(Ryke Geerd Hamer) Summary of The New Medicine

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ISBN 84-930091-9-9*

Hamer, Ryke Gecrd:


Summary of the New Medicine
[ISBN 84-930091-9-9*]

1
I 0.2 COM�IESTS -"'-0 EXPL..�NATION OF Tl IE CONH.LCTS A:-JD TUMORS OF Tl IF. ME$0DERMAI. CERF.BRAL
�lED�LLA DIRECTED ORG;\NS ........................................................................................................................ 62

11 THE DISEASES OJ' THE OUTER GERM JAYJ::R (ECTODERM) .......................................... 65

11.1 THE CONl'I JCT$ OF 'l'HF. OUTER GF.ll\1-1./\ YER (E(:TOL>El<�L) AND THE UIOUJGIC,\L MEANING OF THF.Sli
SPECIM. PROGRAMS 01' NA'l'lffiE .................................................................................................................... 66
I I. I. I '111e l,iolosirnl t,;rriwriul cml}lic1 ............... ...................................... ...................................... 67
I/.).2 fft,ari11,i:, t'<H�f/ic:1, ,;11ni1us .......................................................................................................... 68
J J .J.3 Molor cm�/7ict ofntJt·l>eing·able-w-e.w:up<' .............................................................................. 69
12 TABULAR SUMMARY OF THE NEW MEDICINE .................................................................... 71

13 THE 'HAMERSCFfEN HE ROE' (AH) ............................................................................................ 89


13. l Tl IE RING-FORMATIONS IN UKAIN Gl"S, MISl�TERl'l{ET�D BY RADIOI.OGISTS l;OR Fn-:-rEEN VEAH.S... 90
l 3.2 TIIE llU.AD-UR,-\IN AND THEORG,\N-BRAIS ......................................................................................... 91
13.3 TIIE H.>MliRSCHEl( l lERD INTHE CA-l'IIASEMm Tl IE PCL PHASE ................................................... 92
I 3.3. I /11 .mmmmy, rhe (!VC!WS that utl-:<� plac(' ,tr�·r a OHS 011 1he three /el'els of nw· nrgm,ism (11'e t1S
ji>llm,·.< 9./
13.4 OUR 0I(.>IN ................................... ..................................................................................................... 96
13.5 THECI..APPING TEST ........................................................................................................................... 96

14 THERAPY rN THE NEW MEOICfNE .......................................................................................... 129


l 4.1 THE NORM.>1. COIJRSE AND THE U1'USGAI. COllRSE OF A SO-CALLED DLSP.ASE ................................. 129
14././ ll'il/1 cm 1f/ic1 resol111iv11 ......................................................................................... ................. /29
14./.2 \\lithow co11J7icI re.wlwio11 ...................................................................................................... 129
/././.3 Comhiuatious1{1' 1/(0l•re111 couj1ic1s = ·Syudrnmes· ................................................................ 129
14.2 WORKING Wl'l'l·I THE f\lOL()C;\C,\I. LAWS .......................................................................................... 131
I 4. 2.1 C«lc11/c11i<>11 of the d,•,·elop111e111 ofthe cmif/if:t from ,,,., DHS 011 ........................................... I 3 I
14.2.2 \Vlwl aH·ails us 1m 1lw cerel>ral and vrf!,cmic planes? ............................................................. I 32
1./. 2.J 11 11• medicmim, ........................................................................................................................ 131
l4.2.3. l /\ "'ord about cytoslatic chemoLh!!rapy.... ........................................................................ 133
14.2.3.2 A word ahuul p.;1i1l and rnol'phinc... ................................................................................. 133
/4.2../ J.:· ,·p/ora,ory pw1c1im1s and exploraun:\' excisions .................................................................. 134
14.2.5 Surgical iut(' TYe11tio11s ............................................................................................................. 134
/4.2.6 J-'Jyclwgogic cflre of1he Pmi<qits............................................................................................ 135
14.3 OIO1.OGIC,\l. Pl.ANNL'it; OF l.LFl;•l.ONG C01'F1.ICl'S (SECONf>-WOL.F Pll�.NOMF.NON)......................... 136
14.4 MENTAL 11.LHSSES ANI) MOOI> l)ISORDERS - TUMf'ORARY SURVIVAL l'OSSlllll.lTll;S TOWARDS LA'IER
f(F.SOl.lJTIOi'. TILP. SO-CAI.LED DEVELOPME1'TAL RET,\Rf>ATION ................................................................. 137
/4.4./ Oepressioll .............................................................................................................................. 137
/4 ../.2 Mm1ia ...................................................................................................................................... I 37
/4.../.3 Schi-:.01,hreuic rerebml hemisphere Nmsrellmio11 ............................................................... .. J 37
/4.. J../ Fronw- <1ccipital co11.,· 1ella1imr................................................................................................ I 38
/4.-1.5 This hri 11.�.\· us w rhe sjguiflcance of·11u: schi-:.opl1reHif" consrdlmfon ,?[,he cen!brnl co,·t<·.,·. I39
/./.-1.6 The schi�ophreuic cerebellum c1Jm;,ella1im1 ........................................................................... 139
1./../.7 Seq1wu:e of l>HS in 1he c:Nelmtl ,-,mex ................................................................................. /4(/
1-1 ..J.8 SensiIidIy (>/the pcriosu,u,11 ................................................................................................... !40
/4..J.9 Seq11e11ce af1ht• //11 in r:erebeflw·cml}lir1.<.. ........................................................................... J41
J../.4.10 A sd1 i:01'hre11ic hrain:W.mJ c011srellariou ............................................................................ /-II
/ .f• .f. I I D,·,·efopnwmal retwdatia11 .............. ................................................................................... /4 I
14.5 AVUJl)IN(j THE SO•CAL.l.EI) ·vIc1OLJS CYCl.li' (DEVIi.' s crncu, ) ...................................................... 142

IS Tl:IE BIOLOGICAJ. LANGUAGE OF MAN AND ANIMAL .................................................... 145

15.1 TIIE BIOLOGICAi. CO:-Jl'I.LCT IN TIIE E�IRR\'ONIC PIIASc ................................................................... 148


15. I. I /111ra-11rcriue li quitl conjlicl ,dth rerri10J'ial fiwr a11d.f<'llt/rom behind conflicr.................... 148
15. I .2 '11w mO.\'I n1mm<m imramerim.' co,�f1kl: The circular saw s. nulrome .................................... /49
15.1.2.1 Case of a ncw-bonl with eqllinov:m,1.-. and dhtbi!tcs ....................................................................... 150
15.I .2.2 TI1c 'langua ge of lhc brain' in infants. Ocalh of ,1 baby because of hospitalization damag.e ......... 150

16 ST ATISTICS AS PRESENTLY APPLIED IN MEOT CINE - THE SO-CALLED SUCCESSFUL


CASES ............................................................................................................................................................ 153
16. l THE STA TISTLC OF Ri\TF. OF SUCCESS IN OFFICIAL 1"IF.DIC'INf;............................................................ 155

6
2.1.1 The Iron Rule of Cancer
I. Criterion:
Every cancer or cancer-like disease originates with a Dirk Hamer Syndrome ('DHS')
which is a
very difficult
highly acute, dramatic and
isolating shock
The experience of shock is simultaneous or virtually simultaneous on three levels:
I. the psyche
2. the brain
3. the organ
2. Criterion:
The content of the conflict caused by the DI-IS detennines, at the very moment of the OHS,
the location of the 'Hamerschen Herd· ('HH ') in the brain and the corresponding location
of the cancer or cancer-equivalent disease in the organ (body).
3. Criterion:
The development of the conflict determines a specific development of the HH in the brain
and of the cancer or cancer-equivalent disease in the organ.

2.1.2 The second biological law


Every disease is a lwo-phased occ11rre11ce, as long as there is a resolution of the co11J1ict.
Medical textbooks previously identified a few hundred 'cold' and a few hundred 'warm'
diseases.
Patients with 'cold' diseases present witb cold skin and cold extremitie-s; they are in
protracted stress, lose weight, have difficulty falling asleep and suffer sleep disorders. For
examples we have cancer, MS, angina pectoris, neurodennatitis, diabetes and mental and
mood disorders.
Other diseases are defined as rheumatic, infectious. allergic, and especially
cxantbematous.
But we have discovered that this is not con-cct. These cold and wann diseases were not
single illnesses but one of two phases ofan illness, the 'cold' being the first and the 'warn,'
being the second phase. This will be covered more precisely in Chapter 'The Law of the
two phases of diseases inasmuch as there is a resolution of conflict'.
Since no single disease was underslood correctly, no single case was understood correctly.

2.1.3 The third biological law


The 011toge11etic system of tumors and ca11cer-equivale111 diseases.
The interconnections and relationships - covered in detail in Chapter 'The Ontogenetic
System of Tumors and Cancer-equivalent diseases and the Ontogenetically supported
System of Microbes· • arc so fundamentally new that nothing even vaguely equivalent
exists in the medical literature today.
The ontogenetic system of tumors and cancer-equivalent diseases includes the following
criteria:

12
iranscendental, supernatural, parapsychological or understandable only from a religious
point of view. Things that are felt and experienced from a scientific point of view and that
cannot be explained and seem pu:i:zling or nonsensical.
With the fifth biological law, we can finally understand our connection to the cosmos
around us and in which we arc embedded. The Spaniards, who have a feeling for such
dimensions of understanding, call the NEW MEDICINE 'la medicina sagrada'. This name
came up in Andalucia some time in the spring or 1995.
'La medicina sagrada' opens up a new, cosmic. godly dimension! All of a sudden, our
medical thinking and feeling includes every elephant, beetle, bird and dolphin; every
microbe, plant and tree. Anything other than this 'cosmic thinking' in the framework of
live nature is no longer tenable. While we used to regard Mother Nature as fallible and had
the audacity to believe that she constantly made mistakes and caused breakdowns
(malignant, senseless, degenerative cancerous growth, etc.) we can now see, as the scales
fall from our eyes, that it was our ignorance, arrogance and pride that were and are the only
foolishness in our cosmos. We could oot understand such a 'sewn up' totality, and so
brought upon ourselves this senseless, soulless and brutal medicine.
Full of wonder, we can now understand for the first time that nature is orderly (we
already knew that), and every occurrence in nature is meaningful. even in the framework of
the whole, and that the events we called 'diseases· are not senseless disturbances to be
repaired by sorcerers' apprentices. We can see that nothing is meaningless, malignant or
diseased. Why can we not see this interplay of nature in all the inhabited cosmos as
something 'godly'? Was it not so before the outbreak of the major religions? From the
priests of the god Aesculapius, we I.earn that the profession of physician was always the
profession of a priest.
Afl:er the details are set out, biology, human biology and medicine will become clear,
transparent, aod well understood. As a professor al the Pedagogic Institute in f-leidelberg, I
taught human biology for many years. I believe that those sessions - 'doce11do di.w:i11111s' -
were responsible for helping me to discover the fifth biological natural law.

14
Strictly speaking, diseases do not exist in the sense we have been taught them in
universities. We interpret diseases as Mother Nature's mistakes, or as the 'immune system'
having weakened. But Mother Nature does not make any mistakes; everything is
intencional and may contain meaning for the purpose of the larger group, even though the
individual may experience negative secondary impacts.

5.3 The 3. Criterion of the Iron Rule of Cancer


... states that the development of all so-called diseases is synchronous on the three levels.
At tbe same time, very precise criteria establish what the typical con.flict-active symptoms
and healing-phase symptoms arc on the psyche, brain and organ levels. Added to this are
the symptoms typical on all three levels during the epileptic or epileptoid crisis, which arc
a little different for all diseases. but also typic.il of each disease given the brain and organic
symptoms (for example, cpileptoid of stomach ulcers, epileptoid of bile-duct ulcer, so­
called lysis crises in cases of pneumonia = bronchial-ulccrs-epileptoid, hea1t infarction =
coronary-ulcers-epileptoid, elc.) and just as typical for the psychic and vegetative
symptoms.

Armed with this knowledge of the natural laws and the typical symptoms of the
development on the three levels, we can, for the first time, work causally and meaningfully
in a virtually reproducible manner.

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-0-

brain: the cervix and the cervical collum in the pcri-insular area of the cerebrum is on the
left and the womb-mucous membrane is in the pons of the brain-stem.
Co1Tespondingly, the histological formations are also mtally different f rom each other:
the cervix has squamous epithelium; the womb has adeno-epithclium or cylindrical
epithelium in the pons of the brain stem. Added to this is the mcsodcnnal musculature of
rhe womb, with its relay in the midbrain/brain-stem. This is why it was so difficult to
establish relationships and connections.
!J1 contrast, there are organs that lie far apart from each other in the body - for example,
the rectum, the vagina, the coronary veins and laryngeal squamous epithelium peri-insular
- which are found in the lefl cerebrum - and the i111rn-bronchial squamous epithelium, the
intimal coronary epithelium and the bladder epithelium - which are located very close
10ge1her on 1hc right pel'i-insular area of the cerebrnm.
If I had not continued to compare brain areas, ·homunculus' (sec drawings), histological
formations. embryological research resuhs. textbooks and my own brain-CT'S with all the
patient histories. I would still be dwelling on this because there are mistakes in almost all
the embryology texts since nobody suspected an inter-relation.
I know that 1hc mucous membrane areas endowed with squamous epithelium all belong
together. have an ectodcrrnal origin and correspond 1ogether in the brain. As well, clearly
differentiable organs - such as the mucous membrane of the mouth. of the bronchia. of the
larynx and of the pharyngeal arcb. the intima of the eorona1y arteries and of the coronary
veins. the 111uco11s membrane of the rectum and of the cervix, all belong together. They all
have a right and left peri-insular relay centre and their connict contents are sexual,
tcrri1orial or territory marking.

7.1.1 Cerebellar mesoderm and cerebral ectoderm


I have always had dilliculLy with taking embryology as my starting point. Embryologists
have not concerned themselves with questions that did not seem especially important to
them. Skin is of ectodcnnal origin. but only the epidermis. Underskin (corium) has a
mesodermal origin. There arc these fine distinctions in the so-called skin layers. In fact,
there is an inner layer of skin (corium) of mesoderroal origin that contains glands (sweat­
glands, sebaceous-glands) and mclanophores. On top is the 111os1 outer epidermis of Lhe
squamous epithelium that is of ectodem1al origin. The surface contains sensitive tactile
nerve-endings and below the surface is a layer of melanopbores. The subtle difference is
that one cell is innervated from the cerebellum while the other is innervated from the
cerebrum. Again, this determines their function. their histological eonstrnction and their
various tumor reactions or tumor formations.

7.1.1.1 The cerebellar mesoderm


The cerebellum was forming around the time our evolutionary forefathers were
abandoning the sea for the land. It was the time when a skin was required that would
provide stability and protection from the excessive radiation of Lhe sun, and prevention
from drying oul. l will call this organ the mesodcnnal cerebral-skin.
This cerebral-skin w�s 1101 burdened with great mechanical complexity. The creature
moved by crawling in a worm-like fashion. The skin had unspecific 'proropathic
sensitivity' which is 1hc ability to sense extreme pressure and temperature. ll also had the
capacity 10 adapt and react when enviromnental conditions changed drastically. This skin
stored the melanophorcs 1ha1, with their pigmentation, gave protection from the ullra violet
radiaiion of the sun. Aside from this. it generated a thin film of humidity through the

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co11flic1olysis and finishes with the end of the healing phase, specifically with the
bcginuing of the renewed nonnolonia.
c) Viruses arc simply construction or rcconslruc1ion workers. They bring abou1
significant swelling and re-till the ulcers and the organs' losses of cellular substance
directed by the cerebral cortex. They too, like lhe other microbes, arc only active
during the healing phase. With squamous epithelium ulccra cures brought about by
viruses in 1he case of tubular organs (bronchia, coronary arteries or corona,y veins,
old pharyngeal ducts of the neck, intra-duclal milk duct ulcers or intra-hepatic bile­
duc1 ulcers) they become temporarily blocked by swelling. In principle lhe same
occurs. but less drastically without virus (for example non A- non B- hepatitis).
5. Microbes, our helpers. are directed by the brain. They have worked for us, not against
us, as faithful servants over umpteen billions of years of evolution.
These dependable microbes are programmed with our organs to respond to the relays or
our brain computer. There are therefore neither mycoses in the epidermal layer of our
skin nor viral inllarnmations in the intestine. On the contrary, viruses work according to
plan it1 lhe healing phase after the (te1Titorial anger) conflict active phase which causes
ulcers of the intra-hepatic (ectoderrnal) squamous epithelium, with strong occluding
swelling of the intra-bepatic bile ducts, generally referred to as (viral) hepatitis.
The distinction between icteric and anti-ic1eric (jaundiced or non-jaundiced) describes
how many bile ducts arc occluded, or whether or nor 1he main duct (choledocus) is
occluded lb.rough swelling.
6. If there arc no special microbes, healing occurs anyway. but 1101 to the biological
optimum. This means a death fright conflict with pulmonacy circular foci heals afier
confliclolysis wi1h myco-bacleria tuberculosis through caseination and collapse of the
circular foci. On the 01hcr hand, the same circular foci (adcno-Ca) without myco­
bacteria-tuberculosis are encapsulated in scar tissue. However, the build up of caverns
after caseination and expulsion through coughing or lhe tumo� is biologically more
optimal.
This is also the way in which intra-hepatic bile-duct ulcers heal afier resolution or
conflict in the absence of viruses (non A- and non B- virus hepatitis). When there arc
hepatitis A or hepatitis B viruses, the development is shorter but more fulminant, and
evidently offers, from a biological point of view, a higher chance of survival than
without virus. It is nol the viruses that bring about the hepatitis, as we thought . but
rather our organism that uses them to optimise healing, if they arc available.
Ano1her aspect that provokes ques1ions:
So-called 'dangerous infections' - especially from exotic microbes - occurs only during
the healing phase. There are no virulent microbes present without a healing phase, only a
very specific group of microbes. This principle has hopefully by now become clear.
However, our brain has no program to deal with cars and planes just as a deer's has no
program to deal with bullets shot from a distance of two kilometres; in the same way, our
brain is 1101 programmed to deal with travel over thousands of kilometres or to live in
places with very diflerent climates and microbes. Whal is normal for the long-term
inhahitants of Central Africa is not normal for outsiders; tbe population living there since
childhood is adapted to the environment. Measles, experienced by children living in
Europe, was fatal for tho adult Indian population in North America, but not for 1be Indian
children. Without doub1, the measles virus is transfe1Ted, but only those adults or cl1ildrcn
who have experienced the corresponding conflict and arc a1 the moment undergoing the
healing phase become sick. In the case of measles, it is a conflict content of the mouth or
sinus (,,this stinks..).

