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The Science of Homeopathy – page 109

ary stage of syphilis emerges as a skin eruption elsewhere on the body. Then, after many years, the tertiary stage manifests as central nervous system degeneration and perhaps insanity. During the development of these later stages, it is also true that the patient is “immune” to fur- ther re-infection with syphilis. Clearly, such immunity is not a sign of improved health but rather of further degeneration in the ability of the defense mechanism to maintain the symptoms on more peripheral levels of the organism.

Therefore, because of the severe suppressive effects on drugs, every clinician should be as aware as possible of the therapeutic history of the patient. Drug diseases can then be recognized, and the major sup- pressive influences in the life of the patient can be determined.

In a more general sense, it is also important to realize the effect that such massive and systematic suppressive therapies have on entire populations. As described so well by Ivan Illich in Medical Nemesis1 and Allen Klass in There’s Gold in Them Thar Pills,2 the entire medi- cal establishment has built-in structural commitments to maintaining the current model of disease and therapy. Statistics demonstrate quite clearly that the threat of acute diseases has diminished in this century, although not because of therapeutic effectiveness, and that there is a corresponding increase in crippling chronic diseases,3 cancer, heart disease,4 strokes,5 neurological disorders and epilepsy,6 violence, and insanity.7 Such is the inevitable result when the processes of Nature are ignored. On the other hand, as we see increasing progress toward cooperation with the processes of Nature, statistics will demonstrate a decline in such problems. As a matter of fact, within the past few years, the increased interest in weight control, good nutrition, and exercise, has already resulted in a slight decline in heart disease and stroke for the first time in many decades. As more people are treated by homeopathy, we can expect even further progress.

 

 

  1. Ivan Illich, Medical Nemesis (New York: Bantam, 1976). The first section gives specifics, while later sections discuss societal implications.
  2. Allen Klass, There’s Gold in Them Thar Pills (Baltimore: Penguin, 1975).
  3. Lilienfeld and Gifford, eds., Chronic Disease and Public Health (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1966), p. 8. Leading causes of death and their rates, comparing 1900-1960. A Baltimore study demonstrated the rise of chronic diseases with age.
  4. Curriel et al., Trends in the Study of Morbidity and Mortality, Public Health Papers No. 27 (Geneva: WHO, 1965). Demonstrates increase in mortality rates for heart disease, stroke, and diabetes.
  5. Ibid.; and Lilienfeld and Gifford, Chronic Disease.
  6. M. Ferguson, Brain Revolution (New York: Taplinger, 1973).
  7. Donald Jackson, ed., The Etiology of Schizophrenia (New York: Publisher’s Basic Books, 1960).