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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 17

1. It is endowed with formative intelligence, i.e. it intelligently operates and forms the economy of the human organism.
2. It is constructive; it keeps the body continuously constructed and reconstructed. But when the opposite is true, when the vital force from any cause
withdraws from the body, we see that the forces that are in the body being turned loose are destructive.
3. It is subject to changes; in other words, it may be flowing in order or disorder, may be sick or normal.
4. It dominates and controls the body it occupies.
5. It has adaptation. That the individual has an adaptation to his environment is not questioned, but what is it that adapts itself to environment? The dead body cannot. When we reason we see that the vital force adapts itself to surroundings, and thus the human body is kept in a state of order, in the cold or in the heat, in the wet and damp, and under all circumstances.1
Another proof of the existence of this vital force is the fact that when the disturbed organism of a patient is properly tuned through the administration of the right homeopathic remedy, the patient not only experiences the alleviation of symptoms, but also has the feeling that life once again is harmoniously flow- ing through him. Finally, after centuries of stumbling and ex- perimenting, we have a system of medicine that not only recog- nizes the presence of the healing powers of the body and of Na- ture, the vital force, but actually bases its entire system upon the stimulation of that force. At last, principles have been found by which we can work with, rather than against, the vital force – a true ecology of medicine.

Reference
1 James Tyler Kent, MD, Lectures on Homeopathic Philosophy (Calcutta: Sett Dey & Co. 1961), p.69.