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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 20

If we wish to seek a scientific explanation for the action of infin- itesimal homeopathic doses, we will find it in the law of Mau- pertuis, the eighteenth-century French mathematician. who said:
The quantity of action necessary to effect any change in nature is the least possible; according to this principle the decisive amount is always a minimum, an infinitesimal.2
This principle can be seen in action all around us. How much warmth is required to unleash the incredible growth potential in a seed? How much energy from the sun is needed in order to nourish a single flower? Think of how sensitive the instruments must be which measure cosmic rays from the sun – yet cosmic rays unleash tremendous forces in the vast weather changes oc- curring during sunspot cycles.
Today more than ever, mental shock is recognised as the sole exciting cause of a series of diseases. If we accept in these cas- es the dynamic disturbance caused by a thought or an emotion, why is it difficult to accept that the initial disturbance lies always on an energy level which can be affected also by the inherent vi- brating energy of the bacteria or the microbe?
The conviction that disease is caused by bacteria is probably one of our greatest current illusions. All therapeutic research today is based on this tenet; it has produced a continuous wave of new products, new medicines, at a quite incalculable cost in time, ef- fort, health and money. But it is based on a wrong assumption and directed towards the wrong target. Many people argue that orthodox medicine, as the result of research, has impressively reduced the death-rate all over the world, but if we look around us, we can see that the incidence of mental and emotional illness has increased proportionately. We will later speak of the relationship between these two phenomena.
In homeopathic practice, the contrary is the case. It is not at all a question of killing bacteria but of bringing the whole human or- ganism into a state where it is impossible for bacteria to thrive on it – in other words, to reduce the patient’s susceptibility.
To summarize, then, what we have said so far:
1. A patient is cured only if he is given that medicine that can pro- duce in a healthy organism symptom most similar to his own.