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The Science of Homeopathy – page 28

in the quality of coherence. Such a person is deeply disturbed on the mental level.

The same applies to the master criminal who is highly intelligent and plans a theft or a murder with the utmost degree of clarity and rationality of thinking. Yet this person is ill in the deepest regions of his being, because he is pursuing selfish goals at the expense of other people. Such a mentality pervades our modern world to an extreme degree, and is a root cause of the problems of competition, violence, alcohol and drug abuse, poverty, and war.

We have all known individuals who are highly egotistical and in- tolerant of the views of other people. Such a person believes that he is always right, that no one knows better than he does; he therefore cannot accept any new ideas, even though they may be correct and beneficial. This leads to a state of mind which excludes the possibil- ity of seeing the truth. In such an instance, the qualities of clarity and creative service are lacking and are preventing the full and proper use of his mental faculties. Progressively, such a person is prone to develop a state of delusion, a state in which the false appears to him to be true. In this way, the highly egotistical and selfish person paves the way for a state of confusion which may eventually lead to a state of actual insanity.

We can see a similar process in a highly acquisitive individual. This person has great belief in material values; nothing is more important than the possessions he desires to acquire – which may be objects or people. Such possessiveness may evolve into a driving desire so out of proportion to reality that the person may seek satisfaction at any cost. Exploitation of others, or even harm to others, will not be sufficient obstacles once the desire becomes obsessive. A person in this state has lost all idealistic and ethical values. What can be more insane than hurting or even killing fellow beings in order to attain some material gain? Besides, this eventually results in a state of great insecurity for the possessive person himself. If for some reason this person loses his possessions, the shock will be virtually unbearable. By contrast, a person who is more healthy in regard to this quality, upon losing his possessions, will suffer only temporarily and then move on harmoni- ously to make a new beginning.

As we can see from such examples, there is a very fine line between what psychiatrists judge to be mental health, and what they call mental illness. At what point in the above examples do these people cross the boundary between health and illness? Rather, there is a continuous gradation of mental degeneration starting from selfishness and pos- sessiveness and leading into what can eventually be clearly defined as