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Sensitive Crystallization Processes: Demonstration of Formative Forces in the Blood by Pfeiffer

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From the This book will presumably cause at first a doubtful shaking of heads among some of its readers, by other it will perhaps be laid aside without due consideration because of its "quite impossible" statements. Of what do these "quite impossible" statements consist? Dr. Pfeiffer says that by means of his method crystallization–without taking into consideration the plant or the human being under investigation–far-reaching conclusions can be drawn about the the nature of their constitution. The Researching of human blood according to his method permits a judgment of the bodily condition of the owner of the blood and to a certain degree also of his mental state, especially in recognizing conditions of congestion, inflammation, of tuberculosis, sclerosis, cancer and many other diseases. It not only permits the researcher to "read" in the crystallization plate of the existence of diseases, but also to find the location of the disease in the body. He further states that his method permits the testing of remedies–whether they should or should not be employed–before they are tried on the patient. That sounds indeed unbelievable at first glance. Especially the statement–to all appearances fantastic–that the crystallization picture enables the determination of the locality of the diseases. It compels us to suppose that the blood–indeed every drop of blood–pars pro toto (as the part so the whole)–reflects not only the entire bodily condition and all its essential pathological chugs, but also that it contains formative forces which direct the crystallizations in such a way that the plate offers in a certain sense a topographical image of the body in which we can behold as, in a magic mirror, everything of importance.

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Ehrenfried Pfeiffer

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