42
8 The Terminology of the NEW MEDICINE
ln order 10 avoid misunderstandings from the sta1t, it is very important lo explain the
language and especially the tenninology of the NEW MEDICI NI:i. Given the entirely new
perspective and lhe terminology developing from it, language problems may arise between
the current medicine and the NEW MEDICINE. An inherently systemic way of thinking is
a necessary prerequisite to understanding and utilizing its natural laws and all its
diagnostic, therapeutic and generally human implications. The purpose of this chapter is 10
clarify this.
The terminology of official medicine implicitly embraces dogmatically accepted
hypotheses and cannot distinguish between facts and prognoses because the latter comprise
bypothe1ieal claims. ll is because of this 1ha1 we cannot adopt the standard terminology in
its broadest context and, as a result, the NEW MEDICINE has had 10 create new
terminology, an entirely new language.
We do not doubt the fac111a/ findings of official medicine. What we challenge arc the
connections and inter-relations that are made in arriving at those findings, the so-called
diagnosis in which an evaluation of the facts is implied. A diagnosis of ·metastasis', for
example, implies an unverified. if not misleading, hypothesis concerning a secondary
cancer. thought to be a 'metastasis' of the primary carcinoma. The fact that there is a
secoud or third carcinoma is not in dispute, al least, not in principle: what we do challenge
is 1he e"al11a1io11 of th.is indisputable fact
Our lack of information regarding causes lefl no alternative but to create working
hypotheses that, througb habit and uncritical acceptance, led to their becoming truths.
Countless hypotheses have been postulated 10 explain why alleged apatbogcnic benign
mycobacteria, under ce11ain condicions, could alJ of a sudden become pathogenic or
malignant In face. the mycobactcria lhemselves arc absolutely identical. The working
hypotbeses, however, had impIicit consequences that were never demonstrated.
The so-calied 'metastases'
Example: a right-handed woman suffers a DI IS because her child is suddenly sick. After
three months in hospital, the child recovers. The mother, however, is found to have a 1.5
cm mammary gland carcinoma in tbc lcft breast. She is told that the entire breast has 10 be
amputated because of the danger that the malignant cells will 'spread' to the surrounding
area or 1m1y even swim through the blood and generate 'distant metastases·. In order to
prevent this, chemotherapy should be administered as soon as possible to kill all the
malignant cells. Confronted wilh this frightening diagnosis, lhe surgical interventions, the
implications and the prognosis, the young mother suffers lhe following DHS's:
I. A disfigurement conflict: a melanoma in the surgical scar of her previous left breast.
2. A self-devaluation conflict: rib osteolysis in the area of the Ien amputated breast (,, I
won't be productive there any more" or .,I'm useless there").
3. An attack conflict against the left breast area 10 be operated: a pleuro-mesothclioma of
1he left pleura.
�- A death-fright conflict: pulmonaiy circular foci (adcno-carcinoma).
Some of the organ changes associated with these conflicts are noticeable fairly early on:
lhc melanoma and lhc circular foci in the lung, and, because the child is already better, the
distant 'metastasis' in lhe right lateral cerebellum, which is really an HH i.n the post­
conflict resolution stage.
Rib osteolysis and pleura discharge are usually first noticeable after a conflict
resolution.

45
In the case of a biological territorial-conflict, tenitorial-fear-conflict or territorial-anger
conflict for males, the following will happen:
a) Right-handed man: the conflict affects the right temporal relays;
b) Left-handed man: the conflict affects the left temporal relays.
Should it last a long time, there is a possibility that the highly acute conflict will be
transformed into a hanging-active tenitorial conflict. In the case of (a), the individual ends
up working with the left 'female' cortical hemisphere and becomes soft. (platonic) and
homosexual (second-wolf-phenomenon). In the case of (b) the left cortical hemisphere is
blocked and the individual becomes 'doubly masculine' from a brain hemisphere point of
view; in spite of that, he is psychically castrated. and becomes a macho homosexual (the
·male' partner in the homosexual relationship).
The same happens with women but in reverse in a sexual conflict that cannot be resolved
(and also with territorial fear and identity conllicts):
a) Right-handed woman: there is a block of the left. side - immediate amenorrhea. The
patient functions with the right 'masculine' cortical hemisphere, and becomes more
masculine (also platonic) and a lesbian type.
b) Left-handed woman: blockage of the right cortex - no amenorrhea, but although she
becomes doubly feminine, she is still psychically-sexually blocked. The biological
conflict could have occurred ai a very early age, giving the impression that she was
always homoerotic or particularly predisposed that way, which in this case would seem
to be correct.
CL:
Conflicto-lysis, cont'lict-resolution of the biological conflict. Turning point from the lasting
,ympathicotonia to the lasting vagotonia, specifically from lasting day-rhythm to lasting
night-rhythm or from stress-phase to rest-phase.
Conflict-contents:
The biological conflicts are all archaic conflicts, affecting both humans and animals in an
analogous way. Earlier on, we thought that only so-called 'psychological conllicts'
(psychological problems) were important, but we were wrong. It is the biological conflicts
only that transfonn and change the brain, both in man and animal. The naming of the
conflic.t-contents attests to the fact that these conflicts must be virtually 'inter-animal', at
least for us mammals. For this reason, there are designations such as 'ugly- indigestible
conflict' in cancer of the colon, 'ugly-partially-genital conflict' in the case of prostate
cancer or cancer of the mucosa of the womb. Half-genital means that the conflict does not
concern only the genital realm (in a real or trnnsposcd sense), but evokes the genital theme
as an 'accompaniment', which distinguishes this conflict clearly from the sexual ones. All
these conflicts presuppose a strong understanding of evolutionary history. The biological
conflict of 'feeling disfigured, injured or attacked' can therefore be understood when it
leads to melanoma or, in the case of cortical conflictS, territorial-conflict, the female sexual
conflict of 'being unable to engage in intercourse', the territory -marking conflict
(ulceration of the bladder, because mammals mark territory with their urine) or 'separation
conflicts' (sensory paralyses with neurodermatitis), ·brutal separation conflict' with
inflicted or suffered pain (sensory periosteum paralysis in the PCL-phase or even so-called
'muscular rheumatism') or also 'frontal fear conflict'. 'fear in the neck conflict', 'conflict
of powerlessness', 'identity conflict', 'conflict of resistance', ·fear, revulsion or disgust
conflict', etc.
Animals, our fellow creatures, suffer these conflicts in a very real sense, whereas man does
so mostly in a transposed sense (for example, verbal mediation). Basically, there has
always been a common biological language between man and animal, especially the

49
mammal. This is born out by the fact that humans are often closely aitached to dogs, horses
and cows, communicating and experiencing them as almost human. We suffer the same
type of conflict whether a human partner or a dog partner dies. A young sick dog can result
in a mother-child conllict for the woman, who, if right-handed, may suffer a left breast
carcinoma. Inversely, animals suffer conflicts for people as pa11ncrs as well. I hope that
this knowledge of the conflict contents wi II eventually open a new era of relationship
between man and animal, away from the dreadful perception of animal as object that has
resulted in the terrible extermination of many rare animal species and the totally
unnecessary experiments on animals that arc a particular disgrace.
Conflict-mass:
Conflict mass is the total sum of conflict intensity and conflict duration. Conflict mass
indicates whether the individual will or will not survive his healing phase (for example,
heart infarction). A territorial conflict of average strength lasting more than nine months,
or a very intense six months, leads to a resolution, specifically hear! infarction that will, in
all likelihood, be deadly. There is one phenomenon that allows for very little conflict mass
10 accumulate. and that is the bi-hemispheric constellation. A patient with a bi-hemispheric
cerebral conical conflict constellation can have various hanging conflicts bilaterally for
fifteen years and will survive a resolution of the conflicts like a heart infarction. With
conflicts controlled by the old-brain, the conflict mass is directly proportional to the size of
1he nunor. It is the magnitude of the rumor that allows one to conclude on the mass of the
existing conflic1.
Consecutio conflictuum:
tbe sequencing of the conflict. ln the cerebellum, a biological conllict can impact twice on
the same cerebellum side. depending on the area the individual feels is under attack.
Cortical cerebrum conflicts arc different, however. With the exception of the milk-duct,
i.e., mammary duct carcinoma in a separation conflict (mother-child separation conllicl for
right-handed women in the right cortical sensory centre, milk-ducts of the left breast;
separation conflict from a partner, milk-ducts of the right breast, the opposite with left­
handed women). Should there be an incidence of a second conflict in the opposite cortex
while the first conflict is still active, a bi-hemispheric constellation will immediately ensue.
OHS:
A DHS is a highly acute, serious, dramatic and isolating conflict-shock experience, which
catches lbe individual on the wrong foot, (totally surprised). Its unexpected nature is,
therefore, more significant than the 'psychological value content' of the conflict.
Epileptic crisis (EC):
Epileptic tonic-clonic attack, the low point of vagotooy in t:he healing phase after a motor
conflict. The epileptic crisis is the turning point towards re-normalization that will only be
fully achieved at the end of the healing phase. The epileptic crisis is a naturally
programmed, necessary, almost imaginary, conflict-relapse in the middle of the healing­
phase. The patient re-experiences, in compressed time, the entire biological conflict of the
conflict-active phase. Through this, the organism can press out the edemas and re­
normalize (with diuresis phase).
Epileptoid crisis:
With the exception of the motor biological conllicls lhat have an epileptic crisis in the
healing phase (PCL-phasc), basically all diseases known to medicine have an cpileptoid
crisis. Epileptoid means: similar to epilepsy. There are no cramp-attacks in the epilcptoid
crisis as there are for motor conflicts. but each biological type of conflict and disease has
its specific type of epilcptoid crisis. For example, an cpileptoid crisis for a biological

50
pancreas, lungs), the target configuration is more difficult to sec or is outright invisible. In
organs that generate necroses (bones, kidneys, spleen, lymph nodes, ovaries and testes) the
configuration is invisible after a brief period, because it becomes a kind of empty space
that fills up with liquid. After the PCL-phase, it is possible lo distinguish the callus again in
bones, the 'frozen' target configuration. The HH in the brain shows the typical target
edematization in the PCL-phase, when the entire HH swells up. 111e s11bseq11e111 sromge of
glia cells 1h01. later, with c:0111rast medium, sho11• the HH white, apparently shows along
the rings. as 111a11y examples ha,,e clearly s/w\1/11,
Tracks:
When an individual experiences a bio.Iogical conflict th rough a DI-IS, al the moment of the
DHS there is an imprint, not only of the conflict, but also of certain accompanying
circumstances. If one of these situations recurs, he may even experience a rel apse of the
compl ete conflict. It appears that the side track always leads back lo the main track, which
explains its name, 'track'. Example: In fonner days, the first lovem aking almost always
took pl ace in rhc bay. Complications or small catastrophes were frequent on these
occasions. If these disasters caused a DHS, the smell of the hay could become a 'track' in
the conflict complex. After that, wilhout even thinking, every time the affected person
smelled hay, the tracks would be activated again. Most of the time, the first conflict type
was 'this stinks'. The re-activated cases that we call allergies, the ones we test with our
little patches, regularly caused the patient's hay fever in the PCL-phase. This 'hay-lever'
without hay could also have been suftercd by the patient in the PCL-phase bad he
experienced a comparable catastrophe when making love to the same or another woman in
simi l ar circumstances. \!/hat we have here is an very good, extremely attentive warning
system of the organism.
Vagotonia:
Vegetative innervation of the parasympathetic nerve,. also parasympathieonia. The
meaning of lasting vagotony is the same as that of the PCL-phase. The vagus nerve counts
as its own brain nerve, with several branches, such as the nucleus dorsalis, the ambiguus
nerve and the tractus solitarii nerve. Vagolony, (as per Eppinger, Haas 1910): Lasting,
long-term equilibrium shift towards a higher excitability or a predomiuancc of the
parasympathetic system. This was identified in the past as constituliooa l vegetative !ability.
Symptoms: hypotonia, bradycardia, 111iosis, stomach hyperacidity, intestinal colics,
increased saliva{)' secretion. What the NEW MEDICTNE now calls the PCL-pbase was
previously observed but not understood; it was therefore misinterpreted and called
'vegetative !ability' or dystonia. The fact was incontestable; the evn/11a1io11 of the fact was
wrong.

54
continue 10 keep in mind that these old and archaic progression pallems have a definite
meaning which become much clearer if we understand the history of evolution. A patient is
cold, for example, that he has an intestinal carcinoma that must be operated; on average,
two new conflicts develop as a result:
I. An attack against the stomach because it is going to be cut open. A biological conAict
of this type causes a peritoneal carcinoma (this will be discussed under organs
controlled by the mesodermal layer). The peritoneal carcinoma grows in the conflict­
active phase.
2. If rhe patient suffers a solitaiy liver carcinoma, specifically dextro-dorsally, this
corresponds to the archaic fear that no more food will pass through the intesrine
because supposedly there is a blockage. It means that the patient has an archaic fear of
starvation or of having an ileus growth that wi II prevent food from getting through.
Should there be a lapse of 3-4 weeks between the time of the diagnosis and the
operation, the surgeon would nonually find so-called stipple-shaped metastases on the
peritoneum and, if a tomogram of the liver was ordered shortly before or after the
operation, would find the solitary round focus right dorsally on the liver.
Such a condition is oomially declared inoperable, incurable and a case to be given up,
whereas we can systematically and biologically conclude that the paiient has suffered
secondary conflicts iatrogenically because of the diagnosis and subsequent interventions.
More than likely, the surgeon, because of his lack of understanding the interrelationships,
will attempt to cut as much as possible of this round focus and scrape off what he can of
the 'peritoneal metastases'. The patient, if he now believes he has been cleared of the
malignancy, manifests an ascitcs as a sign of his healing, and will then be regarded by the
surgeon and the oncologist as having entered the beginning of his final stage, since the
interconnection of events has not been understood.
In the NEW MEDICfNE, this patient would be treated more carefully from the
psychological, clinical and cerebral points of view. The same diagnosis would be explained
tactfully and with great care. The patient would be made to understand that the condition
was not severe. Since the conflict was not solved, a solution would be sought with the
patient, and then a wait as the sour-resistant rods assisted towards a spontaneous remission
of the intestinal carcinoma. The patient would then not suffer either a liver or a peritoneal
carcinoma. The prognosis would be quite good, even though there arc a small number of
cases with a danger of bowel/intestinal obstruction and where obviously a prophylactic
operation would be required. But the results would almost always be positive, since there
would be no collateral complications.
This is the sequence of events animals go through; they almost never suffer metastases,
a fact that has failed to inspire our physicians or oncologists to do some thinking. If treated
thus, the patient is normally ve1y co-operative. He experiences night-sweats (intestinal
tuberculosis), pays attention to gelling sufficient protein to counteract the protein loss, and
learns how to deal with this kind of conflict for the future and how lo treat it differently
from the very beginning. Needless to say, the majority of surgical interventions would 1101
be required.

56
Archaic fear-of-death
Adeno-carcinoma of the alveoli of the lungs. After the OHS,
the organism generates more special alveolar cells to improve
conflict of inability to get
air (the air/breath is thethe gas exchange in the alveoli. If there are large round foci in
morsel) the lungs, this means that the fear of death conflict bas lasted
too long. Psychologically, the organism has produced too much
'good stuff . Biological meaning: CA-phase. PCL-phasc:
casci_nation with 1nyco-bacteria�ng tbc.
Conflict of inability to Adeno carcinoma of the small or of the large intestine. After the
digest the morsel that is DHS, the organism multiplies the villous cells of the intestine
too large, conflict of to increase digestive juice production. to break-up/digest the
indigestible anger morsel, make it smaller, so that it can pass through. This is
followed by the conflict-resolution, the newly grown but now
unnecessary cells we call a tumor are now caseinated and
eliminated via night-sweats and sub-febrile temperature. We
used to call this intestinal tuberculosis and we still do, but we
did not understand that this was a healing phase following an
imestinal carcinoma. Biological meaning: CA-phase. PCL­
phasc caseination through myco-bacteria and tbc. intestinal tbc.

58
for instance) - causes an edema in the direction ofleast resistance, the direction of the knee
joint. It is easier to diffuse the edema through the knee's cartilage than to stretch the hard
periost. Through defective testing, we failed 10 see the osteolyses near the joints. We
therefore missed the conflict-active phase and consequently misunderstood the healing
phase as a disease in itself, calling it acute joint rheumatism.
The mechanism with bone fractures for us humans is different. For an animal, bone
fracture almost always leads to secondary osteolysis because its ability to run is impeded;
if it is an animal of prey, it will face certain death; if it is a predator, it will probably also
die because it can no longer hunt. For an animal, therefore , a broken leg is a serious matter
of life and death. For us, on the other hand, a fracture is immediately clamped together and
immobilized by a cast or some other method, and we arc confident that everything will be
back to normal in a Jew weeks.
The difference between osteolysis caused by a biological selt:devaluation conflict and a
fracture without a conflict or of a short duration, is that if there is healing after the
osteolysis, there will be marked swelling of the bone, and periostcal lilting or separation.
The fracture presents a callus fom1ation without significant edema. It seems that the
biological purpose in cases of self-devaluation conflicts lies in the healiug-pbase, when the
bone becomes more calciferous and stronger than it was. During the conflict-active phase
the patient only has a limited time to resolve his cootlict or, gruesome as it may sound, he
will become ·food for the lions'.
The same biological purpose applies to the remaining, cerebral medulla controlled
diseases such as the lymph nodes, renal parenchyma, interstitial ovarian and testicular
tissues, etc. Evidently, their main reason lies in the healing-phase. With the kidney, the
indurated renal cyst evemually produces urine; this repairs the kidney for better urine
production than it had before the disease. We have already mentioned this mechanism.
Some urologists of the old medicine confirmed this fact after testing some of my
conclusions. As a result, renal cysts are now operated on far less frequently than before.
The same goes for ovarian and interstitial ovarian necrosis (with attached ovarian or
testicular cysts). The indurated interstitial ovarian cyst eventually produces so much
estrogen that a woman looks ten to twenty years younger. It does the same, conversely, for
a man. His enlarged testicle produces so much more testosterone that he becomes more
'masculine' than before.
Once again I must stress that this new perspective is not my discovery; it accords
completely with evolutionary history and with known facts. These facts must now be re­
evaluated. A professor of histopatbology in Southern Germany once told me that, with a
microscope, it is frankly impossible to see if the callus cells derive from a fracture, an
osteosarcoma or from acute joint rheumatism. He normally appends the designation
'malignant' or 'benign' after examining an x-ray. We may have over-estimated our
histopathologists. I can think of a number of cases of histological findings that came back
revised once they bad been re-analyzed.

60
12.Icural effusion.
Example: an intern: ,,Your ECG is odd, The organism develops a mcsothclioma as
something's wrong with your heart." The an attack defence in the CA-phase,
patient suffers a DI-IS with a mental anack pericardia I mesothelioma. Biological
against his heart. He imagines a bypass meaning: CA-phase. PCL-phase: pericardia!
operation (something that happened to his effusion, pericardia! tamponade = heart
neighbour). insufficiency. Frequent cause for another
OHS. (Pericardia! track)

10.2 Comments and explanation of the conflicts and


tumors of the mesodermal cerebral medulla
directed organs

schematic CT-section of the


skeleton
cerebral medulla skeleton
rjght body side left body side

arm

cervical spine ..
I
, ., _,...;y
.. ,tr� �! J ·-.. cerv ical spine

shoulder ; { ) \ shoulder

thoracic spine- /
N l
t'thoracic spine
lumbar spine lumbar spine
-,-__!;:;:\

pelvis pelvis

knee '\. i: i •' knee

..: "
tioot ... 1
1, :,\ > fbot

adrenalin grand
right testicle left testicle
right ovary left ovary

62
are always specific for one breast in tbe case of separation, quarrel or worry, but they show
an exception in that they also react strongly in cerebral cont1ict sequence. This is why we
can see the female breast as a linked system between cerebellum and cerebrum and that it
is always strictly conflict related, not necessarily tied to the usual conflict ordering
relationship. Thus, the left breast for the right-handed woman is aftected: be it a worry or a
quarrel with a child, as weU as a separation conflict from it. That is why we are not
surprised to find the encroaching process between co1tical motor paralysis, wbich is
ascribed to the outer germ layer, and the so-called muscular atrophy, classed with the
middle germ-layer, din:ctcd by the cerebral medulla. This coupling, which should be called
a complex event, was the cause for the incorrect diagnosis of ·multiple sclerosis', with foci
frequently affecting muscle groups. as well as !he related skeletal parts, mistakenly seen as
the cause of motor or seosory paralysis.
It is obvious that the oldest pans of the brain namrally contain the most archaic conflicts
and conflict-contents. As we move higher in phylogenetic evolution, our brains develop
more complicated programs.
The cortical programs or our cerebrum are ihe most complex. The NEW MEDICINE.
with its three levels of psyche, brain and organ, is structured virtually parallel with
evolutionary logic:
from the archaically oldest programs of our brain-stem to the somewhat more
complicated conflict contems of the cerebellum. 10 considerably more complex conflict
contents of the cerebral medulla on to the most complex conical conflict contents directed
by tbe cerebral cortex. We think and teel with all pans of our brain, but these areas arc
differentiated by their reaction lO the contlict-contcnts.

