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The Science of Homeopathy – page 50

constitutional state can handle the stimulus with minimal disturbance.

3. The degree of interference by treatments which are not capable of strengthening the defense mechanism as a totality. If the body has established a defense at a particular level, symptoms will be manifest and will tend to remain stable at that level. If an allopathic drug is used to relieve the pain or allay the anxiety, the point of defense is removed, and the defense mechanism must then create a new barrier. This new barrier will inevitably be on a level more vital to the health of the or- ganism, because the original equilibrium was the best possible that the defense mechanism could produce; in this way, allopathic medicines, or therapies of any kind which focus upon specific symptoms while ignoring the total picture, actually weaken the defense mechanism and eventually cause a deterioration of health into ever more serious chronic diseases.

These three factors affect both the best level of defense of the organ- ism possible at any given moment, as well as the direction of change of the center of gravity when the person’s health is altered. If these three factors combine in such a way as to result in deterioration of health, there are two possible directions in which the center of gravity can move:

1. It may change in a linear manner within the hierarchy of one level, with only minimal corresponding changes on other levels. If, for example, the symptoms move from one level on the physical plane to a higher level on the same plane, it can be said that the defense mechanism on the mental and emotional planes was healthy enough to restrict the effect of the morbific stimulus to the physical level alone.

2. The symptoms may jump from a peripheral envelope to a more central envelope. This could occur if the defense mechanism is weak, if a severe shock occurs, or if a powerful suppressive therapy is em- ployed. As general rule, progression to more central regions has a worse prognosis than linear progression within a single hierarchy.

To illustrate these factors and the interactions of correspondences and hierarchies, let us consider three patients suffering from eczema:

1. A woman suffering from eczema for many years is given cor- tisone ointments which she faithfully applies for three years. The ec- zema is controlled as long as the ointments are applied, but the patient notices a gradual increase in sulkiness and irritability, and a desire to limit her social contacts to just a few friends. The center of grav-