Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 259

widely accepted therapy, world leaders would have access to treatment which would reduce their personal reactions to stress, and thereby cre- ate a situation in which nations can decide to avoid conflict and create ways in which to harmonize their relations.
This vision of the implications of homeopathy seems grandiose, of course, because no one really believes that a mere therapy can have such profound effects. This assumption, however, arises out of the fragmented and materialistic views which are prevalent in standard therapies of today. In homeopathy, we take a total view of the person as an integrated spiritual, mental/emotional, and physical being. Homeopathy does not merely remove disease from an organism; it strengthens and harmonizes the very source of life and creativity in the individual. This is very evident in the daily experience of good homeopathic prescribers and their patients; to them, the grand vision presented in the previous paragraph is not at all far-fetched, but quite reasonable and practical given the assumption of the adoption of high standard homeopathy as a widely accepted practice.
Now, that is a large assumption, of course. The medical industry of today is one of the largest single industries in the world, if one consid- ers the many practitioners, the hospitals, the pharmaceutical compa- nies, and all of the ancillary industries. There is a great investment in the allopathic perspective toward health and disease. One cannot hope or even wish that such a structure will change overnight. The forces which allow this accumulated power are not easily going to accept a system as radically different as homeopathy. Any change toward adop- tion of homeopathy will necessarily be difficult and slow.
However, society itself is already undergoing changes which create hope that such progress is possible. More and more people are becom- ing disenchanted with the failures of modern allopathic medicine in the face of chronic disease; the underlying assumptions of medicine are being questioned and openly challenged; Alternative therapies of many varieties are being tried out. In this climate, if the public sees clearly the systematic science of homeopathy and its principles which are grounded in timeless natural laws, there will be a powerful wave of support which can provide homeopathy with the leverage it needs to become accepted and widely disseminated.
The dissemination of homeopathy throughout the world will natu- rally have to be a step-by-step process. It is not the purpose of this book to describe a detailed strategy for bringing homeopathy into its own, but a general outline of the obvious steps in this process can be offered.
To begin with, the highest and strictest standard of homeopathy