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The Science of Homeopathy – page 117

schizophrenia, and many others tend to run in families. All clinicians have also observed frequently that there is a predisposition toward se- rious disease per se in certain families and not others. For example, a patient may develop symptoms of ulcerative colitis at a young age even though no one else in the family ever had colitis; on taking a family history, however, it will be found that many parents and grandparents were sick most of their lives with different ailments. It is quite rare for a person to acquire a very serious chronic disease at a young age if the ancestors were all healthy into an advanced age.

It is known that the genetic make-up, the DNA, of an individual plays a role in shaping the hereditary predisposition to disease, but this is not the whole story. As we shall see a bit later, it is possible for a par- ent to acquire an ailment during life whose influence can be transmit- ted to the children, even though no known change has occurred in the genetic structure of the parent. Taking into account the dynamic plane, it is quite easy to imagine how such a thing can occur. If the vital force is significantly weakened in the parents, the child’s electrodynamic field can be correspondingly weakened at the moment of conception.

The clinical recognition of this “maintaining cause” for disease be- comes apparent when we see a patient returning time and again for the same or similar complaint, even though the homeopathic remedies seemed to have acted quite well in each acute crisis. In such cases, it seems as if the remedies have affected the defense mechanism on an insufficiently deep level of predisposition. It was in frustration over such cases that Hahnemann devoted the last years of his life to search- ing for the causes of these deep predispositions. These investigations finally led to his third major contribution to medicine: the theory of miasms.

In Aphorism 72 of the Organon, Hahnemann describes his initial perceptions on this matter:
 

Diseases peculiar to mankind are of two classes. The first includes rapid, morbid processes caused by abnormal states and derangements of the vital force; such affections usually run their course within a brief period of variable duration, and are called acute diseases. The second class embraces diseases which often seem trifling and imperceptible in the beginning; but which, in a manner peculiar to themselves, act del- eteriously upon the living organism, dynamically deranging the latter, and insidiously undermining its health to such a degree, that the au- tomatic energy of the vital force, designed for the preservation of life, can only make imperfect and ineffectual resistance to these diseases in their beginning, as well as during their progress. Unable to extinguish