11.1 The conflicts of the outer germ-layer (ectoderm)


and the biological meaning of these special
programs of Nature
It would be inappropriate to recapitulate the whole chart once again. Instead, I will give
specific examples of the earlier biological meaning of these so-called diseases; some of
these meanings still apply today. Our cortical conflicts begLn with the 16th/I 7th day of our
embryonal ontogenesis, with the so-cMlled three germ layer embryonic disk. It all began
millions of years ago in the phylogenesis. when the addition of the cerebrum started a new
era in our evolution.
From an evolutionary point of view, as far as the biological special programs of narure are
concerned, we see an absolutely breathtaking development:
I. Conflicts and orgau modifications of the endodenn contrnlled by the old brain and of
the mcsodenn controlled by the cerebellum. Biological meaning unequivocally in the
conflict active phase. In the PCL-phase the now unoecessary tumor is removed in a
significant manner by microbes.
2. Cerebral medulla contlicts and organ transformations of the mesodernial organs
comrolled by the medulla of the cerebrum. Biological meaning unequivocally in the
PCL-phasc, but with the lymph-node organs, both phases of disease have their special
meaning.
3. Cerebral cortex directed contlicts and organ modifications of the ectoderm. The
biological meaning here is the same as with the old brain directed organs,
unequivocally in the CA-pbasc; however, this is accomplished by the opposite action
from that of the old brain-directed organs, which show mitoses and cell multiplication.
In this case, there are necroses or ulcers. Here too. it is necessary to recognize the

66
3. Possibiliry:
What happens if the conflict can never be resolved? Again, two possibilities:
a) With full conflict strength the individual attacks over and over again until ii fiDally dies
of exhaustion or is killed by its opponelll; or
b) The individual acconunodates itself to its conflict (i.e., becomes a second woll). The
conf1ict becomes downgraded, always active, but not serious. The individual has an
ongoing but light angina pecioris, which he can live with. We call this a 'hanging
conflict'. The individual can reach his full life span but he is, so 10 speak, permanently
·cerebrally castrated'. The Behavioural Researchers say that such a second wolf may
not raise his tail, lili his leg to urinate or growl in the leader's presence. This second
wolf has no more contact with she-wolves and may not mount them. ln human terms.
the second wolf is homosexual. This is Mother Nature's solution for building the
pack's social St{1.lcture. It is certain that such an individual cannot claim a leadership
position. for it would immediately die of a heart infarction.
4. Possibility:
Schizophrenic consteUation:
The individual is knocked out of competition by receiving a second active cortical eonf1ict
in the left cerebral hemisphere after an existing right temporal territorial conf1ict. No one
pays ancntion to a madman, or, for that matter, to an animal; they, too, can have this
schizophrenic constellation. Such a person or animal is 'potty', a clown, and the boss'
court jester, right out of competition. Y ct this has a specific Biological meaning
ln the event of a catastrophe. such as if the leader of the pack is gored by a wild boar and
there is no young (cerebrally uncastrated) wolf to Lake over. then the individual in
schizophrenic constellation can take control of the pack, for a while or forever. Because of
the schizophrenic constellation, almost no conflict mass has accumulaced and he will not
die from a heart infarction as would a 'second woll'. The wolf in schizophrenic
constellation therefore represents the security or the 'spare' for the pack, in the case of
need. It would lake too long in this brief summation of the NEW MEDICINE to explore all
cortical conJlicts from the poim of view of their biological me,ming.
Let us describe two other complex conflicts thac allow us to study the so- called 'trncks'.

11.1.2 Hearing conflict, tinnitus


,,l don't believe my ears; what r heard can't be ime!·'
For instance: A patient. driving from Brussels to Aachen iii the autumn of 1992, fell asleep
at the wheel at approximately 3 a.m. He may have travelled at 120 km an hour for half a
kilometre with his eyes closed, and then dropped his speed to l 00 km an hour. The
f
diferent sound of the engine woke him up, as any experienced driver can understand. The
patient received a DHS as he woke io absolute fright. with tinnitus in his lel'l ear. This
probably saved his life! To expr:ess it more precisely, the patient now had a double set of
tracks. He always got tinnitus when he was tired and driving and the speed of the car fell
below 120 km/hr., but he also got it upon awakening in the mornings. The biological
meaning must be sought in the CA-phase. for it lies in the warning function: pay auention,
don't fall asleep! Pay attention, the car is slowing down. Later, be would even have tinnitus
when the car changed its engine noise through deceleration. Since the patielll only had
minor relapses, he suffered the occasional short apoplectifonn deafness in the PCL-phasc,
which was not particularly dillicull.

68
Amenorrhea = oeriod loss in women r.l.a.3, 4.A
Anaemia= low red blood cell count o.r. + l.b.4
Anaemia foseudo) o.r.+ l.b.4
Anaesthesia= disn1p1ion of skin sensitivity r.r.+ 1.9.C.a
Angina pecroris = pains in the heart area with anxiety and r.r.+l.a.2
constrictiot1
Anicteric hepatitis= liver-bile duct-inlJammation, no yellow skin r.r.a.4.B
or sclcra
Anosmia = loss of sense of smell r.r.+ J.b.4
Anuria = absence of urine- formation r.r.+ l.a.6,8
Aooendicitis I v.21
Annendix = ileus . v.21
Appendix cecal appendage
=
lv.21
Annend ix obstruction _Y.-21
Annendix oerforaiion y.21
Anncndix. Ca of the annendix lv.21
Aqueduct = connecting channel filled with cerebro-spinal nuid r.r. + Lb. I
located between the 3rd and 4th vemriclcs
Aoucduct comoression r.r.+ Lb. I
Arm muscle atroohv o.r.b.12, I .b.11
Arm muscle paralysis -------------l-r.r. + l.b.3
Arrhythmia irre •ularitv of the heart beat
= r.r.a.3
Arteriosclerosis= calcification of the arteries o.r.b.9, 1.b.8
Arteriosclerotic plaque= a layer of connective tissue and calcium I o.r.b.9, l.b.8
deposits
Arterial wall necrosis o.r.b.9. l .b.8
Arterial blood vessel necrosis l().r.b._2_Jb.8
Arterv o.r.b.9, l.b.8
Ascitcs = abdominal droosv o.r.+ l.a.7
Asthma. laryngeal r.l.a.2
Asthma r.r. + I.a.?
Asthma. bronchial r.r.a.2
Atelectasis = total or partial alveolar blockage by occlusion of a r.r.a.2
bronchus. alveoli exnand onlv oaniallv or not at ,ill
Arhe.rorna r.r.+ 1.9.C.a
Atroehy = tissue and organ wasting o.r.b.12. l.b.11
Atronbv of tbc muscles or the ann o r b 12, 1 b 11
Autonomous nervous svstem = involumar nervous svstcm
v r.r.+ 1.9.C.b
Basedow's disease y_. 7
Benign= non malignant
Beta islet cells, cells of Langerhans r.r.b.2
Bilirubin = the oran!!e-vellow pigment of bile r.r.a.4.B
Bladder, bleedin�storrhagia) r.r.+ l.a.5
Bladder carcinoma. submucosal v.29
Bladder catheter= tube used to extract urine from the bladder r.r. + l.a.8
Bladder inflammation = cystitis v. 29
Bladder oains r.r.+ l.a.5
Bladder oolvos v.29
Bladder spasms r.r.+ l.a.5

72
1ubcrculosis
Cavem, lung- = a hole resulting from caseation Ill lung y.13 A
tuberculosis
Centralization = narrowing of the lumen of peripheral blood r.r.+ I.a 3
vessels
Cerebral coma, soecified in r.r.a.4.B
Cervical sninc o.r. + l.b.4
Cervix r.l.a.3
Cervix ulcennin2 carcinoma r. l.a.3
Chondro-sarcoma = uew 2rowth of cartilage tissue o.r.+ l.b.?
Cirrhosis, atronhv, shrinkage of 1he kiduey o.r.+ I.e. I
Cold (catarrh), ounilent r.r.+ 1.13
Collu111-uteri-carci11oma = cervical cancer r.l.a.3
Colon = the portion of the large intestine belweeu 1he caecum y.22
and the rectum
Colon carcinoma v. 22
ConiuJJctiva = connective 1issue of the eve
Couiunctivitis = intlammation of the couoectivc tissue ofihe eve r.r.+ 1.9.A.c
Con.oec1ive tissue carcinoma o.r.+ l.b. I
Connective tissue necrosis o.r.+ l.b. I
Corium = dermis
Corium carcinoma o.r.+ I.a. I
Comca, ooacit v,clm1din12 r.r. + 1.9.A.e
Cornea. ulceration r.r.+ 1.9.A.e
Coronal = referring to the heart r.r.+ l.a.3
Comnarv arteries = heart arteries r.r.a.3
Coronary artcrv stcnosis = na1Towine. of the coronarv arteries r.r.a.3
Coronarv arterv ulceratin!! carciuoma r.r.a.3
Coronarv vein ulceration r.l.a.3
Corous uteri = womb. utenis v.26
Corous uteri carcinoma v.26
Corous vitrcum = vitreous humor of the eve r.r.+ l.b.6
Cortex = cerebral cortex
Cortisol = adrenal cortex hormone o.r.b.8, l.b.7
Cou!!hioe; r.r.-i· 1.a,2
Cranial vault o.r. + 1.b.4
Crohn. morbus v.19, 20
Curvature= defom1itv
Cushing syndrome = healing phase aflcr necrosis of the adrenal o.r.b.8, l.b.7
cortex, i.e., a cyst of the adrenal cortex. The cyst produces more
cortisol; therefore,an increase of hair 11:rowth
Cvst, cavern with liauid or viscous contents
Cvstitis = inflammation of the urinarv bladder v.29
Deafness. hearing of r.r.+ l.b.5
Deafness, hearing, above all bad hearing v.9.10,A+
Deafness. sensation of r.r.+ l.b.7.9.A.a. +Ca
Death fri!I.ht conflict v.13.A
Death frio:ht conflict, as svmotom ofthe PCL-ohase, listed under r. r.+ l.a.3
n�"itlna = nhvsiolo2ic !ffO\Vth of the uterine mucosa under y.29

74
ffSf-D hon:nonal inllucnce
Dental, chani,cd sensitivitv wannicold, sweet/ sour r.r.+ 1.10
Dental, dentin, cancer, o.r.+ l.b.5
Demal, dentin, caries o.r.+ l.b.5
Dental, dentin, ostenlvsis r.r.+ l.b.5
Dental, enamel r.r.+ I. I 0.12.B
Dental, enamel caries r.r.+ I.I 0.12.B
Dental, enamel, necrosis r.r.+ 1.10
Deoression r.r. + l.a.3: r.r.b. I
Dennatitis = inflammation of the skin r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Dennis. carcinoma o.r.- I.a. I
Diabetes mel Iitus r.r.b.?
Diastase= nancreatic iuice enzvme. r.r.4.C
Dienccohalon = midbrain
Diencenhalon. comore.ssion of the aoucducL r.r.+ l.b.I
Diseases of the skin r.r.+ 1.9.A.a; o.r.+
l.a.1,2,3
Disnirbed Lhouohts r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Dooamine = hormone of tbe adrenal medulla r.r.+ 1.9. C.b
Ducts of the pharyngeal arch = rudimentary ducts. in evolution r.r. a. I
the oman used bv fish for resoiration
Ducts of the pharyngeal arch, squamous epithelium carcinoma r.r.a. l
(c.f. branchial arch)
Duodenum = sunerior oortion of the small intestine v.16; r.r.a.4.A
Duodenum carcinoma (without bulb) v.16
Duodenum ulceration r.r.a.4.A
Dvschondosis = cartilage disease with nroorcssive deterioration o.r.+ l.b.2
DysQnea = reSQiratorv distress r.l.a.h3
DystoQic = congenital mis12laccment in organ location v. 24
Dystro12hy = irrcgularitv in nonnal !!rowth r.r.+ l.b.3
Ear drum v.9 + 10
Eardrum, nerforation v.10
Ear, discharging v.10
Ears, ooor hearing v.9,I 0; r,r,+ l,b,5
Ears. ringin!! = tinnitus r.r.+ l.b.5
ECG= electTOcardio!!ram = measurement of heart currents r.r.a.3
ECG, disturbances r.r.a.3
Eczema r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Edema= strong tissue fluid deoosits
Efllorescence = a tvoe of skin rash r.r.+ l.b.3
Embolism= occlusion of a blood vesst:I throtJPh a olu!! r. I .a.3
Endocardium = internal wall of the heart o.r.+ l.c.4
Endocardium, necrosis o.r.+ l.c.4
Endometrium = mucosa oftbc uterus v.26
Eoilentic attacks r.r.+ l.b.3
n
E ilclJtic crisis. listed under r.r.+ l.a.3
Epileptoid crisis, lisLed under r.r -'- ' l.a.3,b.2 -3,
r.a.4.A + B + C
Epiploon = omennun, great peritonea.1 fold y.25

75
EQilhelium = t(lQ layer of the skin and of lhc mucosae
Enithelcal ulceration of the skin r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Esoohae:us = too oan of the alimcmarv canal r.r.+ 1.14; y_.14
Esonha11us, carcinoma (lower third) v.14
EsoQhagus, stenosis r r+l b l4
Esonhagus, ulcerating cMcinoma (too '>/3) r.r.+ 1.14
Esonhagus, varices v.14
Eustachian tubes carcinoma v.9
Enthvreote = thvroid gland cvst r.l.a. l
Eutlwroid = nonnal function of the thvroid r.l.a. l
Eutlwroid struma r. I .a. I
Exanthema = acule. tcrnporarv skin rash r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Exnirat i. on = letting air oul of the lum?S r.r.a.2
Exnirmion, gasoin!!. r.r.a.2
Extraheoatic = outside the liver r.r.a.4.B
Ex1rahcnatic bile duct ulccratirn.! carcinoma rra4B
Exudate(e.ffusion)= fluid elimination from tissues o.r. + l.a.5+6
Eveball r.r.+ l.b.6
Eves. nmnel vision r.r.+ l.b.7
Eyes, dry_ v.11: r.r.+ 1.15
Eves, inflammation, coniunctivitis r.r.+ l.9.A.c
Eves lachrvmatin!! r.r. + l.15
_fu:es. lens r.r.+ 1.9.A.c
Eves, lids r.r.+ 1.9.A.c
Eves, noor vision r.r.+ l.b.6, 9.A.d+e
Eves, SU"')urativc, lachrvmating v.l I
Facialis = nerve of lhe face r.r.+ l.b.3
Facialis. narcsis r.r.+ l.b.3
Fallonian tube, carcinoma v.28
Fallooian tube. obstruction v.28
fatigue stress o.r.b.8. l.b. 7
Fibrillation = irregular contraction of the cardiac muscle r.l.a.3
Fila ol facioria = multiQle small endings of lhc olfactorv nerve r.r.+ l.b.4
Fluor= discharne v.26. 23; r.1.a.4.A
Fluor vaginalis= vaginal discharge, leucorrhea r.l. a.4; v.?6. 28
foot r.r + l.b.3; o.r.+ l.b4;
r.b.12, l.b.1 1
Fovea centralis = 'central pit'. retinal point with the greatest r.r. 1· I. b.6
visual acuitv
furunculosis = abscesses of the connective or adioosc tissue o.r.+ l.b. l
Gallbladder r.r.a.4.B
Gallbladder. biliarv stasis r.r.a.4.B
Gallbladder, colics r.r.a.4.B
Gamma gt = enzyme r.r.a.4.B
Germ-line-cell tcratoma v.32
Glandula sublingualis = sublingual salivarv !!land v.4· r.r.+ 1.1.17
laucoma -. .r. l.b.7
G ------------------�r +
Glioma = multiplication of glia (glial tissue = supporting tissue r.r.+ 1.9.C.a
I
of the nervous system)

76
Hvnosmia= loss of smell r.r.+ l.b.4
latroe:enic = caused bv the nhvsician o.r.+ l.a.4
lctcric hepatitis = inflammation of the hepatic ducts with r.r.a.4.B
iaundice
lctcrns= jaundice r.r.a.4.B
Ileum= lower oortion of the small intestine 1 v.19+20
Ileum carcinoma lv.20
Beus= occlusion, mechanical y. 19, 20, 21, 22, 23;
o.r. + l.c.2
lieus, aQQendix I v. 21
IJeus, naralvtic o.r.-� l.c.2
Inner navel (onmhalocoele) carcinoma v.31
Inner ation, ner e sunnlv
v v

Insufficiet1cy. lower than required function in an organ, listed o.r.+ l.a.5


under
1.nsulin r.r.b.2
Interstitial= in between tissues
lmestinal = oertainimi 10 the uastro-intestinal tract
lntestinal bleeding v. I 9, 20. 22, 23
Intestinal colics o.r. + l.c.3
lntestinal musculature necrosis o.r.+ 1.c.3
Intestinal oaralvsis o.r. + 1.c.3
Intestinal peristalsis = serial contractions of smooth muscle o.r.+ l.c.3
forces food through the digestive tract
lntima = inner wall of blood vessels o.r.b.9, l.b.8
lntrabronehial = in the bronchial branches r.r.a.2
lntrabronehial ulceration r.r.a.2
Jntrabronchial, carcinoma of the souamous enithelium r.r.a.2
Intrnductal mammary carcinoma cancer in the milk ducts of the r.r.+ 1.9.B
=

breast
lntraheoatic= in tbe liver r.r.a.4.B
lntraheoatic, ulceratin12 carcinoma of the heoatic ducts r.r.a.4.8
Jei unum = middle nortion of the small intestine lv.19
Joint, rheumatism o.r.+ l.b.4
Keioids= proliferation of scar tissue o.r. + l.b. l
Keratitis= inflammation of the cornea r.r.= 1.9.A.c
Kidnevs, blocka11e r.r.+ l.a.6
K.idoevs, cavities (caverns) v.30
K.idncvs, colics r.r + l.a.6 + 7
Kidnevs, collcctin!! ntbules, carcinoma v.30
Kidnevs, cvsts o.r.l.c. I
Kidnevs, oains r.r.+ 1.a.7
Kidncvs. oarenchvmatous necrosis o.r.+ Le.I
Kidnci::s, renal calyx I v.30: r.r.+ l.a.7
Kidnevs. renal calvx, enlarr,ed lv.30
Kidnevs. renal oelvis r.r.+ l.a.6+ 7; v.30
Kidnevs, soasms r.r. + l.a.7
Kidnevs. stones (renal calculi) r.r.+ l.a.6 + 7
Kidnevs. tuberculosis of y.30

78
Mediastinal thyroid Qland cvsts r.l.a. l
Mediastinum= soace between the lungs r.l.a. l
Melanoma= tumor originating in the ni2ment cells o.r. + I.a. I
Menstmation = oeriod v.26· r.l.a.3 + 4 A
Menstrual haemorrhaging = neriod bleeding v.26· r.a.3
Mesothclioma = tumor of the pericardium, pleura or peritoneum o.r.+ l.a.5.6, 7
(adenoid)
Mesothclioma, pericardium o.r + l.a.5
Mcsothelioma, peritoneum o.r.+ l.a.7
Mcsotbelioma. nleura o.r.+ l.a.6
Metastasis = according to conventional medicine, secondary o.r.+ l.a.5
growths
Middle ear. carcinoma lv.10
Middle ear. inflammation v.9 + 10
Milk ducts. occluded r.r + 1.9.B
Mitosis= indirect cell division
Morbus Addison, (Addison's disease) = disease of the adrenal o.r.b.8, l.b.7
!!land cortex
Morbus Crohn, (Crohn's disease) = intlanunation of the y.19+ 20
intestinal mucosa together with mucosa) sunnuration
Morbus Parkinson, (Parkinson's disease) r.r.+ l.b.3
Motor= regarding movement
Motor MS r.r.+ l.b.3
Motor paralysis of the arms, legs, hands, back, shoulders and r.r.+ l.b.3
face
MS= multiple sclerosis o.r.b.12, l.b.11, r.r. +
l.b.3
MS, motor r.r.+ l.b.3
Mucoviscidosis (cvstic fibrosis) I v.3, 4, 1 L 1 3
Mumos r.r. + 1.16
Muscle. atroohv o.r.b.12, l.b.11
Muscle, dvstroohv r.r. + l.b.3
Muscle, hvoertroohv o.r.b.12, l.b.11
Muscle, recoverv /restitution) o.r.b.12, l.b.11
Musculature o.r.+ l.c.2, r.b.12, Lb. I I,
r.r.+ l.b. 3
Mvcosis = disease with funQal occurrence v.1-32; o. r. + La. I
Neck of the femur o.r.+ Lb.I
Necrosis localized death of tissue.
=

