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The Science of Homeopathy – page 19

sive lack of confidence in social situations, later perhaps apathy, and finally a depression. In this instance, the stimulus is received through the emotional receptors, and results in a disturbance manifesting pri- marily on the same level.

4. If the daughter’s health were even further deteriorated due to hereditary predisposition, the same degree of stress overwhelms the resistance even more severely, and a mental disorder is produced. The child is unable to concentrate in school, eventually may lose marks in class, and may complain that she does not comprehend material which previously was understood perfectly well. Such a progression, if con- tinued, may well end in psychosis. This instance demonstrates a stress received by emotional receptors and transmitted to the center of being, the mental level.

A crucial and profound conclusion that can be drawn from such examples is that the human being is a whole, integrated entity, not fragmented into independent parts. Medicine in general has amassed a great deal of information concerning human beings from anatomy, physiology, pathology, psychology, psychiatry, biochemistry, molecu- lar biology, biophysics, and so on. unfortunately, each of these branch- es of study has examined the individual from its particular angle. No one denies that what was revealed through these laborious studies has been illuminating and often useful. But such studies have not so far given us a clear, integrated idea of what a human being is, function- ing in its totality – not merely on its molecular level, nor on the organ level, nor even on the psychological level alone. Consequently, modern therapeutics takes a fragmented view of the human being. If the liver is affected, give something for the liver; if the nose is running, give some medicine for the nose. The knowledge is haphazard, rather than being based on systematically verified laws and principles derived from ob- servation of human beings.

The above examples consider the effects of environmental stimuli on people of varying degrees of ill health; the structure and function of the human being can similarly be described in the healthy state. If we observe a healthy man, we can easily discern that he is an integrated organism acting all the time either consciously or unconsciously. Ac- tion is the characteristic of a living organism. Action can be either pas- sive or active, and the exact nature of the action is an expression of the individuality of the person. The activity of an individual is manifested primarily on three levels: