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The Science of Homeopathy – page 9

bones dated from 5000 B.C and infectious diseases such as gonorrhea, malaria, and leprosy found many thousands of years ago. Syphilis be- gan in North America about 13,000 B.C. and spread to Europe via Co- lumbus. Cancer has been found all over the world since earliest times. Also includes a chart of mortality from major diseases in Scandinavia, comparing rates from 1911 to 1961 – a dramatic decrease in infectious diseases, and a dramatic increase in cardiovascular disease and cancer (p. 31).

3. Gordon, Benjamin l., Medicine Throughout Antiquity (Phila- delphia: F.A. Davis, 1949). evidence for epilepsy, mental disorders, arthritis since earliest Man.

4. Raven, Ronald W., ed., Cancer, Vol. I (London: Butterworth, 1957). Cancer documented since 3000 B.C. in Edwin Smith Surgical Papyrus.

5. Himwich, Biochemistry, Schizophrenias, and Affective Illness (Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1970), p. 153. Schizophrenia is one of oldest diseases in human race. Well-described and differentiated from other mental disorders as early as 3300 B.C. First described in Indian Ayura Veda.

6. Lilienfeld and Gifford, eds., Chronic Disease and Public Health (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1966). excellent documentation of changing rates of incidence and mortality of major chronic diseases, especially in relation to infectious disease rates. It is commonly stated that chronic disease rates are only apparently increased because of the success of antibiotics in reducing infectious disease rates. rates of ten leading causes of death in the U.S. in 1900 and 1960 clearly demonstrate an absolute increase in the mortality rate of chronic diseases, not merely a relative increase (p. 8). This increase is not due to a relative increase in age of the population, contrary to popular opinion. For example, mortality rates for heart disease and cancer increased by about 25% in absolute rate from 1900 to 1960; the effect of age changes in the population would have accounted for an increase of only 12%.

7. International Agency for Research on Cancer and John E. Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health, USA, Host Environment Interactions in the Etiology of Cancer in Man (Lyons: International Agency for research on Cancer, 1973), p. 17. One of the best studies available on the specific changes in rate of individual can-