Necrosis of the arterial blood vessels o.r.b.9, Lb.8


Necrosis of the walls of the arteries o.r.b.9, l.b.8
Neuralgia nerve oain
= r.r. -1· 1.9.A.a
Ncurinoma = proliferation of the connective tissue in the neural r.r.+ l.b.5
sheath
Neuroblastoma = adrenal cortex ovcn>rowth r.r.+ 1.9. C.b
Neurodcrmatitis = desquamation of the skin in the conflict active r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
phase, in longer duration the.re is a thickening and hardening of
the skin
Neurofibrorna - oroli fcration of the connective tissue in the r.r.+ L9.C

80
Shoulder o.r.+ l.b.4
Shoulder, musculature r.r.+ l.b.3
Sigmoid carcinoma = carcinoma of the pelvic colon = colon y.23
cancer
Sigmoid colon = pelvic colon = lower portion of the large y.23
intestine
Sinus naranasal r.r. + I. 13
Sinus. naranasal, ulcerating carcinoma r.r. + 1.1 3
Skeleton o.r. + l.b.4
Skin sensitivitv r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Sleenlessness listed under: r.r.+ Lb. I
Small intestine carcinoma. unner V. 1 9
Small intestine. lower v.20
Smooth muscle, necrosis of the intestine o.r + 1.c.2
Solitarv = single annearance
Snasm = cramoin!!
Soleen, cancer of o.r.b.7
Soleeo. holes in o.r.b.7
Soleen necrosis o.r.b.7
Solenomcoalv = swellin<> oftbe soleen o.r.b.7
Soontancous fractures o.r.+ l.b.4
Squamous epithelium = e.g. the epidermis is constrncted of
!avers of squamous enithelium
Stenosis = narrowinE!
Stomach carcinoma, without the small curvature v.15
Stomach, colics r.r.a.4.A
Stomach, nains r.r.a.4.A
Stomach, ulcerating carcinoma r.r.a.4.A
Stomach, ulceration, bleedinll. r.r.a.4.A
Stomatocase, ulcerative stomatitis = ulcerations in the mouth v.12
Stool, black = melaena r.r.a.4.A; v.19
Striated musculature, necrosis o.r.b.1 2, l .b.1 1
Stroke r.l.b.3
Strnma = troitre r.l.a.l
Struma. i>oitre. benign euthvroid r.l.a. I
Struma, hard = hvnerthvroid eoitre v.7+8
Sublini>ual 12land
Sublineual 12land, carcinoma lv.4
Sublinm,al 12land, ducts of. ulcerating carcinoma r.r.+ 1.17
Sublinvual salivarv !!land, carcinoma v.4
Sublingual salivarv ll.land. ducts, ulccratin!! carcinoma v.4: r.r.+ 1.1.17
Submucous = under the mucosa
Suicidal = wishing to kill oneself, especially in schizophrenic r.r.b.l
constellation
Swallowing= de!!lutition, spa�ms r.r.+ 1.14
Swallowin!! stenosis r.r. + 1.14
Svmoathctic tract see neuro12an!!lia
= r.r.+ 1.9.C.b
Tachycardia = abnormal increased working of the heart withI r.l.a.3
palpitations

84
Tamponade = compression of the heart as 1he pericardium fills o.r.-'- l.a.5
-th Ii uid
r.r.+ I.I 5,
.11
Tears. viscositv lr.r.+ I. 15, v.11
Teeth, changed sensitivitv, warm/cold, sweet/ sour r.r.+ 1.10
Teeth. dentin, cancer, o.r. + l.b.:i.
Teeth. dentin, caries o.r.+ 1.b.5
Teeth. dentin, osteolysis I
r.r.+ 1.b.s
Teeth, enamel I
r.r..,. I.Io.I 2.B
Teeth. enamel, caries I
r.r.+ I.I0, 12.B
Teeth, enamel, necrosis lr.r.+ I.IO
Tendon necrosis lo.r+l
. .b3 .
Teratoma, a tumor composed of different kinds of tissue _ none y.32
of which usually occur at the siic of the tumor, most common in
tlie ovaries and testes
Testicular carcinoma o.r.b.14: l.b.13
Testicular cvsts o.r.b. I 4; l.b.13
Testicular swelling o.r.b.14; l.b.1 3
Testicular teratoma v.32
Testes = 1esticles v.32
Testes, teratoma v.32
Thalamus = part of the midbrain with important centres and r.r. + l.a.5
nuclei,
Thrombocytes = blood platelets; having an important role in o.r.b.7
coarrulation
Thrombocvtooenia = reduced blood olatelet sunnly o.r.b.7
Thrombophlebitis = inflammation of the wall of a vcm with o.r.b. l0, l.b.9
blood clot formation
Thrombus = blood clot r.1.a.3
Thrombus, embolism = a clot causing an occlusion in the small r.1.a.3, o.r.b.7
blood vessels and capillaries
Thvroid carcinoma, acinar oortion v. 7
Thvroid cvsts r.l.a. l
Thvroid nodes v.7
Thvroid. cold nodes r.1.a. I
Thyroid, function. increased= h);)2Crthyroid or thyrotoxicosis v.7
Thvrotoxicosis = increased function of 1hc thyroid !!land v.7
Tinnitus = ringing in the ears r.r.+ Lb 5
Tongue v. 12; r.r. + l.12.A
Tongue mucosa of haemorrhage v.12; r.r.+ 1.12.A
Tongue, mucosa of_ ulcerating carcinoma r.r.+ 1.12 A
Tonsillitis= inflammation of the tonsils v.6
Tonsils, v.6
Tonsils. abscess v.6
Tonsils, carcinoma of v.6
Tonsils, enlarizcd v.6
Tonsils, hvncrolasia = excessive rrrowth of the tonsils v.6
Tonsils, mycosis ly.6

85
To1Jsils, ourulenc v.6
Transverse lesion of the chord, with oaraolegia r.r. + l.b.3
Trigeminal neura!Pia r.r.+ 1.9.A.a
Trigeminus = fifth cranial nerve r.r.+ 1.9.A.b.+ c
Tubal = concernin,;, fallonian tubes v.28
Tubal carcinoma v.28
Tuberculosis = the healing phase of diseases directed by the old
brain
Tubules= collectin" tubes of the kidnevs v.30
Ulceration = abscess or boil
Umbilical carcinoma, internal v.31
Umbilicus. carcinoma of the inner Laver v.31
Ureter r.r.+ l.a.6
Ureter v.27; r.r.+ l.a.5
Ureter, occlusion r.r.+ l.a.6
Ureter, nartial occlusion v.27
Ureter, snasms r.r.+ 1.a.8
Ureter, total occlusion r.r.+ 1.8
Ureter, ulceration r.r + l.a.6
Urethra, y_.27, r.r. + l.a.8
Urethra, nartial occlusion v.27
Urethra, total occlusion r.r.+ 1.8
Urethra, ulccratin!! carcinoma r.r.+ 1.8
Urinarv bladder v 29; r.r.+ l.a.5
Uri.narv bladder, submucosal carcinoma v.29
Urioarv bladder, ulceratiol! carcinoma r.r.+ l.a.5
Urine, nroblems voidine v.27, r.r. + 1.a.6 + 8
Urticaria= nettle rash r.r.+ 1.9.A
Uierus = womb o.r.+ l.c.3; v.26
Uterus, mucosa, carcinoma v.26
Uterus, musculature, necrosis o.r. + l.c.3
Uterus, mvoma = growths of the smooth muscle cells o. r. + l.c.3
Vagina r.l.a.4.A
Vaginal haemorrhage r.l.a.4.A.+ 3.8; v.26
Va!!ina, ulcerative carcinoma r.l.a.4.A
Va!!ina, ulcerative carcinoma. nains r.l.a.4.A
Vaeina, ulcerative carcinoma, snasms r.l.a.4.A
Va!!inismus = nainful va2:inal snasms r.l.a.4.A
Varicose veins o.r.b. I0, l.b.9
Varicosities o.r.b.10, l.b.9; v.14
Ve!!etation (adenoids) of the oosterior pharvnneal cavitv v.l
Ve2etative = oart of the nervous system
Vegetative, massive irnoaim1ent of r.r.+ l.b. I
Veins o.r.b. 10, l.b.9, r.l.a.3
Venous vessel, necrosis of o.r.b.10, l.b.9
Venniform annendix, carcinoma = annendix carcinoma v.21
Vision, dete1iorat.ion of r.r.+ l.b.6
Visual acuitv
Visual acuity. loss of r.r. + l.b.6

86
Vitili go r.r.+ 1.9.A.f
Vitreous humour of the eve = corous vitreum r.r. + I. b. 7
Vocal cl:lords r.1.2
Vocal cl:lords, altered r.1.a.2
Vocal chords, oolvos of r.l.a.2
Vomit = emesis r.r.a.4.A
Waterhouse-Friedrichsen syndrome = necrosis of the adrenal o.r.b.8, l.b. 7
cortex

87

13 The 'Hamerschen Herde' (HH)


Ever since the introduction of brain CT's, aggregations of glial tissue that are easy to
colour with contrast media, have usually been misdiagnosed as brain tumors.
lo 1982, a year after the discovery of the lron Rule of Cancer, l found a
Hamerschenherd (H 1-1) of gigantic proportions in a prospective patiem with a t.erritorial
conflict who had suffered a heart infarction and was in the epileptoid crisis. From that
moment, I knew that these could not be brain tumors but a phenomenon that must be
associated with the healing phase of a biological conflict.
Hamerschenherd is a tenn originating from my opponenlS who derogat0rily named the
stmctures l had found in the brain 'comical Hamer Foci'. I started to observe these HH's
with meticulous care and soon recognized those that were apparently activated at the start
of the healing phase.
Since I had discovered the law of the two phased-ness of disease, I knew that every
developing healing pha.�e has had a corresponding conflict-active phase.
Unfortunately for many patients, the repair of HH's in the healing phase occurs through
an accumulation of coanective tissue glia cells. This create.s an increased rigidity of ihe
(brain) tissue but (the patient) remains free of complication as long as another conflict does
not take place in the same location.
However, enormous difficulties arise:
I. With respect to cancer - which I concentrated oo at the time because I thought I had
merely discovered the mechanisms of its origin - it was aoi common to have CT's ofihc
brain done unless there were grounds to suspeci a brain met.astasis. 11 was difficult in
particular cases to obtain a brain CT because its high cost could not be justified. Oae
was really lucky ifa series ofCT"s of the brain could be obtained.
2. I immediately began work on establishing a topography of HH"s in the brain. This was
difficult because whal I saw in the brain could well be the result of an old and resolved
process, unrelated to the patiem·s curreal conflict. I also didn't know whether or not tbe
patient had any otber undiagaosed carcinomas - a strong possibility with respect to
processes connected to biological conOi.cts occurring in the present.
3. I found overlapping conflicts with similar conflict contents, which I know today to have
covered several relays with one single !-IH. This means that the patient suffered one or
more conflicts with various conflict aspects that had all impacted in the same second of
the DHS, resulting in a large HH.
At tbe same time there were patients who had several HH's in very differeat locations in
the brain. However. these had one thing in common where the patient demonstrated all
the symptoms ofa resolved PCL phase.
4. There had to be formations in the brain that corresponded to all these HI-l's in the
healing phase - fonnatioas that would identify conflicts in the active phase. Sometimes
I saw circles that looked like target-rings, but radiologists smilingly rejected them as
circular artifacts created by the equipment. I also saw semicircular stmctures and those
limited by the lateral frame of the CT.
5. Co-operation from radiologists was practically non-existent. Some of them had
radiation equipment and practised so-called radiation therapy. These former colleagues
could not afford to consider that my results had any validity. The rest told me point­
blank - and not many radiologists had CT equipment at the time - that they would stop
getting work from clinics the momeal they considered my theories. Orders for CT's
were normally exclusively to look for a brain tumor or a brain metastasis.

89
establish the cri teria for when something was an artifact and when it was not. Mr. Feindor,
an engineer, had no problems in establishing the conditions under which it would be
possible to folfill or not 10 fulfill one or other case. This took place on 1be 18111 of
December 1989. On the 22nd of December, the final protocol was signed. There was real
panic among neuro-radiologists. We felt it in the New Year when we planned a set of tests
t0 be undertaken at Siemens. l asked Mr. Feindor to allow me the use of the equi pment in
Erlangen to ru11 a series of tests for about four weeks. We would invite a group of ncuro­
radiologists and sbow them that the demonstrated cases could not be artifacts but facrual
findings.
The appointed date was postponed again and again until finally a Siemens'
representative told me ihey were having the most incredible difficulties with the
radiologists. Disapproval was undou btedly being voiced.
ln preparation for the conference, we carried out all the studies originally stipulated with
Siemens, such as moving the CT-Scan patient 2 cm 10 the right from centre or 10 the left of
centre to dctennine whether the target configuration would stay in the same place on the
brain, which it actually di d. \Ve also tried to carry out distance control wherever possible
by systematically checking with different equipm ent to determine which setting showed
the target configuration.
A dependable criterion for a real finding was if the target configuration only appeared in
a determined number of layers but not in others. These studies, which took a lot of time,
effort and persuasion of the radiologists, led us to an amazing discovery: one of the
radiologi sts indicated th at they really must be arlifacts, because he had also seen them on
organs.
From that moment, l was intensely i nte rested in target configurations on organs and
began systematically to look for them. I found th at target config urations that can be seen
on tbe compact organs on which we can do CT's - the liver, the spleen, the parenchy ma of
the kidneys, bones, etc. - are only vis i ble at the beginning. They eventually becom e visi ble
again when the bone re-calcifies. So was revealed the astonishing fact lhai the brain and
the organ often have target configurations in simultaneous correspondence and the target
configuration on the organ has a specific development. The classical target configurati on
on the liver can only be seen at Lhe start of a solitary liver carcinoma. The solit ary li ver
carcinoma later gets dark on the CT and can no longer be identified as sucb. When narural
healing occurs through tuberculosis, calcification-rings can be seen - particularly if the site
has not become cavernous, i.e. if there is no hole in the liver· especially in cases where the
liver carcinoma has stopped growing halfway and the natural tubercular healing has only
had to thin down the solitary nodule.

13.2 The head-brain and the organ-brain


ln considering the mailer correctly, on one side is the well-known head-brain and on the
other are the organ cells, all of which have a cell nucleus. The organ cells are connected to
each othe r and to each cell nucleus, indicating a mini -brain networking with all the mini-
brains of the body.
The sum total of these mini-brains can be regarded as a second brain, so that in a
biological conflict, an area of the b rain called the HH enters into correspondence with an
area of the body. This was called cancer, cancer equivalent or organ change.
Jn the case of a sensory sti mulus, information flows from the organ brain to the bead
br ain. It is the reverse with a motor response where the infonuation and commands flow
from the head brain to the o rgan brain. However, we do not know exactly what takes place
electro-physiologically at the cell ular level either in the br ain or on the organ or what takes

91
place in the overlapping areas or relays. On Lhe other hand, this knowledge is not a
prerequisite to our working with these distinct findings.

13.3 The Hamerscher Herd in the CA-phase and the


PCL phase
At the moment of a OHS, the corresponding specific brain relay is marked with a target
configuration. These arc sharp circles that form around the centre of the relay and look like
targets. 'Target-configuration' means the HH is in the conflict-active phase.
The locari.on is not accidental and is the computer relay that the individual associates
with the contents of the conflict in tbe momenr of the DHS. At the very same second, the
organ correlated to this HH is impacted with cancer. Amazingly, we can also establish this
impact on the organ through a target configuration on the compact organs that can be
scanned, such as the liver, the spleen, bones and kidneys, etc.
With rhc advancing conflict. the HH in the brain also progresses. The impacted area
keeps growing in size or the area becomes more and more intensely altered. As the cancer
advances, the tumor grows bigger through real cell mitosis {for the endodenn), or through
larger necrosis (for the mesodenn) or more ulcerated and expanded through many small
ulcers (for the cciodem1).
1n my first pocket edition (1984) of · Krebs · Krcmkheit der Seele. K11rzsc/rlms im
Ge/rim ... · r ·ca11cer, Disease Of Tire Soul, S/rorr-Cirrnit ill Tire Brain') I described HH's in
the conflict-active phase as 'short-circuits' because we knew nothing of the bioelectric
processes. I no longer call them this because a short-circuit is generally considered to be a
'dismrbance of the program. This is only partially true in the case of an HH. We could call
it a dismrbance of the normal program, but one for which the organism is already prepared
in the possibility of an event.
However, even the word 'disturbance' is not really adequate for this 'emergency' or
'extraordinary', program. When an individual gets caught 'on the wrong foot' in a situation
not anticipated, an emergency program is set in motion, what we call a 'biological
conflict,' whose aim it is to remrn the individual to his normal rhythm. This program can
apply not just to individuals bul depending on the situation, to several individuals, an entire
family or even a tribe.
An example: a mother secs her 3-year old son have an accident and lose consciousness
right before her eyes. If this is a DBS for the mother, it causes a biological conflict,
specifically, a mother-child wony-conflict. This conOict has particular significance on
three levels. On the psychological level all her mental and physical activity circles around
restoring health to the child. At the cerebral level, if the woman is right-handed, there i.s a
target-like HH on the right side of the cerebellum showing an active mother-child conflict.
On the organic level, the breast gland tissue of the mother's breast is growing, increasing
the size of the left breast to some extent. It is common in nature and in primitive societies
for the mother to produce more milk so that the child can heal faster. When ihe child is
well and the conflict-solution sets in, the extra milk-glands are no longer needed because
the child can make do with the regular amount of milk. The return to normal results iu the
mother getting tuberculosis and the child receiving tubcrculotic milk that does not harm
him. The tuberculosis caseates the newly grown breast gland cells and breaks them up.
What remains is a cavity.
\Vhat are these Hll's in the brain that are already in a healing phase when they are
visible but are called brain tumors or brain metastases by radiologists? When they are less
clearly marked, they elicit only perplexity. The 1-lH's that show marked perifocal edema

92

I
become more and more damaged. This corresponds exactly to the organ in the body that is
enlarged, shrunk or altered because of the cancer, in order to deal with the new unexpected
situation. Nothing really exciting happens in the HH, as far as the CT is concerned, other
than that the target configuration remains constant. We can see in the nuclear resonance
scan (MRI) that there is a totally routine change in the immediate environment.
In fact, the reality is totally different, for it is in the PCL-phasc that we can establish the
magnitude and extent of the damage because the organism starts its repair of this special
program at the very beginning of the PCL-phase, either by cell-multiplication or by cell
reduction of the body organ and of the affected relay in the brain.

