Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 55

rates. These may be affected, in part, by affinities arising out of known embryological layers of development.

Annotated Bibliography for Chapter 3

1. Simeons, A.T.W., Man’s Presumptuous Brain (London: Long- mans, Green, 1960). An excellent and thorough description of the per- sonality correlations to physical ailments. Mostly provides personality descriptions useful to a clinician; does not list research data supporting the observation.
 

2. Hinkle and Wolfe, “The Nature of Man’s Adaptation to His Total Environment and the Relation of This to Illness,” Archives of Internal Medicine 99: 442 (1957). A good survey of psychosomatic correlates to physical states. Does provide research data on subjects in whom at- titudes were induced by hypnosis.
 

3. Eastwood, M., The Relation Between Physical and Mental Illness (Toronto: Univ. of Toronto Press, 1975). An up-to-date and extremely thorough review of research done in the entire field of psychosomatic medicine. Quotes both physiological and epidemiological studies.
 

4. World Health organization, Psychosomatic Disorders, WHO Technical Report Series No. 275 (Geneva: WHO, 1964). An overview, and a reasonable perspective on correlates.
 

5. Raven, R. W., ed., Cancer, Vol. 4 (London: Butterworth, 1958). Describes direction of metastasis for individual types of cancers: p. 227 for breast cancer, p. 201 for prostate cancer, and p. 308 for lung cancer.
 

6. Cann and Cann, eds., Current Diagnosis (Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders, 1971).
 

7. Harvey, A.M., and Bordley, J., Differential Diagnosis (Philadel- phia: W.B. Saunders, 1970).
 

8. Simeons, Man’s Presumptuous Brain.

9. Hamilton, Boyd, and Mossman, Human Embryology (Balti- more: Williams & Wilkins, 1972), Chapter 7, p. 162.