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The Science of Homeopathy – page 4

treatment. Great interest has been aroused in all quarters concerning the fundamental assumptions underlying medical care, a result, I be- lieve, of the enormous amount of suffering people are undergoing to- day in the face of a disproportionately small amount of relief available through the various accepted therapies.

Because of the arousal of such doubts, alternative therapies have once again become popular, and people are in desperation trying them indiscriminately. once disenchantment with orthodox approaches oc- curs, one is then at a loss to evaluate accurately and dependably the efficacy and safety of the alternatives. Thus, by contrast it becomes clear that the prevailing medical system has not explained the laws and principles governing health and disease. Such an explanation has not been forthcoming because it has in fact not been formulated, even within the medical profession itself. If we search back into medical history, we shall find volumes of empirical data and experimental re- sults, but no general laws or principles to support them, or arising from them. It is not unfair to conclude that medicine is the only branch of science that has based its structure on opinions and suppositions rather than on laws and principles.

Due to such a weakness in its conception, the prevailing medical system fails either to persuade the populace as to its efficacy or to pro- vide satisfactory and continuous therapeutic results, especially in the face of one of the most frustrating and rapidly increasing crises facing medicine today: chronic disease.

The purpose of this book is to attempt to restate the universal prin- ciples of health and disease into a comprehensive rational system, readily verifiable by actual clinical results, that understands and can effect radical cure whenever that is possible. These principles must be known and respected by any practitioner, no matter which therapeu- tic modality is used. By understanding clearly these simple principles, people will be able to judge any therapeutic method as to its curative action, and thus will be able to find their way to better health by choos- ing to take advantage of a system that offers the most efficacious pos- sibilities.

During the course of this exposition, readers will doubtless come across fragments of ideas they remember having discovered in one or another healing system proposed in the past. However, it is only in relatively recent times that such a comprehensive description of the natural laws governing health and disease has been formulated into one methodology.

At this point, let us touch on the highlights of medical thought throughout history. It is not within the scope of this book to present an