Allopathic anatomy and physiology is all about matter and biochemical
processes, not at all about true physiology.
The universe consists of matter, substance and essence. The
realm of physiology is that of substance, the next level up
from matter. Substance is manifested in powers, forces and energies,
namely the domain of the Dynamis, Living Power, Life Force and
Life Energy, all mentioned by Hahnemann as the basis for his
living approach to medicine in particular and healthcare in
general. The operation of powers, forces and energies results
in various functions, which involve a living polarity or relationship
between two powers, with their force and energy fields, that
are either identical or opposite.
The essential nature of a function is a dynamic unity wherein
exists a distinction between the direction of forces from two
poles or tendencies that are intimately related such that the
one could not exist without the other; they are functionally
identical in a dynamic way. Power is also a functional polarity
between force and energy. Life is a function, then, of the interplay
between various forces and systems of forces, which generate
more or less energy. Each function derives from a common principle
of which the two powers are constituents. In Hahnemann’s
system, the Living Power or Dynamis is characterized by the
polarity between the sustentive side and the generative side.
In turn, the disease function engages this polarity: the initial
action sees the dynamic disease agent impinge on the generative
side of the Dynamis of the individual, which is the disease
proper, and this is followed inevitably by the counter or back
action of the sustentive side, which produces the various symptoms
and characteristics we associate with disease. Equally, remedial
function involves the initial action of the remedy (acting on
the generative power of the Dynamis), which we term cure, as
well as the counter or healing action, of the sustentive power
of the Dynamis.
As has been set out in the overview article on Heilkunst,
the whole nature of disease and remediation (restoration of
health) is a living, dynamic one, and, thus, there must be a
living, dynamic understanding of the human being that goes beyond
the limits of a the material world. Hahnemann provided a foundation
for understanding this supersensible dimension of man in speaking
of Geist, Seele, Sinn, Gemüt, Leib, and Wesen.

Geist: the spiritual aspect of man. Hahnemann
connects the Geist with pure intelligence or pure reason. It
is one of two supersensible (not directly perceivable by the
senses) presences that permeate the organism, the other being
the Wesen.
Seele: the soul, which partakes of the Geist
on the one hand and of the sense (sentience) on the other. It
is the seat of feeling and conscience and includes the world
of morals and ethics. It is the functional opposite of the Leib.
Hahnemann uses the term Leib und Seele (body and soul) frequently.
Sinn: the mental aspect of sense involving
the intellect and reason. This involves the discursive (reasoning),
as well as the intuitive aspect of the Mind. The term often
used by Hahnemann is here too, as Geist in German has the meaning
of mental operations in the world of sensibilia (intellect)
and mind operating at the supersensible level of pure reason
(when unclouded by beliefs).
The organism: the physical vehicle for the
members, consisting of solid, fluid, gaseous and thermal elements.
Gemüt: the emotional mind. It is instinctual
rather than intelligential (Sinn). It is the basis of knowledge
derived from emotional reactions relating to the activity of
the life energy (Leib). It is the Leib function raised up into
various gradations of consciousness. A certain part of the functional
energy of various organs of the Leib give up some of their life
energy to develop the supersensible organ of consciousness.
This is the basis, along with Geist as sense (Sinn), for the
reference Hahnemann uses to the Geistes-und Gemüths-Organe
(§216), the organs of knowledge (both emotion and reason,
instinct and intellect), which relates to what we call “mind”
in English. Each of these has a functional relationship within
a hierarchy and all relate to the organism, which is the vehicle
with respect to which all these members operate together at
various levels of harmony or disruption.
Leib: the action or organised activity and
functions of the Wesen. The Wesen manifests as the Living Principle
in the individual and the Leib is the primary realm of its action.
The Leib is not the organism, but the bodily activity perceptible
through effects and appearances and discernible in phenomena.
It relates to the old concept of body, meaning activity of the
Living Principle: cf. the body politic – a body (a political
entity) which has activity that you can see in its effects and
appearances, but which is also more than the outward appearances.
Wesen: the pure instinct, the wise Dynamis
in the organism. It is that entity which is the unchanging quintessence
of something. It is not material, yet it is real. It permeates
the whole of something and cannot be considered as separate
from that something.
In addition to this complex and profound insight into the
higher functioning of man provided by Hahnemann, we also know
that around the turn of the 18th century he was an important
part of an effort in science, particularly medicine, to come
to terms with animate nature, following on the earlier hard-won
success in the realm of inanimate nature - the astronomy, physics
and chemistry of Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Boyle and Lavoisier,
to name the most prominent (noting also that Hahnemann himself
was a noted chemist in his day, one of his early works being
used as a textbook in higher education in Germany).