13.3.1 In summary, the events that take place after a OHS on the
three levels of our organism are as follows
Psychological:
A. Conflict-active phase (CA-phase):
Standing sympathicotonia, i.e. maximum srress. Tbe patient dwells on his conflict day
and night, rrying 10 resolve it. He can't sleep, and if he docs, it is only for the first half
ofihe night. in half hours. He loses weight and has no appetite.
B. Conflict resolution phase (PCL-phasc):
There is peace. The psyche has to recover. The patient is worn out and tired, but feels
liberated, has a good appetite, is hot, and has frequent fever and headaches. He sleeps
well but often not until 3 a.m. Nature has arranged this mechanism so that people in
vagotony sleep only from daybreak to avoid potential dangers (predators) while
asleep. All patients like sleeping a lot during the day.
Cerebral:
A. Conflict-active phase (CA-phase):
Target configuration in the corresponding HH (see chart) that means there is a special
program runnmg.
B. Conflict resolution phase (PCL-phase):
Repair of the HH through development of edema and accumulation of glia in the
vicinity of the affected relay. This leads to re-establishment of the prior condition thai
is important for future conflicts but is at a price because the tissue is less elastic than
before.
Organic:
A. Conflict-active phase (CA-phase):
According to the chart and the ontogenctic system of tumors and cancer equivalents,
there is either cell increase during the conflict active phase, with a very specific
purpose, or a cell necrosis, or hole, also with a definite biological purpose. This
purpose consists in using the organic change to resolve the surprise situation we call
the biological conflict. The biological purpose of a coronary ulcer, for instance, is that
of expanding tbe coronary arteries to allow more blood to flow through, 1h16
increasing the strength and endurance of the individual. A multiplication of the breasi
gland cells serves tbe purpose of providing more milk for the child and speeds the
child's healing after an accident.
B. Conflict resolution phase (PCL-phasc):
Repair of the cancerous tumor through microbial decomposition, and of tbc cancerom
ulceration through microbial reconstruction (see chart and diagram of the ontogenetie
system of tumors aod cancer equivalents). Edema found in the brain and on the orga;:i
is always a sign of healing.

94
13.4 Our brain
Modem methods of computer tomography a How us
10 practically look into the human brain as we
investigate it in layers. The desired layer can be set
up and photographed, vert'ically or horizontally.
The above picture shows the standard layers that
nm nearly parallel co the base of the cranium.
The various layers permit us to obtain a series
of photographs showing various parts of the brain
and possible HH's.

13.5 The clapping test

linke Hand oben = rechte Hand oben =


Linkshander Rechlshiinder

The clapping test is the easiest way to test right and left-handedness. lt must precede an
evaluation of a brain CT. The upper hand is the leading one and determines the patient's
laterality.
a) brainstem: the deep regions of the pons are unpaired from a functional point of view,
not from the anatomical point of view, i.e. the conflicts of the gastro-intestinal tract
appear in a counter clockwise manner (mouth, oesophagus, alveoli, stomach, liver,
pancreas, small intestine, large intestine, rectum, urinary bladder (trigonium portion)
and ovarial ducts) showing up from medial-dorsal laterally to the right, then mcdial­
ventrally, to the left laterally then to medial dorsal (sec the brain-stem diagram Chapter
'The Diseases of the lnner Germ Layer'). However, the transition zones (the angle of
the cerebellum pons) already show pairing (e.g. the nucleus of the acoustic nerve). The
acoustic nuclei innervate the middle ear in the case of a biological conflict of 'not
having obtained the auditive morsel, nol having received the information', but they do
not cross over to the organ. The relays located in the midbrain, all the way to the brain
medulla bordering at the relays for the kidney parcnchyma, are paired but do not cross
over.
b) Right or left-handedness becomes significant from the cerebellum onwards. From here
on, all relays of the cerebellum and the complete cerebrnm show a crossed-over

96
correlation to the organ. Even so, the cerebellum and the cerebrum are different from
each other even though the handedness applies to both. The conflicts of the cerebellum
impact strongly on correspondence of the conflict contents in relationship to the organ,
i.e. the cerebellum sides are each bound on the basis of conflict theme. A mother child
worry contlict always impacts right-laterally in the cerebellum for a right-handed
woman on the glands of the left breast. If the patient suffers another conflict for another
child, or a mother-child conflict with regard to her own mother, the impact is stilJ on
the same cerebellum relay as the new HH. Even if she suffers another two conflicts of
an attack against the left abdomen or breast side (peritoneal and mesothelioma of the
pleura), they all impact on the right side of the cerebellum. which would show five
HH's in target configurntion. and not even one on the left side. Two conflicts on two
separate hemispheres of chc cerebellum are known as ·cerebellar schizophrenic'
constellation. There is profound emotional disturbance in icm1s of paranoia bui no
effect on formal-logical thinking ability: e.g. ,,l am burnt out; I feel completely empty.
I have no more feelings'·.
c) This would also be possible in the cerebral medulla. The connict contents and the
organ correlation are always unequivocal, i.e. bound by conflict theme.
d) In the case of the relays of the cerebml cortex, this is only possible with one exception:
the ductal milk-tubule-ulcerating-carcinoma which, with regard to laterality, is strongly
coupled to the cerebellum relays for the breast glands. There is a totally new element at
play here; for the cerebellar cortex directed conflicts, the correlation to the organ is no
longer unequivocal as was the case in the cerebellum. The organs are only paired in
part; it is the latcrality, as well as the momentary conflict situation that determines
which relay can become the HH in the moment and affecting the correlated organ. The
correlation between the brain and the organ, on the other band, is always unequivocal.
Therefore: if a left-handed woman suffers an identity conflict, the HH impacts on the
right side temporally and at the organic level becomes stomach or gall-duct ulceration.
If she then suffers another identity conflict for some new reason, she cannot react on
the right brain hemisphere cortically, so she suffers the second identity conflict
temporally on the left side; on the organ level she suffers a rectal ulceration and in the
PCL phase this becomes haemorrhoids if the ulceration was in the proximity of the
anus. The patient is in schizophrenic constellation for as long as the two conflicts (right
and left cortical) are active. The questions - how the conflict is experienced (in a male
or female fashion) and where it impacts on the brain - depend not only on the hormonal
state (post-menopausal, pregnancy, contraceptive pills, ovalian necrosis, etc.) but also
on the laterality of the patient. In the same way that the conflicts change, they can also
be robbed of their meaning-contents if the preconditions (actual conflict constellation,
borrnonal situation, etc) have changed. They can then 'jump', i.e. a rectal ulcer can
become a stomach uleer and vice versa.
The correlation between the brain and the organ, however, is always unequivocal - once
the conflict bas impacted, it is the specific correlated organ tbat is affected for as long as
the conflict is active and has not 'jumped' to the other hemisphere through a change of the
hon11onal and conflictive constellation prerequisites.

97
/'/(l{e I:
Typical wr.�e1 co11figura1io11 of <m HH - i.e. CA-phase in
the sensory cor/ical field with i1s cell/re /yill,� paramedially
011 1he /e.f). This leads 10 a sensory paral.vsis of 1he righ1 ltig
a11d (to a lesser e.<1e111) the rig/11 arm. The Jae/ 1/wt the
ri1 1gs of tire larger co11figart11io11 reach over w the rig/rt
.,ide of tire brain as well as rite mowr corrical cell/re ond
the post sensory (a.JJ'ec1i11g the periosteum) shows rhar even
the left side of the body is affected, as ore' motor a11d
periOSlt!ttllt Sl!llSitivity.

( applicable lo the
PCl.-phase ( lteali11g

Plare 3 011d 3a:


Same patient. same CT. d/ffere/11 layers. HH in the CA­
plrase, partially projel·ti11g i1110 the cerebral medulla but
be/011gi11g 10 rite posr-se11sory cortex (pai11Jitl se/)aration
conflict a.ffecting the left leg [perios1e11111 I). A ri111? is
already visible as going i1110 resol111io11, which means it
was spo1ted duri11g 1/ui con,llic:tolysis.

98
Plaie 4: CT of 715//990 - flare 5 CTof317/J990
CT of7/5//9c)0.
A 60-year-old parie111. wife of a university rector who
had /eji her 15 y,•ctrs earlier. Divorce 1101 permitted for
religious ,w,s011.<. Five yews earlier. the 11·oma11 had
met auorher man who ,,.a.< nor yet di.,orced. He did get
divorl·ed i11 /9fl9. bw the patient could 1101 persuade
herse!l w divorce her husbcmd and marry him. The 111011
chose ro move in with mwrt,e;- \\'Oman. The pariem
sujfered a OHS confticr ,f 1101 being able 10 hold 01110
the 111a11, and " separation amf1ic1 because he had
slipped from her fumds. The pa1ienr suffered a 111010ric
and partial .1·e11sOJ)' pamlysis im:o/ving both hands with
c,/111os1 1otal 1110/0r paralysis of the riglu 11111111b. MS "'as
s11spec1ed. The wo111t111 ·s da11gh1er. a professor of
ne11rofogy. asked me for advice. 011 the basis of the er
she had bro11gh1 11·e recons1r11c1e,I the case ve,:v quickly.
She gaw her 11101her therapy by discussi11g the sit11a1io11
in grea/ dewil. The paralysis readed. The mother 1he11
sujfered 1/,e ohligaJory epileptic anack. However, 1he
folfowi11g then happe11ed: 1/w pmie111 teamed 1lrlll her
ex-bo.v.frie11r/'.1· new par111.er was not a ·[ady·, and 1/wl
she !,ad already been involved with him while he was
,will imim(lle wirh the pmie111. Sire suffered Cl resi.mmce
DHS 011d a fear-revu/sio11 co1iflict (f�fi-lumded). which
fa· centered in the glucagon relay wirh hypoglycemia
011nveighi11g hyperglycemia. We c<m sii/1 see 1he slw,p
ri11gjim11ario11 ,m plate 4 as a sign l!( 1he active cmtjlicr
of 1he moror and sensory 11aralysis. This co11ffict u·as
resol ved 1wo months farer. Howev,�r. 1/tere is evidence
of a 11ew W.r[iei c01ifig11r(llion of an active conflict ar
tlris time, that rhe patiellf .Hill had resistance C111d
rev11/sio11 in tire g/ucagon relays. /111e11sive disc11ssio11s
were c1ble 10 resolve this conflicl as wdl.

flare 6:
HH for large resolved terri1orial fear c01{/7ict (bronc:hial
cMci110111a) of a,, elderly fenwle pa1ie111. Also central co,iflil-1
in 1he pos1-se11sory conex in CA-phase. Tire pmient's sister
came imo the lwspiwl and wld her she fwd seen 1heir mother
in a whi1e dress saying she would be coming for her daughier
(pmiem) soon.

99
P//11e 6a:
The same pmient - the HH seen in a higher c:ross-sectio11.

Pltt1e 7:
Hr/ semicircultt r on the right for motor COl!/lict ill the
PCL-phase. Right 11e.n to it (thin arrows) all H/-1 i11 CA­
phase ce11tral ill rhe gl11tago11 relay. Further"'' HH ill
f
cm advanced swre o lreali11t; on the leji i11volvillg the
righr shoulder (osteosarcomo caused by u se(f­
deva/ruuivll collf/ict i11 relatio11 10 a parmer) alld cm HN
rhm is almost complmely healed in the right visual
cortex (fear from /)ehi11d).

Plate 8 and 9 Th£• same pmiellT.


Plate 8:
Two d!lf'ere11t HJ-f's showing " sharp 1arge1
conjig11ra1io11. The W'l'OWS poillt w the rcfoy of the
small imestille. revealing 011 indigestible allger.

100
Centre of NEW MEDICINE in Austria
Directed by Dr. Ryke Geerd Hamer
Burgau
27th January, 1993
This will confirm that we have searched for and verified a right testicular necrosis for Mr.
(name covered) ou tbe basis of a brain CT, auarnnesis and report of light tension ou the
right testicle but no complaints of any kind from the patient.
Accordiog to the brain CT we can identify a cross between necrosis (active phase) and
refilling of the necrosis (healing phase).
Signed Dr. Willibald Stangl, Medical Examiner
A-8291 811rgt1u. Alces Schloss Tel: 00483383/2040

Plate /6:
25/1/1990 CA-phase.

Plate 17:
25/2/19.90 immediately ,l(ter CL.

104
Plate 20: Plare 21:
which allows the HH 10 slide forwards or backwards a little bi!. We can sec that the HH
has begun to fonn glial scarring. I should also mention that the patient had an epileptic
attack (epilep1oid crisis) on I 0/3/1990, which did not surprise her, since her doctor had
fully explained the mies of the NEW lvlEDICIN.E. Between July 1989 and February 1990
there was a suspicion that the patient was suffering from MS. Luckily, it was easy 10
convince her that this was nonsense: the biggest danger is always a secondary motor
conflict suffered from the shock of the diagnosis, principally involving the legs because
she is told that she will be confined [p.116} to a wheelchair for the rest of her life. This is a
cont1ict that is usually difficult to resolve.
Plate 22:
CT plare of 2414/1990. The same p:wem rhrec momhs
la1e1: We can see tlmt 1/Je lc1rge1 configvmtion has 2
slight j)rickly pear· torma1io11, i.e. the height of ihe
PCL-cdema phase is already over.

106
Plme 23:
The photograph sho111s the pati£'/ll demonsll'ating 1/te
'PQ11ia/ paralysis of the leji leg. Plates 24 cmd 25 show
.ne 1arget conjig11ra1ion thm radiologists 11 101dd
onsider an artifact.

107
Plates 24 and 25:
HH in active phase in sha,p wrget co11jig11ra1io11
corresponding to motor pamly.vis, .wmso,y loss and
periosrea/ sensoric panial pamlysis. Ajier a fight, the
patie111's wife angrily threw her wedding ring at his
feet ... I stood as if rooted to the spor and co11/d11'1
move", he said. His w/fe came back a week later 011,;/
the 1u:xl scan shows that the target configuration had
(logically) disappeared.
The patient suffered motor paralysis and periostea/
f
sensoric panial p(1rctlysis o the left leg and leji arm
(conflict 0/1101 knowing which wa.J' 10 tum with a bruwl
separation). CL: a week /mer, the wife came back and
the next scan showed that the wrget co11jig11ra1io11 "'"S
beginniiig 10 disappear.

Plmes 26, 27. 28 and 29:


Series of CT's of a female pa.1ie111 wirlt a11 interval of six weeks. fl refer., to a co11J1ic1 of .fear­
rev11/sio11 and avaida11ce of her boss who was gay mu/ whom she .fowul vulgar a11d revolting.
Plme 26 of24/l190 in CA-phase:
f
The centre o the 1arge1 co11ftg11ra1io11 is locared an £he
right. J11is is why diabetes 0111weiglts hypoglycaemia - i.e.
rhe beta islet cell ills11[ficie11cy opposite 1/te alpha islet cell
i11.wjficie11cy. She gave 1101ice shortly ajier 1his pic111re. The
mme plme show.< a large HH dorsally. which has already
become a scar b111 reini1iari11g 1he wrger co11figura1io11 that
sholl'.f repemed scarring, i11 renewed target C01!fig11rmio11
i11 1:0111,ection with both vitreous bodies 011 the organic
level. The biological conjlict: the year hefore, 011 her way
to work at a phllrmacy, she had been followed. assaulted
and 1hreote11ed with a knife. The relapse: site had 10 lake
1/1e same way lo l111d ji'om the pharmacy eve,y day, and
suffered a bilateral glaucoma.

108
Plate 27 cmd 28 of 15/3/90:
Both ccmjlit:ts are in /he PCL-
hnse, tire fro111al one more than
·lie occipital 011e. We can see.
oowever, that rhe ede111111ized
:arger rings are ar 1/te same
nage. We call rhis 1/re normal
de-.•elopme/11 of the HH af1er
resolution of the conj1icr.

P/me 29:
CT of lire wme parie111 2 112 mo111hs farer. We see only a
,car ofthe tissue in tl,e relayfor diabetes/hypoglycaemia.

Plate 30-33:
A series of fo11r CT's of a young woma11 with 111arw11a,y d11ct Ca in rece111 PCL-plrase. Tire
radiologist shifted the parie11t 011cc 2 cm to 1/re riglrr of centre line (plates 30 and 32) 011d once 2 cm
ro tlw left (Plare 31 a11d 33). As can be seen, the HH did 1101 change as a ca11seq11ence.

109
..

Plare 36:
Plate 36-42)
A whole series of CTs of a banker i11 a London
ilospital. A t)'/>ical caw, of misdiagnosi.<. After a
,lrommic arg11me111 with his supel"l'isor that cosr him a
promo1io11, the pt11ie111 s,,ffered a motor paralysis more
of rite rigl11 leg tha11 of rhe left ml(/ also more of tl1e
right arm 1ha11 of the le.ft . A11 exa111i11mio11 revealed an
old pancreatic carcinoma anti a11 old liver carcinoma.
The cancer of the small i111esti11e (plme 41. left upper
:v-ro11·) c111d the wrge1 C01(fig111wio11 (p/me 42. left
arrow) could 1101 be seen, of course. Plate 41 shows the
old solitm:v Ca-foc11s i11 the. pancreas and 11,e liw,r. The
correspo11di1 1g HH latemll.r 011 the right of rhe brain
siem (right arroll') has scorring. edema mu/ e,•em,wlly
also a ve,,• lighrly 1•isi/Jle llll'JiCI co11Jig11ratio11. t, is
possible thm 1he old HH /rad a co1111ectio11 with his
occup(l(io,, (h1111ger m,,flicr, o.( 1w1 being capcrble 10
diges, the morsel) a11d has been reacliwsted /p.124} (trucks). We ther�/ore have li1ree di.ffere111
=get co,,fig11m1io11s 011 tl1e same patient, one of which is (Ill old relay that has been scarred over.
While the conflict involving the extremities..uronger ()JI the left 1lta11 011 tire right, is (I/ready in
PCL-phase a11d has beg1111 10 llSsume a prickly pear shape, i.e. lws already pass(«/ the climax; the
rorget co1tjigura1io11 for tire small inte.wine is ./idly active. This sho,vs th(I( a co11j7ic1 involving
several aspects need 1101 be resoil-ed at the same time 011 all h,ve/s, One 11 spec1 can be solved while
w1other i.1· still aclive.
Had tire NEW MEDICINE been employed, it would lwve been possible to appreciate that bmh
the pc111creas Ca and //1e liver Ca, l'111/lli11g si111uilw1eo11sly. 11111st have had a11 old histo,y a11d 1hct1
there was a potential to r1,activate them now Os 'tracks'. Tire cortical mot0r t01(f1ict 011 the other
band, having already gone through an epileptic ,·risis (a11uck ri 1011ic-c/onic spasms) had already
gone beyond the climux of tire /'CL-plwse. The co,!/lict qffecting rile small intestine, as mentioned.
is sri/1 higl,/y actiw, Coincidentally, the abdominal CT (plow 41) shows the pre-ileus as occlusion
of 1he sm(III imesrine. Had this pmie11 1 been exti1pated c�( a slum section of the small i1 11csti 11 c. he
co11ld hove had a WI)' good prog11osis. However, the pre-ileus was ossu11111tl 10 be o 11ew liver and
pa11creas cancer and the patieut was declare(/ inoperable. In this case the 11101or co1if/ict
f
corresponds to the .wpposi1io11 o 1101 being able to dimb higher, specijiwlly, that one is tied dow11.
and the cancer <!f the small intestine is co1mcc:te(/ with the i1 1digestible anger. We can see then in
differemial diagnosis 1he NEW MEDICINE is superior 10 currelll medicine.

111
ZI I
11/d
:sr ,,1 :t,f f>/1)/d
:ot, 1"111 6£ J11,1,1
Plate 41:

P/(l(e 42:

Plate 43: Plate 44:

ll3
Plate 45:
Series of CT's. In 11,is series we ccm see ve,y clearly
how 1/te wrget co11jig11ra1io11 th(ll is edemmized i11 rhe
PCl�phase is clearly visible in one /c1_1,er bw /Jecomes
/J/urred in the orher ( cenrral periosteum co1!flic1, i.e.
resolvi11g bnital sepcircuion co11.flict).

Plate 46: Plate 47:


Sensory. posl sensory ( Perios1e11m) sepamtion COl!flict, already past tire high poi/I/ o.f the PCL
phase. (the organic level: exanthema_. urticaria, pruri111s) begi111,i11g to 1ake Oil o v,ickly pear
co11figuratio11.

114
Plare -18:
Jjwe /rave good MRI scans and 1/re co11Jlicts have l)ee11
active for some time or /rave been reac1il-a1ed, we can
also see tire wrget co11figuration 011 1/1e MRI as
demonsrrared here: motor conj1ic1 lefr arm, motor
co11flict right arm a11d rig/rt leg a11d sensol)' ccmJ7ic1
right arm. posr ser1so1y co11Jlic1 /�fr arm, all conf7ic1s in
PCL-phase in a wse ofi\4S.

