Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 84

Summary of Defense Mechanism Section

 

  1. Most morbific stimuli are managed successfully by the vital force without producing symptoms. If the morbific stimulus is stronger than the defense mechanism, the initial response is a change in the resonant frequency of the organism.
  2. There is a latent period before actual symptoms are produced, even though the vibration rate of the organism is changed immediately by the stimulus.
  3. Once the resonant frequency has changed, the susceptibility of the organism to disease has also changed; there is a new spectrum of diseases to which the person is susceptible. This changed susceptibil- ity explains the numerous known cases in which the patient seems to acquire a series of infections of increasing virulence and decreasing responsiveness to antibiotics.
  4. The principle of resonance renders the organism susceptible to morbific influence on basically only one level at any given moment. Thus, a person can be “immune” to gonorrhea for two reasons: he is too sick, or he is too healthy to resonate with the level of the gonorrhea influence.
  5. Beneficial influences also are subject to the principle of reso- nance. If a curative action occurs, by any therapy, it is because the treatment resonates with the level of susceptibility of the organism at that moment. Such an occurrence is rare, and occurs by accident be- cause the laws and principles of cure are not understood. Most such cases are later suppressed by inappropriate therapeutic manipulations.

Annotated Bibliography for Chapter 5

Beaty, N.N., and Petersdorf, R.G., “Iatrogenic Factors in Infectious Disease,” Annals of Internal Medicine 65: 641-656 (Oct. 1966). An extensive review of the literature, including 39 references. Studies the prevalence of iatrogenic illness in hospitalized populations. Particu- larly focuses on antibiotic therapy. “If the sputum flora of the patient under treatment for pneumonia is followed throughout treatment, col- onization by an organism resistant to the antibiotic employed can be documented frequently. Usually this constitutes bacterial superinfec- tion without clinical disease, but in a significant number of instances this ecological change in flora is accompanied by an exacerbation of signs and symptoms. These infections are often refractory to treat- ment because the superinfecting organism is resistant to most antibi- otics.”