While there was already a tendency in science to carry over
the understanding (laws, principles) of dead matter to living
“matter” (substance), Hahnemann as well as his contemporaries,
Dr. John Hunter, Dr. Richard Saumarez, Dr. John Brown, Samuel
Taylor Coleridge, not to mention the works and influence of
Wolfgang von Goethe (who several times pointed to Hahnemann’s
writings and practice as being an example of the application
of his scientific ideas), forcefully resisted this tendency
and sought at the same time to provide a secure basis for a
true science of life in the form of physiology. Whereas material
science reduced substance to matter and living functions to
dead chemical processes, these members of what Coleridge termed
the Dynamic System of Thought or the Dynamic Method of science,
developed an entire system of principles of biological life
that could provide the basis for a better understanding of health
and disease, illness and disorders, as well as of the manner
in which health can be maintained and restored, by means of
a therapeutic system that respected these principles (see Aphorism
2), and, thus, life itself, so that we would have a true healthcare
system instead of the disease and disorder management system
of allopathy.
The work of Dr. John Brown provided, in effect, a “Second
Organon,” similarly written and organized into aphorisms.
Where Dr. Hahnemann focused on disease and the law of similars,
while recognizing and making room for disorders and the application
of the law of opposites (balance or homeostasis), Dr. Brown
provided the rational foundation for the scientific application
of regimen (therapuetic regimen), based on the phenomenon of
excitation. While Brown grounded this in the living principle,
in keeping with Hahnemann, more his compeer than a rival, material
science reduced the phenomenon of “excitation” to
a capacity of the nervous system, and then only of the central
nervous system and the brain.
Later, the insights of Rudolf Steiner in the first two decades
of the twentieth century in the realm of health provided an
extension of Heilkunst in terms of understanding living functions
(physiology) by means of increased detail concerning the various
supersensible members identified by Hahnemann, such as the Geist,
Seele and Leib. Steiner’s core idea also concerns the
living duality or polarity of animate nature. Much of these
insights into the dynamic functions underlying health and illness
can be found in anthroposophic medicine. For example, Steiner’s
insights into the process of digestion provides a rational basis
for understanding the immune system, while his lectures on the
function of organs renders more rational Hahnemann’s insight
regarding the “nobility” of organs in the human
body.
From Steiner’s Heilkunst lectures we gain an understanding
of the two beings, one related to the upper, conscious self
coming from the earth forces, and the other to the sub-conscious
part of our self, coming in from the periphery of the universe
(bringing in the stellar and planetary forces and energies in
a scientific way), that must properly connect and integrate
to produce the healthy sense of true self that is the foundation
for health, much as is revealed in the work on epi-genetics
as revealed by Dr. Bruce Lipton (in his book, Biology of Belief).
We also have an understanding of the make-up of the individual
in terms of the self (character and personality), plus that
of our nature: astral or feeling body, which is connected to
the cosmic influences, and is the seat of our obejctive desire
function (the term de-sire meaning “from the stars”);
etheric or life body, which is the seat of the temperaments,
the humoral understanding of Greek and medieval medicine, but
now brought forward into the current scientific understanding
in an enhanced way); physical body, which is the realm of what
Hahnemann called the constitution, and the basis for a true
constitutional prescribing.
Further work by Dr. Wilhlem Reich took place in the first half
of the 20th century, and provided the scientific identification
and understanding of living energy, which he termed “orgone
energy,” as well as a deeper understanding of the nature
of dynamic functions in the human body. Reich provided a clear
insight into the workings of life energy and the consequences
of any blockages to the natural flow of orgone in terms of disease
and disorder (what Reich termed “armor”). Reich’s
work also provided an extension of the foundation laid down
by Dr. Brown a century and a half earlier, as well as providing
a better understanding of the nature of the energy released
by Hahnemann’s dynamization and potentisation process.
In effect, orgone or life energy precedes matter, and thus,
is prior to and above the forms of energy derived from matter
- electrical, magnetic, weak and strong nuclear forces. This
means that it cannot be destroyed by these forces, so that so-called
homeopathic medicines are not affected by X-rays, strong odors,
electro-magnetic fields, computers, etc.
The dynamic understanding of human functions also provides
a deeper insight into the nature of healing, as well as an ability
to identify the complex of disturbances possible in a given
individual so far as all the members of the human organism are
concerned. This then provides a means to therapeutically address
in a rational, grounded fashion (grounded in natural law) disturbances
and diseases both at the level of the cell and the inter-cellular
matrix (using the pioneering work of Drs. Heine, Schimmel and
Reckeweg), as well as at the level of what Hahnemnann termed
“the highest diseases,” that of the mind and consciousness,
of false beliefs and illusions/delusions (taking us into the
work of Rajan Sankaran, Scholten, Banis and others, going all
the way back to the emergence of “essence prescribing”).