Pla1e 49, 50:


CT mu/ abdominal CT of a /ifrle girl.
Plare 49:
HH i11 clear large/ conjig11ratio11 in 1/re
relay of tire liver (brai11-stem lorually right)

Pierre 50:
Corresponding ro a so-called solitary liver
carcirm111C1 of a little girl i11 Sowhem
France: c01iflic1: tire parel!ls 011med a
grocery store and wlre11 " supermarker
opened next door, tire fmlrer complained:
.,Oh God, we're goi11g to suirve ro death!';
The jive year-old took this li1erally, and wiry
slro11ld11 '1 sire have? Tire child died from 1he
fear ofstwwirion.
Al jirst I had grear difficrrlty
rmderstc111di11g this kind of sca11 because, i11
conrrasl 10 tire findings of a greatly
expa11ded liver, rhe brain did 1101 show
a11ythi11g remarkable. /iowever. 1r/ren ,re
team to undersumd 1/te large, C()l(fig11rario11 and can 1ell rhe difference beiween 1/re dijferemiable
/omurtions in ti r e CA an<I PCL phases, 1/ren 1hese scans become bril/ia11tly clear.

115
Pfotes 51 and 52 sho11 1 1ypical CT'sfor i<?ukaemia.
Plate 5 I:
f
Generaliwd med11/lary edema o 1he brai11 marrow with
special emphasis 011 t/1e relay for 1he left neck of the
1high and 1he relay for the rig/it shoulder after res()/ved
seif-deval11atio11 crmflicJ in an old gemleman h'hose
f
presidency o a co111111i11ee for 1he beawi[iauion of a
village had been taken away. CL: 1he mayor personally
apologized and rei11stmed him.

Plate 52:
f
Generalized medu/lmy edema o a young wom(IJI who
wt1s a member of a cull and had l,een 'shipwrecked' i11
a /111111cm and professional way. She managed a fresh
Siar/.

Plaie 53:
Right-handed mother with a mother-child
con/lic1 1/wt had run i1s conrse. She spen:
some weeks in 1l1e !'CL-phase with heflT'T
night swears, i.e. wbcrcu/osis of 1he I¢
brea.1·1. A CT of 1/ie pend11/ons left brea:s:
shows 1he fresh cavern. The rig/11 breas:
shows ,m older cave.m 1ha, has been scarra;
over.

l 16
i'/a1e 70:
..,...nir CT of tire cerebellum slw,vs IIVO
, erlappi1111 active tar11et
amfig11rario11s i11 the right lateral
.JTl!a. TT,e nvo active F-ff/'s i11dicme a
'flOiizer child conflict, i.e.. a daughter
'flOiher co,if1ict.

P/cue71:
Several wrget co11fig11rwio11s i11 the
lil'er: always w1 early stage cf a so·
called solitary liver carcinoma. The
1arge1 co11.figuratio11 in the organ is in
correspondence wi1lt rhe wrget
co1yi1111ration. Tire exciting ele111ent i11
1his e111pirically discovered
re/a1ionship is that in fact. 1he brai11
and the organ develop wrget
co11figura1ions simuha11eo11sly. and
i.e. we ccm i111agi11e the nuclei of the
cells in the organ all networked.
almost like a second brain, an orga11
brain. The head brain a11d the organ
brain move in the same phase in rhe same manner. as slww11 hy our target configurations.
!11structio11s go from the head brain to tl1e organ. e.g. motor, or 1hey go from the organ brain ro the
head. e.g. smsury. These tl,ings were partially known from 11e11rology b111 wrril now we could go 110
f11r1her because rite correlatio11s in 1he NEW J\l!ED!CJNE were unknown.
Plwe 72 · 74 show 1he course of such
a wrget co11fig11ration in the liver.

123
Plate 76:
Co,!flict activity o.f 1111 !-IN i11 the left peri-imular
temporal arell. Conjlic·t: ajier a wonde1ji1l night of
lovemaking. wife told by her lwsba111/ tlwt it had 1101
been tl,a, impommt. The patielll St(fJered a se-mal
frusrration conflict and showe(/ {I co,,jirmed c,1rci110111a
of t/1e cervix as well as an ulceration of the coronary·
1•eins. She re.wived 1l1e co,,jlict by separating from her
/111sbc111d {Ind survived the epi/epu,id crisis of the
p11l111011my embolism. Three mo111h.1 later, a .,·mec,r of
1he ce,,-ix was negative.

Plate 77:
HH in the PCL-plwse of a carcinoma of the ce11 1ix and
ulcermion ,if the coro11llT)' wins immediwely b�{ore the
i1 farction of the righr side of the he((rr and co11seq11e111
lung embolism: the co11/1ici: the pmient '.t ho.1:fi'ieml
111ailc lrer best friend pre,�nmrr. Duration of rlre coriflict
was seven numrlrs. Tire CL came through the
reconcili((tiou of tl1e lll'O .fi-ie11ds. 71,e patielll swvived
both tire cen•ical carcinoma {Ind the so-called />rain
tumor without any sra11dard medical 1hernpy. The
highly dri,111(//ic epileproid crisis (heart and 11111g
i1,jt1rction) ,,.,,s co11rrolled ll'i1h high doses ,!{cortisone.

Piute 78:
HN with terriwrial co11J1ict for a right-handed 111a11 in
rhe PC/fphase ajier lcfr heart i1lfarcrio11 (swelling of
rhe 11lcerated cm·onmy arteries). The c:oriflicr: the
farmer's 011ly son suffered an appare111/yfatal accide111
curd was interned in rhe iufen..iw: care unit. 7"1,e farmer
.rnffered both a territorial co,,jlict beca11se he thought
he 110 /011ger fwd c,11 heir for his farm. a11d a loss
cm!/1ict (IS II farher. He suffered a leji hear/ i1!farctio11
and a s,velling c!{ tlie riglrr tesricle in rhe PCL-phase
(the s011 lived). The patienr survived wirh 110 srandard
medical rherapy.

125
Ev Qe,vi,,� 1 "2-Z. -1?. g5-

SO<j. :b:agliche Ringstrukturen/P.rccfakte J.m Hirn-CT

Die Onterzeichne= haben ±olgende 8 Ausschlullkriterien erarbeitet,


die das Vorliegen von aog. Ringartetakten ausschliellen.
&in Ringarte=ekt liegt de:.lZufolge sicher-nicht vor,
1. w1;mn im NMR eina verglelchbe.re eindeutige Ringformation sichtbar
irt,
2. w-enn die Ringe nicht rund, sondern "eingedellt· sind, d.h.
offensichtlich Rawnforderungen miteinhergehen,
3. wenn eine Kreisformation offensichtlich Gliaeinlagerungen hat,
�- wenn der oder die Ringe nicht im Dreh-Zentrum der Anlage
liegen { • parazentrale "SchiellscheLbenkonfigu.ration • J,
5. wenn mehrere. Kreise gleichzeitig nebene!nander bestehen,
kann hochstens 1 Ringformation Ringartefakt sein,
6. wenn die Ringformationen einen klinisch-radiologischen �ver­
lauf" haben, d.h. dall sie auf n"chfolgenden Kontroll-CTs wie­
der an gleicher Stelle, aber verandert i;ichtbar sind.
7. Die gerageabhangigen Artefakte aind kxeisforige oder kreis­
segmentformige Strukturen um das Drehzentrum der Anlage.
Wenn solche Strukturen echten anatomischen Gegebenheiten ont­
sprechen konnen, empfiehlt sich die Wiederholung des Scans mit
seitlich oder in der Bohe verschobener Patientenposition.
Wenn die Struktur in dem wiede,:hol ten Tomogramm bezUg Heh
markante4, patienteneigener Strukturen niche verschoben ist,
liegt kein Artefakt vor.

--- Sie(Tlens Aktlengesellschaft


-�T­
......... 1Z7 • TUOn (09131)
Postlad\32:&0
WI)�
&40

�,V\�c_,
l?�

126
I

Proposal for a common protocol for a further planned study of a series of CT' s of volunteer
;:iiarients with round structures in their brain CT's (see text) wh.ich was vetoed.

SIEMENS
£rlangen, 18.05.90

Betrlfft: s09. Rlngstrukturen, Rundformatlonen, SchieOscneioen­


Formationen oder HANcRsche HERDc im Hirn-CT

Die Fa. Siemens und Herr Dr. Hamer bestatigen folgende physlkaliscn­
technische Zusammenh8noe:

Die Unterzeichner haben schon am 22.12,89 folgende 8 AusscnJvO­


krlterien ecarbeitet, die das Vorliegen von s09. Ringartefakten
ausschli e/Jen:
Ein Rln9artefakt liegt demzufolge sicher nlcht vor,
1. wenn lm NMR elne vec9leichbare eindeutlge Rlngformation sichtbar
ist,
2. wenn die Ringe nlcht rund, sondern "ein9edellt" sind, d.h.
offensichtlich Raumforderungen mltelnhergehen,
). wenn ein Kreis ganz offensichtllch oedematislerte Ring-Beglelt­
erscheinungef).het ("Oedem-Rlnge")
4. wenn dee oder die Ringe nlcht lm Dreh-Zentrum der Anlage
11 egen ( "parazentrale Schi eOschelbenkonfigurat ion"/
S. we;:, eine Kcelsformatlon offenslchtlich Gliaeinlagerungen nae,
6. wenn mehrere Kreise gleichzeitlg nebenelnander bestehen,
kiinnte hiichstens l Ringformatlon s09. "Rlngartefakt" sein,

7. wenn die Rlngformationen einen klinisch-radiologlschen "Verlauf"


haben, d.h. da/3 sie auf nachfolgenden Kontroll-CTs wieder an
gleicher Stelle, aber veriindert sichtbar sind.
8. Es liEgt auch kein Artefakt vor, wenn die RvncJformatlonen nur auf
elnem Teil der CT-Schlchten sicntbar slnd, auf anderen aber iehlen.
!I. Die 9eriiteabnifo9i9en s09. "Artefakte" sind kreisformige oder
kreissegmentf"i:irmige Strukturen um das Drehzentrum der Anlage.
Wenn solche Strukturen echten anatomischen Gegebenheiten ent­
sprechen konnen, empflehlt slch die Wiederholun9 des Scans
mit seitlich oder in der Hiihe verschobener Patientenposltion.
Wenn die Struktur in dem wiederholten Tomogramm bezugllch .ar­
kanter, patlenteneigener Struktvcen nicht verschoben 1st,
llegt keln Artefakt vor.

127
Erlangen, 22.17. 89
So-called dubious ring-structures/ artifacts in CT'S of the brain.
The undersigned have elaborated the following eight exclusion criteria to eliminate the possibility
of ring artifaccs:
The following preclude the possibility of a ring artifact:
I. If there is a similar ring fom1ation clearly visible in 1he MRI.
2. If the rings are not round but dented, i.e. there are obvious masses at the same time.
3. l.f ihcre are deposits of glial tissue in the circular formation.
4 If one or more rings are not centred on the pivotal centre of the shot (parn-central target
configuration).
5. If there are more circles simultaneously adjacent to each other, only one of the ring formations
a1 most could be one ring artefact.
6. Jf the ring formations have a clinical radiological ·course', i.e. the sequential follow-up CT'.s
show them at the same locations bur changed.
7. Those artifacts generated by the installation are structmes that are circular or in the fonn of a
circular segment centred on the pivotal centre of the shot. If such struccurc.s could possibly
reprc -scnt real anatomical strnctures, a re-take of the picture is advisable with a lateral or
ve11ical displacement of the patient position. If the repeated tomography c]early shows the
structures without relative displacement. then these are not artifact�.
Siemens Corporation
Medical Technical Division
Address and signatures

SIEMENS
Erlangen. 18.05.90
Subject: so-called ring-structures, round-formations, target fomiations or Hamcrscheoherd in brain
CT's.
The firm Siemens and Dr. Hamer verify the following physical technical relationships:
The undersii.'lled, on tbe 22.12.89, have already articulated the following eight exclusion criteria 10
eliminate ihe possibility of ring artifacts.
The following preclude the possibility of a ring artefact:
I. If there is a similar ring formation clearly visible in the MRI
2. If the rings are not round but dented, i.e. there are obvious masses at the same time
3, If there are deposits of glial tissue in the circular formation
4. Ir one or more rings are not centred on the pivotal centre of the shot (para-central target
configuration)
5. 1f there arc more circles simultaneously adjacent to each other, only one of the ring formations i
at most could be a ring artefact
6. If the ring fonnations have a clinical radiological 'course', i.e. the sequential follow-up Crs
show them at the same locations but changed
7. Those artifacts generated by the installation arc structures that are circular or in the form of a
circular segment centred 011 the pivotal centre of the shot. lf such structures could possibl)
represent real anatomical strnctures, a re-take of the picture is advisable with a lateral. or
vertical displacement of the patient position. If the repeated tomography clearly shows the
strnclurcs without relative displacement, then these arc 001 artifacts.

128
14.2.2 What awaits us on the cerebral and organic planes?
The l\1EW MEDICINE is not a partial discipline that is confined to the conflictolysis but
delegates complications to other partial disciplines. On the conrrary, it is an all­
encompassing medicine that considers alJ the steps in diseasc development, including the
ccn:bral-organic plane. This includes the need to be able to estimate, from the process that
has taken place so far, how long the healing will take and what dangers and complications
can be expected on the cerebral and organic planes. This is not the place to list all the
possible complications: that is where the expcricncl: and knowledge of a dioic.ian counts
most.
In the same way that he would help himscJJ: a good physician should use all the medical
means at his disposal in the way of drugs and smgcry 10 help his patient. In NEW
MEDICINE, we have the responsibility 10 assist the patient through the PCL-phase
inasmuch as there can be a conflict resolution. The PCL-phase holds far greater diflicultics
for the physician than the CA-phase. He has to convince the patient that his currcm
symptoms are not as bad as they appear, and should actually be welcomed. There are,
however, real medical crises that sometimes have to be endured. Consider, for example.
cases such as the first phase of leukacmic healing, or the epilcptic/cpileptoid crisis that.
even if identified, were known under other labels. i.e, misunderstood. We build on the
basis of symptomatic therapeutic relief that we have always had, for example, to reduce the
severity of a vagotonic phase. However, with our new understanding or microbes
everything must be re-thought. lt is therefore no longer possible to recomrncnd doses
according to standard practice. This is especially true for cortisone therapy. which we
know can cause edema to regress. particularly in the brain.

14.2.3 The medication


It is impo11ant 10 note that in order to helpfully support the healing process, all 1nedicatioas
that can alleviate symptoms should be considered.
It was believed thac medication worked either centrally or peripherally. However, with
the knowledge of the NEW MEDTCINE, this becomes relevant because in practice all
medications work centrally, i.e. from the brain to the organ. Whereas we formerly believed
tbat the action of digitalis was lo saturate the heart muscle, we now understand that it acts
cerebrally on the heart brain relay.
The physician in the N'EW MEDICINE is not opposed to medication even though he
understands that Mother Nature has already optimized all developments. He knows that
most cases do not need the support of medication therapy because the conflicts arc ofshon
duration. resulting in smaller conflict mass and a healing phase thai does 1101 entail special
complications. What remains are the cases in nature that would come to a lctbal end and
which involve a special approach from a medical ethics point of view.
The most critical points in the healing process for certain conflicts and diseases are. for
example, the EC (epileptic crisis) for left and right heart infarction. pneumonic lysis
(fever). the hepatic crisis. etc. These crises sti.LI result in death in a large percentage of
cases. In future, we will still lose many patients. but we now have the advantage of
knowing from the siart what I() expect and to be prepared for the developments as they
approach. 1t is 1101 mucl1 use io have reduced the frequency of pneumonia by renaming it
'bronchial carcinoma· (see chapter on statistics) if the pati.:nts die of an actual bronchial
carcinoma; we have really only renamed the disease. If we know exactly when to expect
the pneumonic lysis and know what bas to be done to influence this normal biological
development in a beneficial manner through antibiotics and cortisone, then we have a

t3�
Morphine has therefore always been a one-way street - death by advice. It is a tragic fact
that pain occurs in the healing phase, and that it is usually limited in duration. Such is the
case in bone osteolysis in the PCL-phasc. It results in acute pcriosteum pain, regarded as
the most feared pain in medicine. With the NF.W MEDICINE, we can precisely identify
the stage of the disease the pain corresponds to, its quality, its duration, etc. 1 have never
known a patient who wanted the morphine, even if offered, once he was told the bone pain
would last 6 to 8 weeks afler which time his bone would be healed. The patient mentally
prepares himself and we can help him hy distracting him with things like theatre,
comedies, light films, singing, swimming, and, for the external pain, witb therapies like
acupuncture, massage, etc. This works nearly every time.
lt is imr,ortant to know that morphine immediately creates ve1y serious menial and
cerebral changes that quickly destroy tbe patient's morale so that he is unable to withstand
any pain from thcll point on. Since pain is something subjective, patients experience a
severe increase o[ pain intensicy as an after-effec1. of the morphine, as if they had never
taken morphine at all. IL is recognized that che dose has 10 be continuously increased. The
patient dies a morphine death - the intestine becomes inactive and he dies of hunger and
thirst.

14.2.4 Exploratory punctions and exploratory excisions


The knowledge that the same place in the orgao will always be affected with the same
histological formations, even in the case of cancer, drastically reduces the need for
exploratory punctions and exploratory excisions. Our experience shows that a CT can give
us more precise information than an exploratory punetion.
An exploratory excision of bone sarcoma is almost always the beginning of a
catastrophe because the callus fluid contained under prcssme finds a way out through the
open periostcum (bursting of the periostcum seam) into the surrounding tissue and leads lO
a gigantic sarcoma. If the exploratory punction bad not been performed, the surrounding
tissue would only have swollen somewhat, because the fluid flows out of the periosteurn,
but not the callus cells. The process would have been similar lo acute joim rheumatism that
has spontaneous remission after a certain arnounl oftime.
A punction can have fatal consequences in the case of a so-called cold abscess - i.e. a
carcinoma o[ the breast gland in the PCL-r,hasc - where the puncture biopsy of the breast
creates an external opening. This leads to a foul-smelling tuhcrculous discharge from the
breast. As with the opened osteolysis in its healing phase that can only be stopped from
continual formation of callus fluid by chemotherar,y and eventual amputation, so the
outcome in the case of the punctured breast will be a quick amputation.
For this reason, exploratory punctions and exr,loratory excisions will be performed only on
very rare occasions in the future.

14.2.5 Surgical interventions


At present, most operations are so-called cancer operations. The surgeon is governed by
the histologist's sentence that declares either a benign or a malignant process. However,
we know that all cerebral medulla directed necroses in the healing phase make so-called
malignant tumors (lymphomas, osteosarcomas, kidney cysts, ovarian cysts). but the NEW
MEDICfNE sees them all as 'healing tumors·, i.e. hannless cell multiplication only to be
operated on iftbey create mechanical interference or if tbey are unacceptable to the patient
ernotionally. We still need the surgeon in cases ofold brain directed tumors just as we need
the hunter i11 the forest since we no longer have wolves: with this, it is importaat to

134
I

differentiate exactly how big the intestinal tumor is when it comes to connict resolution. 1f
lhc tumor is relatively small. we can assume. evca if there arc no tubercular bacteria. that
!here will be no serious complications. However. if the tumor is large and capable of
making an iatestiaal obstruction, we must very carefully consider whether 10 wait out the
healing phase in the hope that tuberculosis will take over the healing process quickly. In
any event, the patient must be warned that this cons1itmes a risk just as an operation would.
Ii is belier to operate during the patient's CA·phase because during the PCL·phase the
anae. sthcsia. combined with the vagotonia. presents a much greater risk. Always emphasize
to the patient that he is the key decision.maker, and very carefully explain the pros and
cons.
The NEW MEDICINE also bas some surgical indications of a ncga1ive kind. For
instance. ovarian·and kidney cys1s develop at approximately the rhythm of a pregnancy
and require nine months to become indurated and take over the function designed for them
by the organism. There should be oo operation in these nine months because during this
time the cysts, lacking an arterial and venous system. attach themselves to other abdominal
organs to provid� themselves wi1h a blood supply. This biological process has been
misin1crpretcd as 'malignant infiltrating tumor growth'. The evidence was sclf.folfilling
since the tumor portions kept growing for oine months and needed to be operated on
repeatedly, seeming to be uncommo11ly malignant. These premature operations, because of
official medicine's lack of understanding. usually extirpated the affected organs as well.
with the consequence 1hat 1hc abdomen became Jillie more than a torso. We will not even
discuss the consequent conflicts of these poor patients. Instead, if one waits out the nine
months, it will not even be necessary lO operate small cysts of less than 12 cm since they
fulfill the function of bormoue production, specifically Lhe elimination of urine as foreseen
by the organism. An operation would be indicated only in extreme cases where the cysts
bring about serious mechanical problems, and aHer approximately nine months and
ioduration of the cyst. Such an operation is technically a small intervention because all
adhesions have been released in the meantime and the cyst is encased in a tough capsule.
(See. case examples ia the Gelsenkirchener and Celler Documentation).

