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The Science of Homeopathy – page 31

or fear provides poisonous food which eventually leads to degeneration of health in himself and others.

As on the other two levels, there is a hierarchy of emotional distur- bances which can be graded according to the extent that they reach deeply into the individual or remain relatively on the periphery. The current approximation of this hierarchy is listed in Figure 2 (page 24). Again, this is a rough approximation developed from past clinical ex- perience and will undoubtedly be altered and refined by careful ob- servers the world over. At the boundaries of the emotional plane with the mental and physical planes, there is a certain amount of “overlap” as described in Figure 3 (page 46). Still, within the emotional hier- archy itself we see a gradation of symptoms which again is useful in determining whether a given patient’s progress is improving or declin- ing. For example, considering each symptom at equivalent degrees of intensity, depression can be seen to be more seriously limiting to the life of the patient than anxiety, and anxiety more severe than irritabil- ity.

Comprehending the gradation of symptoms is helpful to the practi- tioner in determining in which direction the patient’s progress is head- ed, but a quick guideline is needed with which to judge the degree of health or disease in an individual immediately at the first interview. At the highest state of emotional health, the individual experiences an ab- solute dynamic calmness combined with love for self, others, and the environment. This is a state of serenity which is actively involved with people and the environment; it is not merely a lack of emotional feel- ing generated as a protection against emotional vulnerability. On the other hand, a person at the worst extreme of emotional health suffers severe internal anguish or depression of such intensity that all interest in life is lost and there is an active desire for death. In between these extremes, there are wide variations and individual modes of expres- sion.

In modern times, weakness on the emotional plane has become one of our major existing health problems. Whether because of lack of understanding of the laws of nature, or because of continuous “thera- peutic” suppression of relatively peripheral ailments into the core of human existence, many of the problems of today’s world can be seen as arising from emotions which are imbalanced, misdirected, and de- structive. Modern problems of indiscriminate warfare, random vio- lence and terrorism in the cities, mass murders, racial oppression, and child abuse are all examples of mismanaged emotional states, both on individual and societal levels.

As described earlier, the human being both affects and is affected