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The Science of Homeopathy – page 36

Understanding this hierarchy is not a mere academic exercise; it enables the practitioner to recognize the direction of progression of illness. If disease is progressing upwards in the hierarchy – from kid- neys, lung, pituitary, heart, and finally brain – it is clear that progress is going in an adverse direction. On the contrary, if the progression is downward from brain toward muscles, there is clearly improvement occurring in the general health.

If a modern physician observes a particular patient progressing, for example, from eczema to bronchial asthma, he is likely to explain this to the patient in one of two ways: either it is the natural course of the disease in allergic individuals, or the asthma is an unfortunate, but coincidental, second ailment added to the eczema. If a patient who has suffered from rheumatoid arthritis later has a heart attack, the doctor will consider both events as separate and coincidental, and will treat them separately. Even more unfortunately, the deeper the organ in- volved, the more likely the physician will be to give a more toxic drug to control the symptoms (if indeed one has yet been invented); the patient with rheumatoid arthritis will likely be given aspirin or buta- zolidine, and after the heart attack he may receive digitalis, quinidine, propranolol, or anticoagulants as well. It is not considered possible by the allopathic profession that progressively more serious ailments may be the result of suppression of symptoms of less serious ailments. Re- gardless of whether the method of therapy being used is “artificial” or so-called “natural,” if an adverse direction in the hierarchy occurs after the treatment, it must be suspected that the therapy is doing harm, and it should be either discontinued or changed.

 

The Definition and Measure of Health

 

Thus far we have tried to consider in some detail the human organ- ism in its setting of environmental influences and on its three levels of function. Necessarily, this approach presents a somewhat fragmented picture of the human being. In fact, of course, the human organism is a completely integrated totality, always acting with innate intelligence to maintain homeostasis with varying degrees of success. Now we will attempt to pull together this fragmented image and illustrate with ex- amples how these concepts can be used by practitioners to precisely evaluate the state of health of a given individual.

As we have seen, there is a hierarchical gradation of functions and disturbances within the human organism which tends to maintain order. This hierarchy is not merely limited to living entities; it is a characteristic of the structure and function of the universe itself. For