenth century, describes some of its qualities in his Lectures on Homeopathic Philosophy: