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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 68

In the phenomenon of illness, we see the appearance of certain symptoms. But what is the process of their creation -indeed, of any creation? When something is created by man, it is first con- ceived in his mind. That conception is the birth of creation at a dynamic level. For example, when a new machine is made, its inventor first conceives it and works it out in his mind.
This rule of the dynamic origin of creation holds for all creation, whether it be for the original creation of the universe or of man or of man’s works. ‘As above, so below.’ Nature works this way and disease is created this way as well. When a morbific agent comes in contact with a susceptible organism – and here we have, clear- ly, the positive and the negative, light and dark, male and female, yin and yang – then the disease is conceived on a dynamic level. Only later do we feel and see its results in the organism.
This dynamic disturbance which shakes the entire organism, starting from its centre, first affects the electromagnetic field of the human body. Until recently, the very concept that the hu- man organism is associated with an electromagnetic field has re- ceived scant attention, but modern research with field-measur- ing devices and Kirlian photography is demonstrating that there is a highly active electrodynamic field permeating every living organism. These fields can be measured in intensity and they have been demonstrated to be very dynamic. From moment to moment the field changes in intensity depending upon altera- tions in consciousness, emotional changes, ingestion of alcohol or drugs and even the acquisition of illness.
The discovery of bio-electromagnetic fields is beginning to revo- lutionize the concepts of Newtonian physics. Newton explained laws which govern the visible physical universe, and these laws remain as valid today as in Newton’s time. However, observa- tions of nature on atomic and sub-atomic levels required new con- cepts and these have been provided by modern physics. Basically, these concepts recognize that matter and energy cannot be consid- ered separate categories. They are interchangeable, and they in- teract constantly in the context of what is called a ‘field.’ The im- portance of this new perspective is stated best by Albert Einstein:
We may therefore regard matter as being constituted by the re- gions of space in which the field is extremely intense… There is