14.2.6 Psychagogic care of the Patients


The goal of eve r. y therapy must be to promote an understanding of the inter-connectious of
tbe patieut's disease. For a patient who is always alone and in constant danger of panic
brought on by his surroundings, i1 will be very difficult to defend himself while the NEW
MEDICINE remains an 'outsider•medicine'. In a good cl.iuic where all colleagues and
patients understand the NEW MEDICINE, this panic making would not exist. Such an
enclosed therapeutic space would allow paticms to trust their therapis1s, who are not
necessarily doctors, who can explain to them their currem symptoms and those tha1 are to
come. This also requires patients to be isolated for a while in order to prevent con.flier
relapses. I am thinking here of a symbolic ·fo1trcss', offering protection from banks.
creditors, lawyers. employers, vengeful wives, mothers-in-law, offspring or relatives keen
on an inheritance. In short, all the dangers of a conflict relapse.
for the patient$ who do not make it in the end but who are full of hope, dea1h without
morphine or intensive care is more humane and nan1ral, a passing over iuto another world.
not an end filled with mortal !ear and panic. Such a death, for the patient and the family. is
a dignified leave.taking.

t35
14.3 Biological planning of life-long conflicts (second­
wolf phenomenon)
We have already discussed the fact that biological con(licts arc someihing very
meaningful, especially at the organic level. These co11nections were not seen because we
were blind to the biological aspects of evolmionary history in connection, for example,
with tumors. We will consider the conflicts that Mother Nature elevated to be long-tenn­
systcms and consequently planned for theni in the brain. By this l mean that there is
meaning to be found in a situation such as when a man suffers a territorial conflict, for
example, and cannot resolve it during his lifetime. The meaning is even clearer with an
animal in the same situation.
We arc at the very beginning of understanding in this field and must learn from cultural
anthropology and from the studies being clone on behaviour and primates. Scientists who
only collect facts, ask 1he wrong queslions and observe many phenomena very
super:ficially, end up no further than where they started.
Our perfonnaJJce-oriented socie1y has a tendency to judge and evaluate people.
especially men, in tenns of masculiac criteria which are: position and standing at work,
ability to assert oneself in one's career, a ce11ain amoun1 of disrespect, hierarchical
thinking, man-iage io a woman, e.stablishment of a family, etc. These are crileria that not all
men can meet and that usually underlie tbcir hanging conflicts.
As already memioned, an individual has a specific amount of time to resolve a
(terTitorial) conflict. If a resolution is 1101 reached, lhe possibility remains of dowograding
the conflict in order to guarantee survival with a hanging conflict. A right-handed man
would be quasi-blocked on the right brain hemisphere with a 1erritorial eonOict and would
react 10 a further conflict on 1he left 'female' side. This clearly has obvious consequences
in daily life. Such a man must l'i.Ilfill entirely diJferent duties in order LO be able to co-exist
within the conlext of his group, and the usual criteria used for measuring the achievemcn1s
of men would no longer apply 10 him.
Let us observe a pack of wolves: we establish that there is only one lllale and one
fornale leader; and the res! of the male animals in the pack are young wolves or second­
wolves. Second-wolves resemble the leader but are actually quile different; they may not
carry their tail as high, they may not lill their leg but will urinate like females and they
have no role in procreation. This suggests that these wolves have suffered a territorial
conflict as a consequence of a serious territorial fight the conflict remaining hanging. They
virtually reacl in a female way. Such second-wolves may never become free of these
hanging conflicts because !heir lives probably depend on lhelll. If a second-wolf were 10
resolve its territorial conf1ict, it would die shortly after from a heart attack and that is noi
nature's intention, as it would nol help the iadividual or 1he pack. The second-wolf is
changed for Ille and receives constant reminders from the leader about its rank. This
constellation is ideal at the same lime for lhe pack, because if I here wer.e constant territorial
fighls, the pack would be incapable of functioning.
Such comparisons, of course, are risky. My wish at this point is 10 sharpen everyone's
vision of the biological function and the biological meaning of life-long hanging con0icts.
They seem 10 have a double function, for the individual and the group.

136
also fulfilled if the patient suffers active conical foci both on the right and the left. H is
then that both hemispheres vibrate differently from each other. i.e.. no longer in the normal
rhythm. Thus. if these two conditions exist and the patient has corresponding cortical foci
in conflict activity. he is then in a schizophrenic constellation. There are however, two
other possibilities for being in schizophrenic constellation.
I. Dmgs auromatically alter the brain's normal rhythm; this, then, has already brought
abom tbe first condition. Just one existing or one new conflict puts the patient into
schizopb J·enic constellation immediately. This explains how people with an active
cortical conflict so quickly come into schizophrenic constellation with one drug, be it
heroin, morphine or alcohol. The same happens in reverse, when the patient is on
drugs and then suffers a contlict.
2. The second possibility is that the patient is brain damaged or has had a brain operation.
The brain no longer vibrates in the normal rhythm. This is the difference between a
healed IIH and an operated I-11-1; in the first case, the [damaged) brain returns to its
normal rhythm after repair, while in the second case, the operated or injured brain can
never retrieve it.
By definition. in the case of a brain injur y or operation, it is enough for a patient 10
suffer an active contlict on the same side as the injury to go into an immediate
schi�ophrcnic constellation. This bas important consequences for those patients who
have had brain operations and sufler an active cortical HH that is, speaking
figuratively, located close to or immediately on, the site of the operation. ln the case of
spontaneous healing with glial scarring. that would constitute a very normal relapse.
However. in the case of a brain operation, there cannot be a normal relapse. Instead.
the patient falls instantly into schizophrenic constellation. He will have enormous
difficulties resolving this conflict.

14.4.4 Fronto- occipital constellation


Although the schizophrenic constellation signifies a transversal opposition of the HH
affecting the right and left hemispheres ( to a greater or lesser degree), the fronto-oceipital
constellation is where the patient perceives u danger fro01 the front, as well as perceiving
or suspecting a danger from behind. This is a bad situation for the patient, often with no
way out, and can result ia what used 10 be described as schizophrenia. Additionally there is
the combination with right frontal and left occipital or reversed, which has the patient in
schizophrenic constellation because both hemispheres are affected. but be is also in fronto­
occipiial constellation because he has suffered a frontal and an occipital HH.
ff we imagine both hemispheres as not quite complete eggs that have been somewhat
Dattcned in the middle when laid next to each other, every point on the one eggshell ,,�th
any point on tbe other can. in a way, create a schizophrenic constellation. There are
countless possible combinations corresponding to the many manifestations we know from
psychiatry.
It is also important to determine the individual HH - there can be more than two; the�
can even be three or four - because only these HH's can give us information on th::
contents of tbc supposed or even real delusions ,vhich arc quite irrational in realii y, bm
once had very real things as a basis, things that will reveal the patient's connicts.
A patient with two motor connicts on each of the two hemispheres usuall y has a ruoto£
manifestation, i.e. a tick. or repetition of a certain movement or, in a situation related to the
conflict, engages in a particular, apparently nonsensical motor activity which will re
understood oucc we reflect on the two DHS's.

138
the rigbt breast with aa acLive 1111 in the lefi lateral cerebellar hemisphere. The patient
reported thal her world had just collapsed and she felt as cold as ice, with no feeling. She
suffered for many months. with resolutions of short duration and night-sweats (a sign of
n1berculosis which sometimes led to the destruction of one or other nodule); aticr which
there were relapses when she was in a ki1id of schizophrenic constellation. She would do
crazy things, all manifestations of this total emotional numbness.

14.4.7 Sequence of OHS in the cerebral cortex


A right-handed man nom,ally suffers his first conllict in the right hemisphere, and the
second conllict cortically on the left. This order is reversed with a lef.i-handed man. A
right-handed woman suffers her first conllicL in the left hemisphere cortically, and Lhc
second conflict in the right hemisphere cortically. A lefL-handcd wonrnn experiences it in
reverse. There is an exc.:ption: Lhe milk ducts for the right and left breast arc cquilaterally
tied to the cerebellum and they arc always unequivocally delined as child-breast or partncr­
breas1. If a right-handed woman suffers a seraration con0icL from her child. the impact is
always on the right cortical area in 1he sensory cortical centre, whether it is the first or the
second conflic1. This is because it is tied 10 the right lateral area of the cerebellum. which
would react if it was a worry or quanel conflict about or wiih the child. not a separation
eonflic1.
A left-handed woman shows the reverse. It is the right breast that would he artected in a
conflict of separaiion with her child and one would look for the corresponding focus for
the ductal carcinoma in the left sensory co1tical centre, and this would be tied to the relay
in the left lateral cerebellum, which would react if the conflict were mother-child worry or
mother-child quanel of a left-handed mother.
The m.ilk ducts which correspond tn the ldi breast in a right-handed mother and clearly
define the 111other-child breast, may be joined in definition with the flexor muscles of the
let1 arm as being for the child, as well as the inside of the skin of the same ar111, the hand
and the leti abdominal portion of the skin (because humans, too, had a mammary ridge
which is now only rudimentary) and the inside of the left leg which is where the child of a
right-handed woman normally sits.
It is exactly the opposite for a partner. One has to separate from this the outside of the
arm and Lhe leg that means separation as well a� defence. !-'or a right-handed woman, the
left arm is the 'shielding' arm while the right one is the 'hitting' arm.

14.4.8 Sensitivity of the periosteum


These rules arc also valid for the sensitivity of the periosteum where the conflict contem is
always a separation, with the addition of pain. inflicted or suffered. and is a brutal
separation. Analogically, the same topographic correlations are valid here as well.
There is therefore only one schizophrenic constellation with periosteum conflicts
(sensory paralysis of the pcriostcum) on both hemispheres. The neurologist cannot derca
anything other than perhaps a somewhat lower temperature of the affected extremities than
in the non-affected ones. This explains why there is an organ correspondence for each and
every contlicr and why at the same time schizophrenic patients do not show organic
disease, since apparently they have no lack on the organic plane. This was because we
could not examine them prorcrly and did not know how to understand and com:late 1he
HH in the brain.

140
guaraotees survival through the schizophrenic conslclla1ion. Should the individual continue
his devclop111e111 into maturity in spite of the schizophrc. nic constellation. there would be
immense negative consequences.
If a little girl suffcn; a separation conflict from her father because the mother gets
custody when her parents divorce, should the conflict remain active for too long, at some
point she would develop a serious neurodcrmalitis with mcrnory loss from which she could
die. If; fi'lr instance. a motor conOict is added (of not-being-able-to-hold-the father), the
child's developmem will come to an immediate standstill. This guarantees the following
two actions:
I. There is almost no contlicl mass built up.
2. Th.: liltlc girl can resolve the conflict when she gets older.
For the girl in this case. 'better weather' means being older. The moment she turns 14
she can decide by herself which parcnl she wants to be with and both conflicts will be
resolved simullancously. ln a very intelligent manner. maturation stays at aa infanlile stage
so 1ha1 the individual does not reprcs..:111 competition, which, in this connection, is an
important momc111 of survival. Had she continued 10 mature, independent of the unresolved
conflicts, she would never have had the chance to resolve these conflicts again, because her
development and consciousness would be al an entirely different level. She can resolve her
conflicts and catch up with her maturation when the outer circumstances change. which is
an incredibly interesting aspect.
There are many special education programs for developmentally retarded children, and
even for college students and university graduates whose maturity index corresponds to
puberty or pre-pube1iy stage. The number of people atTected is greater than generally
accepted. It is only necessary 10 be al the level of maturity of a thirteen year old 10 achieve
an academic degree. General human and sexual maturity is not essential lo attaining purely
intellectually defined college degrees. The intell igenee and aptitude tests used tell us
nothing ofa person's maturity level.

14.5 Avoiding the so-called 'vicious cycle' (devil's circle)


In my book 'Legary £la NEW MF:DIC/Nc'. I describe the vicious cycle as a dangerous
mechanism that manifests as relapses and new successive conflicts combined with a
psychic self-build-up, all of which are caused by doctors inducing panic and panic in
general so that the patient falls back into contlic1 again and again. This should not happen;
ii does not happen with animals because diagnoses and prognoses cannot cause them panic.
For us, however, there arc vicious cycles that we find difficult to break because they
seem to run their course automatically.
Example:
A patient allowed her breast to be amputated because it had a nodule that had stopped
growing as her conflict was resolved, but the node bothered her. I advised her 10 have lbe
gynaecologist mcJ·ely excise the node but 1101 lhe entire breast. However. the gynaecologist
argued with her and convinced her to have the whole breast amputaled. When she came out
of the anaesthesia she did not suffer a conflict because she had agreed to the amputation.
Six weeks later she put on her German traditional folk costume. As she smoothed it down
in front of the mirror she was startled because the left breast was missing. The costume's
front was not filled. and it did not sit properly. At that moment she suffered a
disfigurement conflict at the site of the amputated left breast. In the meantime, a melanoma
started growing. This began the vicious c.yclc (devil's circle): every time she saw tbe
melanoma. she felt that she was deformed and soiled. The melanoma continued to grow.
The vicious cycle continued: since the paliem fell she was deformed on the left side of the

142
mistress had died and her daughter had taken the dachshund home to her apartment and
tobacconist's shop. The dachshund suffered two contlicts simultaneously:
I. A nest-territorial conflict with accompanying right teat-Ca (instead of left, because of
left-pawed-ness).
2. An identity-conflict with accompanying stomach ulcer (instead of rectum ulcer-Ca,
because of her lefl-pawed-ness).
r---- .,.. � Had the dog been right-pawed, her HH would have
� �
( hit th� right cerebellum (with left teat-Ca) and the
-:=; ·
' ·-
lcfi side of the cerebrum (with-rectum-squamous-
epithelium-ulcer-Ca). Because she is left-pawed,
we find the HH on the left cerebellum and the
accompanying carcinoma in the right teat, as well
as the other 1-1 H in the right hemisphere in the
stomach relay - just as one would with a 'right­
� pawed' female dachshund with an identity conflict.
�"- -- , I was told that the dog always had her epileptic
vomiting attacks when the new owner's brother
came for a visit. The dog, which had a 'biological
identity conflict' (I don't know where I live),
hoped each time that be would take her back to her
former home where the brother still lived.
Whenever she came to tem1s with not being taken
back, she would have her cpileptoid crisis.

And this is how (see arrow), with our brain, we


accurately 'understand' Tiu.> language of the li11fo dog
that had two operations pe,formed 011 her teats a11d was
,..,..., close 10 being put doiv11.

\���
Once we understood the little animal's language, the therapy was relatively simple: we had
to provide a permanent conflict resolution for the biological identity con11ict 'I don't know
where I belong'.
We solved the problem by asking the owner's brother not to visit for a few months; and
every morning, I took her a sausage that she loved. Soon enough, the little dog knew where
she belonged. The teat-ulcer slopped and needed no more surgical attention. The stomach
epilepsy, which had occurred twice a week after the visits of the owner's brother, also
abruptly stopped. No one talked about 'putting her to sleep' any more. She has been very
happy these last four years. All we needed was to understand our 'comrade dachshund's'
language; the therapy fell into place quite simply, it was logical, consistent and necessary.

146
15.1 The biological conflict in the embryonic phase
Jv1an (like animal) is an independent being from the time of conception. As such, he Lives
through the entire phylogeny during his intra-uterine ontogenesis. He can suffer biological
conflicts during all the phylogenesis - the oldest being the archaic conflicts of the old brain
directed organs. Why, during the recapitulation of the phylogenesis in the womb's
ontogenesis, should he not suffer biological conflicts in that very place? He can and does
suffer them, and as an independent being!
One of the ways is to suffer a biological conflict that bypasses the mother. Another way
to suffer a biological conflict is for the mother to panic, causing the supply vessels to the
placenta to close and the child to die of hunger. The mother, of course, can also suffer a
conflict, but she will remain on hold uaLil after the pregnancy whicl1 lakes absolute
precedence. This changes tbe moment the child in the womb gets into the CA-phase and
aborts itself, commits suicide, as it were. Labour starts, and the pregnancy is biologically
over from then on. The mother can now, in a counter-move, terminate the (no-longer
existent) pregnancy.
Some examples:

15.1.1 Intra-uterine liquid conflict with territorial fear and fear from
behind conflict
A young midwife, five months pregnant, was rinsing instruments at the delivery room sink.
She was close to a foreign woman in labour who was panicking because of her poor
understanding of German. She suddenly screeched hysterically as if she was being
impaled, and everyone i.n the delive1y room began to tremble. At that moment, the embryo
in the young midwife's womb suffered both a water conflict and a territorial fear conflict at
the same time. The embryo would associate water with very great danger because of tbe
blood-curdling screams of the woman in labour and his mother's cleaning of instruments
under running water and audibly splashing. The midwife went into labour that evening
witb light bleeding wbich threatened an abortion. She stayed home for a few days until the
sin1ation calmed down; or so she thought.
Upon returning to tbe delivery room, and again while rinsing instrwncnts, she heard
women howling in labour, just as her unborn baby bad done, not as horribly frightening.
but bad enough. Labour and bleeding occurred several times, again threatening abortion. In
the middle of her sixth mouth she decided to take early maternity leave. The foetus realized
Lhis and had no more relapses, so the biological conflict was resolved. A Rer birth, the child
had a left-kidney cyst and a cough that lasted for a while and the mother noticed that its
vision was poor. Unfortunately, she was persuaded to have the child's kidney excised and,
despite its well being, to be treated with chemotherapy.

148
Relays right fro11/a/: Brcmchia/-Ca in the PCL-phase.
,n:�anic·dinica(: severe cough.
Left kidney relay 1>0110111 leji: in PCL-phase. organic
level: left kidney cyst.

15.1.2 The most common intrauterine conflict: The circular saw


syndrome
By far the most common embryonic conflict is the circular saw syndrome. We already
have thirty cases of it. Its mechanism is as follows:
Humans have the same inheren t codes as animals. Men, l ions and other be asts of prey
have sh ared the same environment for millions of years. The lion 's roar is an alarm signal
for us; it is innate, and even the embryo recognizes it a11d becomes extremely distressed.
A circular saw sounds like the roar and hiss of a beast of prey. .l n our civilization, the
pregnant mother-to-be has largely lost her instincts. Without a second thought, she might
stand beside a working circular saw with no idea that the child in her womb will get into a
terrible panic; it thinks that a lion is going to swallow the motber - along with the embryo.
Depending on the first appearance of the biological conflict, its extent and frequency and,
of course, how the embryo experienced the OHS 's biologica l con11ict, there will be
motoric or sensory paralysis or both combined, and often a schizophrenic constel lation as
well after the birth. This can happen if the child is exposed to a similarly frightening noise
like the sound of a dril l, when it will be hit with a new conflict on the. other cortical side of
the cerebrum. There is a danger that the child will remain with these two biological
conflicts in schizophrenic constellation if the unsuspecting parents push the baby carriage
past another circular saw, for instance. In the countyside,
r these are almost household
appliances. Our brain is simply not progr ammed for the noise of civilization and associates
it with dangers that arc engraved into it because of our phylogenetic adaptation.

