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The Science of Homeopathy – page 116

Chapter 9

 

Predisposition to Disease

 

IT SHOULD BE CLEAR that disease is a result of a morbific stimu- lus which resonates with the particular level of susceptibility of the organism. This stimulus is called the exciting cause and may be a mi- croorganism, a foreign chemical, an emotional shock, an allopathic drug, a vaccination, or any one of many other influences. A strong susceptibility to the morbific agent is necessary for producing disease; this predisposition is called the maintaining cause because it is the weakness of the defense mechanism which maintains a lowered state of health, rather than a succession of exciting causes. In this chapter, we shall consider exactly what this predisposition is, what its characteristics are, how it is transmitted, and its importance in treatment.

As described in Chapter 5, the susceptibility of a given person tends to vary within a narrow spectrum of illnesses. Throughout life, a par- ticular individual remains on a certain level of susceptibility unless a major influence (such as those discussed in Chapter 8) produces a jump in levels; even then, the organism will remain on the new level unless treated by homeopathy. Within a certain range of diseases, a person will vary according to such factors as the amount of sleep he gets, nutrition, sanitation, the degree of stress in his life, etc., but he will be unable to make changes from one level to another on his own.

How does a person acquire a predisposition to illness in the first place? How is the weakness on a given level established? As we know, powerful acute ailments, allopathic drugs, and vaccinations are major factors, but it is also clear that a considerable portion of predisposition is hereditary. It is well known that certain diseases such as heart dis- ease, cancer, diabetes, Huntington’s chorea, tuberculosis, alcoholism,