Organic life is a specific form of life that exists on earth
enclosed within a membrane. On earth cosmic orgone energy is
contained within certain vesicles termed bions such as in sand,
silicon oxide, the most common element in the earth’s
crust. Organic life is continually dissolving back into this
bion form (dying) and being reformed (living). Conscious life
is a dynamic between the forces tending to dissolution (catabolic
or death forces) and those tending to growth (anabolic or life
forces). At conception, the growth forces prevail, but eventually
the death forces gain the upper hand and eventually the balance
is tipped sufficiently that the physical body can no longer
continue as such and what we term death occurs.
The relationship between cosmic orgone and the life force
within us means that various influences from outside affect
the functioning within. Forces and energies are not visible
to the naked eye and these influences can come from earth or
from the cosmos.
Both Reich and Steiner saw the essence of life to be the polarity
between an expansive or centrifugal force and direction and
a contractive or centripetal force and direction, similar to
the sacred geometry of the point and the plane. The one force
is radiating outwards and the other is a rounding or shaping
(formative) force. The physical structure of man is the result
of the systems of forces operating to produce the deposition
of substance at certain points on the force field grid where
there is a concentration of energy. In this sense, form follows
the function of the dynamic forces in their polar relationship
(polar logic), but also in their relationship hierarchically
to each other (scalar logic of the universe).
Thus, what we term health is a dynamic balance resulting from
the interactions of a myriad of functions, which is what we
can more properly term our physiology. This balance is both
one within a given state of being (homeostasis) and of an evolution
of states of being (palingenesis).
What we term disease is a process involving a given influence
(power) that alters the inherent balance at any point, either
in terms of the sustentive side of the life force (homeostasis)
or the generative side (palingenesis) beyond a normal variation
or range. Health is a harmonious cycle or rhythm between two
poles that does not exceed a certain range. When this range
is exceeded, then one or the other pole of a dynamic function
gains too much power and influence. Either there is too much
growth or too little, or too much shaping or compressing or
too little. Because of the polarity, there can be an endless
series of relationships along a continuum, but they are, in
logical terms, of eight different types. Each pole of a function
is either increasing or decreasing and then it can be either
stronger or weaker relative to the position of the other pole
(see The Web That Has No Weaver, Ted Kaptchuk).
A dynamic view has also provided for the integration of various
individual contributions to our understanding of diet and nutrition,
for example, as is set out in more detail in the article on
therapeutic regimen, in terms of typologies, as well as in the
area of minerals, as applied in cell or tissue salts (see separate
article).
The insights of dynamic physiology allow us to better comprehend
the inter-relationships between the body and mind, psyche and
soma that avoid the abstract dialectics of material science,
and provide greater insights into those already provided by
Hahnemann in his aphorisms on soul-spiritual diseases and their
treatment. Once having identified the true dys-function, the
practitioner can then address this, as opposed to the symptoms
themselves, allowing for a true causal prescribing as called
for by Dr. Hahnemann. A comprehension of a dynamic physiology
provides for a living and real link between diagnosis and prescription
that promotes the health of the individual in a systematic and
comprehensive manner.
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Rudi Verspoor DMH
Rudi Verspoor has been studying Dr. Hahnemann's medical system
for more than two decades and has acquired extensive clinical
experience, particularly with complex and chronic cases,
in the application of this system. His abiding interest in history
and philosophy has led him to undertake continual research into
various problems and issues that have arisen in traditional
homeopathic treatment, and this has included weekly conversations
with Steven Decker for over 12 years. This research has led
to the development of a systematic dynamic approach to therapeutics
that is now being offered in a comprehensive form to others
through a number of educational programs.
Rudi has written several books providing new insights based
on his research and clinical experience and has lectured widely
in Canada, the US, the UK and Europe. He served as the Director
of the British Institute of Homeopathy (Canada) from 1993 to
early 2001, and developed their Homeopathic Practitioner Diploma
Program. He has taught extensively both in-class and on a distance
learning basis. His previous experience has been in public policy,
planning and administration.
He helped to found the National United Professional Association
of Trained Homeopaths (NUPATH) serving as its president for
14 years, and the Canadian/International Heilkunst Association
(C/IHA). Part of his time has been spent advising the Canadian
government on health-care policy and in working for greater
acceptance of and access to homeopathy and Heilkunst amongst
policy makers and the public.
His publications include: Autism: The Journey Back, Recovering
the Self Through Heilkunst (with Patty Smith); Homeopathy
Renewed, A Sequential Approach to the Treatment of Chronic Illness
(with Patty Smith); A Time for Healing; Homeopathy Re-examined:
Beyond the Classical Paradigm (with Steven Decker); The
Dynamic Legacy: Hahnemann from Homeopathy to Heilkunst (with
Steven Decker). He also has written various articles for Canadian
and International journals.