149
15.1.2.1 Case of a new-born with equinovarus and diabetes
The CT is,�{ a baby a Jew days afrer bin!,, hom wirh a
c/uhjoot (ha11gi11g hea/i11Ji = S/JOSricity of rhe /ejr leg).
There was also a second motoric conflict for the
right leg and am1 and diabetes. The ch.iId resisted
and wanted to flee because the parents shouted al
each other constantly during the last part of the
pregnancy. The ensuing panic put the child into
schizophrenic constellation. It suffered two
conflicts in the womb:
I. Diabetes, resistance conflict
2. Motoric conflict of the right calf with
cquinovarus after birth, i.e., spasticity as a sign
of hanging healing. The relapses continued
because the parents persisted in fighting after
the birth.

15.1.2.2 The 'language of the brain' in infants. Death of a baby because of


hospitalization damage
Stomach ulcer because of hospitalization and a
shunt operation with all the additional damages
suffered unnecessarily by the I½ year old child,
causing cachexia aod leading to bis death.
I. Partial motoric paralysis, right arm, in
resolution,
2. Territorial anger conflict (stomach ulce r) in
resolution, continuous vomiting of blood
(hematemisis) in the PCL-pbase.
Partial motoric paralysis (right arm) resulting from
the vaccination against diphtheria and tetanus
\ administered at age 3\/z months (upper arrow,
cortical motoric centre). During the vaccination,
the liLtlc boy was tightly wrapped in a cloth towel
and 'bound'. He suffered a conflict of not-being­
able-to-defend himself as well as a territorial anger
conflict with stomach ulcer (right arrow).
Because of the ensuing epileptic crisis, he was hospitalized in the clinic and suffered
another OHS, renewed epileptic crises with territorial anger (and stomach epilepsy in the
healing phase) and continuous relapses, an aggravation resulting from the hospitalization,
which finally resulted in his death.
The inter-animal (biological) language is unequivocal and explicit: let me be free and leave
me to my mother! This case was particularly contemptuous because the so-called judge
declared that the mother, who bad healthy common sense, was a minor and, over her and
my objections, ordered surgery to be performed on the child, whereupon it died.

150
16 Statistics as presently applied in Medicine - The
so-called successful cases
The intention of statistics is to introduce a list of facts, as in a graph. Then another list of
facts is presented. Thirdly, the curve or parameter A is associated with curve or parameter
B in a causal manner.
The content of the curves is selected aad arbitrary. Calculations and conclusions
reached follow in a fomrnlly correct manner. So-calle.d knowledge in official medicine has
always been established by the use of statistics. As long as it is possible to aggregate facts,
statistics are valid. When different lists of facts have to be connected statistically in a
causal sense, however, things become more misleading.
For example: there are increasingly fewer storks, so it foUows statistically that there are
increasingly fewer babies, since it was the storks that brought them. Shepherds in the
Caucasus do nol get cancer. They eat a lot of sheep·s cheese with the statistical
consequence that sheep's cheese is anti-carcinogenic and prevents cancer (Sciemific paper
.from the pmfessorship.fi,r ca11cer prophylaxis 111 the U11i11erxity of Heidelberg/Mannheim).
In my view, the use of statistics is a highly controversial practice of the so-called
scientific method.
An example:
a) more cars are being produced
b) more streets are being built
Possible statistical correlations:
I. because there are more cars, more streets have to be built
2. as more streets are built, more cars are manufactured
Since there is limited infonnation about most phenomena (without regard to the hidden
background difficulties), it seems that statistics are typically employed where sampling or
data collection is relatively easy; e.g. mortality statistics in connection with geography,
nutrition, pollution, etc.
The mistake lies in the fact that out of the hundred possible causes, only tbe one that fits
is used, and a statistical likelihood is constructed without investigating all the other
possibilities. The fact that there is very little possibility of a serious conflict for a shepherd
in the Caucasus is not even considered as a potential cause.
Similarly questionable results can be found if a comparison is made of a group of poor
people from a socially weaker level - which is almost a given in surveys of strongly
polluted areas due to industrial emissions or other toxic materials - with a group who live
in unaffected areas. For people who live in Bilterfcld or Leuna, environmental pollution is
a ve1y important issue. Yet, the following type of questions is not considered:
• the social classification of the population under investigation
• whether they come from areas with significant or threatened unemployment because of
site restructuring or mass-layoffs, such as in the heavy industry sector
• to what extent the awareness in an area with significant environmental pollmion
combined with sensationalist press coverage is a factor in generating conflict.
(Example: the 'horror stories' in the press of some babies born without bands which
was supposedly caused by water pollution in the North and West Atlantic where the
mothers of the affected babies live.)
• would the hopelessness, poverty and fear of serious disease suffered by the people of
Bittcrfeld and Leuna n.ot be more significant statistical factors in the origin of disease?

153
• what is the interaction between life in a lower social class (with all the pressures that
ent ails) and the awareness of having to work in conditions that expose one to
carcinogens and the conflicts this can generate?
There arc no statistics as yet from the point of view of the NEW MEDICINE. There would
be other explanations that could be proven with the greatest accuracy.
It is generally thought that aniline medication leads to papilomas of the bladder or renal
pelvis or mucosa of the rectum. Here, the NEW MEDICINE can provide a very simple
explanation: The affected individuals can experience a biological conflict of 'not being
able to m ark the territory' because of the change in colour and odour in the urine and
faeces. If there is a OHS, this conflict, which exists in males and females, can lead to renal
pelvis or bladder ulceration in right-handed males, and in right-handed wo men and left­
handed men these organic sympto ms would correspond to an identity conflict and a
territorial anger conflict. By then, the papilomas are in the keratinized and healed state, but
up to now, they have been erroneously diagnosed as carcinomas; in reality they arc only
h armless papillae.
If a survey were 10 be conducted of the populations that live close to atomic reactors, it
would no doubt emerge that they were more than likely to be poor people; rich people do
not need to live near an atomic reactor. One would therefore come to the conclusion th at
the poor get more cancer than the rich. However, there is no mention in the statistics that
one group is poor and the other is rich: only that some live close to the reactor and the
others do 1101. I do not know a single wealthy person who would not immediately sell their
house and move away the mom ent there were pl ans for building a reactor close to where
they lived. Many st atistics rest on the basic observation that the poor have more diseases
than the rich.
Every textbook in oncology states that circumcision lowers the incidence of cervical
carcinoma, therefore it is anti-carcinogenic. This assessment, along with its ridiculous
conclusions, came about in the following way: Some Israeli doctors studied a group of
f
lsraeli housewives to asce1tain how often they suf ered cervical c arcinomas. They then
used some Arab prostimtes as a comparison group, women who had indiscriminate sexual
intercourse with circumcised and uncircumcised men. Obviously, by earning their living in
this manner with everything that this kind of life entails, they suffered cervical cancer with
far greater frequency than the Israeli housewives.
The conclusion was that since the Israeli housewives only slept with their circumcised
husbands and the prostitutes slept with uncircumcised men, the cause for the cervical
cancer had to be the male smegma - perfectly pseudo-scientific proof that smegma is
carcinogenic. Knowledge of the NEW MEDICINE obliges the following comment: as we
all know, the problem is that if two simil ar events affect two groups, statistics establish
only one of fifty possible causes and drops the other forty-nine under the table. Such
medical pseudo-statistics are certainly not science.
Statistics have always been a numerical aggregation of facts. The assumed causes bavc
been statistically built after the fact. Furthermore, they have only been used in reference IO
the organic level and even there, given the lack of understanding of the interconnections,
the knowledge of the two phased nature of disease was ignored. In the same way, the
psychological and cerebral planes and the importance of l aterality remained unrecognized.
As for the epileptic crisis, the most frequent cause of death, not a word.
In hindsight one can say, with full authority, that most medical statistics have linle
value and make little sense.

154
I could continue to criticise the pseudo-scientific use of statistics in medicine. l will allow
myself to prognosticate that the future will look back on our collective age and regard
animal experimentation as a disgrace and a testimony of our unspeakable ignorance.
The following observation has been made: it appears that only men suffer from bronchial
carcinoma and because men smoke, carcinoma of the bronchi must come from smoking.
The NEW MEDICINE explains it this way: bronchial squamous epithelial ulcerative
carcinoma is the organic correlate of a territorial fear conflict. Territorial fear conflicts
affect only males (or masculine post climacteric women). Young women who are left­
handed can also suffer bronchial carcinoma (together with depression). Given female
hormones it does not usually get ve,y bad and it is seldom diagnosed. None of this has
anything to do with smoking.
In 'Scientific American' (Spectrum of Science, 3.ed. Heidelberg l 990) l read with
surprise how cigarette smoking and cancer are linked, i.e., specifically the assertion of a
causal connection: a 'latency period' was created all of a sudden and a shift was made from
bronchial cancer to 'lung cancer' (with alveolar cancer). The whole thing now read like
this: 'Lung cancer is a disease of the twentieth century. In the beginning, only males were
affected but in the meantime it has started affecting women as well. In the USA, lung
cancer (men) is responsible for about one third of all deaths, in England for about one half.
From the start it was believed that cigarette smoking was the likeliest cause since this was
a new form of polluting the air to which men were first exposed and later women. This
explanation encountered difficulties, however. It was impossible to correlate the incidence
of lung cancer with the per capita consumption of cigarettes in different places. This
problem was resolved with the recognition of the long incubation period of the disease
(next Plate). Many questions remain open, yet the basic fact is no longer questioned: a
cigarette smoker is ten to fitcy times more likely to die of lung cancer, the exact risk
dependent on the amount smoked and on where he lives. If a lot of people in a group give
up smoking, the mortality rate for lung cancer within this group will be reduced. This gives
the impression that lung cancer, the deadliest form, could be reduced overall if smoking
were reduced .
How could such statistics and conclusions have come about? 1t is quite simple: three
factors had not been considered:
I. The I 920's saw a worldwide economic crisis and mass unemployment, no welfare, no
unemployment benefits, a great fear of death during and after the First World War, and
liver and lung cancer were very common.
2. The eradication of contagion by tuberculosis since the I 930's was celebrated as an
outstanding achievement of modem hygiene. Although there was a reduction in liver
and alveolar (lung) nodule carcinomas in the thirties because of the much improved
economic situation, those that arose after 1939 in much higher numbers because of the
war, were no longer caseated by tuberculosis and remained visible to diagnostic
exploration as alveolar (lung) nodules, i.e.,' lung cancer'.
T quote W.E. Millier (Die !11fek1io11serreger des ,We11sche11, 1989 S 3) [Infectious Germs in
Huma11s, 1989, p.3]: ,,In 1850, the mortality rate from tuberculosis in Northern Europe was
still about 50 times as high as it would be 50 years later."
Deaths from tuberculosis in the USA for every 100,000 inhabitants in the year
1900: 194
1940: 46
l 956: 8
(Dokll mema Geigy, wisse11sclu!(1/iche fobe/len,/960. S.632/ /Documem Geigy. Scie111/fic C/wns.
1960. p.632]

158
J

explained in twenty years. Back to our diagram: while tbe increase in lung cancer
between 1920 and 1940 is quite possibly tied firstly to an improvement in X-ray
diagnosis and presumably includes cases of bronchial atclectasis, from 1940 on there
were improved diagnostic techniques and suppression of tuberculosis. It is curious that
the graph stops around I 970/i2, because additional phenomena can only be explained
with ditTiculty. The consumption of cigarettes dips from 1970 on, and so-caUed lung
cancer should also have gone down if smoking caused iL but this is not the case.
Another error is the failure to consider the age pyramid. Old people suffer a much higher
incidence of bronchial cancer and pulmonary (lung) nodule carcinoma than the young. We
only count the incidence of lung cancer in a given population unit in a given time unit.
even though there has been a significant incre.ase io life expectancy and "·e simply say 1hat
it has increased. For the mass of those between 65 and 8:5 we have an ia.significam group to
compare with!

16.1.5 The 'questionnaire statistic'


I am very waiy about results of so-called ·questionnaire statistics' when a quesiion such as
,,Tlave you, within a given time span, had a psychological-biological conflict?" is asked of
a patient in a group. As we know from the NEW MEDICfNE, the trigger for a OHS with a
biological conflict does not have to be the 'loss of a partner'; what is relevant is the WAY
in which the loss occurred and how it UNEXPECTEDLY affected the individual. This is
what decides whether there is a biological conflict.
On the basis of knowing the five biological laws, we can assume that most statistics
regarding psychological data on patients arc completely worthless, in particular if such
falsely obtained data is used to refer to the incidence of disease.
For non-smokers, 'second-hand smoke' was fabricated, containing more than 1200
different substances lhat can occur in all sorts of other materials and chemical
combinations that we all inhale.

161
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16.1,6 The 'Success case statistic'


I am often asked by all sorts of physicians to document 'success cases', my 'best cases'. If
we were all to take our best twenty cases, we would all be equal. It would not make any
difference if ten other practitioners also produced well-documented cases, each believing
that it was their therapy or their treatment that had worked.
There is no success or failure in a scientific-biological system. The system is pre­
programmed when it is based on the biological laws. Regardless of therapeutic
intervention, everything will follow the five biological laws.

162
17 The connections between psyche-brain-organ that
were already surmised before 1981

17 .1 A historic retrospective
People have always fell a connection be1ween psychological conflic!S. emotions. traumatic
experiences and shocks in life, such as 1he death of a partner or a child. Our language
provides a testimony to 1his in couoiless phrases ai1d expressions. The following
expressions briefly illustrate how closely people have approximated an understanding of
biological coullicts in the sense and content that I myself have understood them:
Describing the txpericnce of shock, the DHS:
It was as though rd been hit by lightning
It hil me like a blow
It went right through to my very core
Ongoing conflict activity:
I've never been able to get over it
I couldn't swallow it
I battled with this problem for a long time
This is going to get the better of me
l still have sleepless nights about it
l can't get over it
Brain level:
My head can't tolerate it
My head is bursting
Archaic morsel conflicts, e.g. tonsils:
Not being able to assimilate something
Not being able io grab something
To want to collect something
Indigestible gastro-intestinal conflict, indigestible anger:
Somebody cou Id not stand it
I haven'L digested it yet
It's lying in my stomach
Existence conflict, kidney-collecting tubules:
It went straight to my kidneys
Fright conflict, area of the larynx:
It left me speechless
I was speechless with horror
It took my breath away
The words stuck in my throat
Fright-fear conJlicts, regarding larynx:
I was struck dumb
I was speechless with terror
[I took my breath away
The words stuck in my throat

163
1 st ill rem ember a radiologist in our clinic in Ober audorf who had studied a few
semesters of psychology. When l gave a lec ture to my colleagues and tried to explain that,
according to my observations, acule-dr ama1ic conflict-shocks h ad caused lhe cancer, he
groaned. ,,That's al l nonsense and doesn't exist i n psyc hology". Fo111111atel y, with several
years of experience in neurology and clinical psychiatry behind me, I reacted with
complete indifference. lt is not reality thal ha s to adjusl to psychological theor ies, but t h e
other way round. To the degree that medicine wants to be taken seriously from a biologicc1l
and scientifi c point of view. using expe rimenls as the basis for all future analy sis, to 1hat
degree will psychology l ose its grip, disadvantaged by its theoretical con stn1c1s which do
not match reality.
On the whole, lhe basic sh orlcoming of psychol ogy is that it not only lacks medical
knowledge, bul medical experience as well, and th is should be codified in
psycho1berapeu1ic law. Parallel to 1his, as tbe new psyc h otherapeutic law is set in Slone.
physici ans will see th emselves more and more as organ-doctors. They leave the psyc.!1c 10
the psycholog ists. However, as wc have seen so far, we cannot split lhc individual i nto
separate parts.
E. Evans, I 926 and LeShan tried to provide therapy for cancer patients throug h their
'personal devel opment'. The anempi 10 'Under.mmd tire 111alfor111atiu11 of tile pwie11t'
(Mars, Frl12 Zorn !97i) led to adveorurous speculat ions by th erapists as they tried to
provide 'therapy· for a patient who had maligoant lymphoma with th e resull that they made
h im sick agai n, since malignant lymphoma is in reality a harmless swelling of the lymp h
nodes in the healing phase. We can see doctors, psych oanalysts and psychologists working
past eac h other indifferent ly, with the psychologist accepting lhe phy sician's di agnosis at
fac e val ue and passi ng it on. There was a hypothetical assumption (Engel 1954, Grinker
1966, Bahnson. 1966. 1969, 1979, Baltrush 1975, Schmale 1977, Fox 1978) that cancer
wa s to be understood as a resu l t of pre-morbid psyc h osocial influen ces and the personality
of t he cancer patient.
Enge l (1961) examined th e influenc e of loss and gri eving on cancer, and defined loss as
1he lo ss of a precious object, a c l ose relation. a property. a place of work, one' s home,
one' s country, iclcc1ls. hody pa1ts. et c .
Such investigations are lypic all y psychological and have little to do with biological
conllicts. The biological realm is such thal a loss conflict can only be experienced for
another human or for an indi vidual of the same species. Even here lhough, it depends on
whelhcr, in the second of lhe DBS, the conflicc was experienced as a loss conflict or as a
territorial conflict (inheritance. pecking order) or not cve.n experienced as a biological
contlic i if the death was expect ed. On the other hand, if the loss happens during an
argument, a woman could develop breast cancer instead of ovarian cancer. If the loss is
experienc ed as a separation conflict, the result will be a biological conllict with a sensmy
function loss or (depending on whe.thc r it is for a child. a mo1ber or a partner) left or ri ghl
breast ductal ulcerating c arcinoma, which is practi call y undetect able in the c onflict active
f
phase. The s ide afected depends on wh cther the woman is right or left-handed. If the loss
refers to a home. specifically one's own home, the corresponding biological conflict can be
a territorial one; but it coul d also be a refugee-conflict w ith carcinoma of the col l ecting
tubules of th e kidneys in the CA-phase. If the patient l oses not onl y his house but i1lso his
possessions, he could suffer a biological starvat ion conllicl, but always, of course, w ith a
OHS.
As can be seen, worlds separate us! Even for animals. the loss of a 'morsel' is
completely diflercnl from the loss of a close member of its species.
1nvestigations in th e psychological fie l d inlo whether grief is an illness (Engel 1977)
and whe1her or not. if not processed, migh t turn into ' h elplessness or hopelessness', are

16R
Hodgkin's disease and brain tumors; according to the NEW MEDICINE, all in the PCL­
phasc.
Typical of the psychological point of view is the following conclusion: In answer to the
macabre question: ,,What do you really want to do with your life?" many of the cancer
patients stared at LcShan in as1onisl1ment. He concluded from this that patients had an
inability to aggressively express their own requirements, wishes and feelings. I suspect (hat
these are likely to be secondary phenomena, for I never see this hopelessness and lack of
faith in patients before. their disease. I think that talking about a ·cancer-personality' is a
disastrous mistake. Occasionally. sympathicotooy or vagotony, which profoundly affects
the psychological state of a patient, will suggest a psychological portrait reminiscent of the
foregoing.
LeShai1 cettainly created awareness for the existence of psychic reasons for cancer, but
did not reach the core of the mailer because he did not differentiate between totally
different conflicts and only saw causes in a vcty generalized view of the patient's pre­
hisro,y and pcrsooal developmen.1. Needless to say. he had no interest in cerebral or
organic events.

17.3 Separation from psychosomatics


My professor from Giessen. Thure von Ox.kiill, for whom 1 was rcside01 (physician), wrote
a very thick classic on psychosomatics. 11 deals with the question of sympathicotonia and
vagotonia in a few short lines stating that these disrurbances email 'vegetative dystonia'.
Psychosnrnmics was certainly headed in the right direction and even arrived at many
correct conclusions. ll would be unfair to many authors nol lo recognize their attempts to
establish correlations between psyche and organ. However, one cannot really work with
them because unequivocal and sturdy connections - such as the NE\V MEDICll\'E lawfully
exhibits - were never found.
From the very beginning, psychosomatics dealt only with diseases where a conflict had
allegedly become chronic. causing somatic changes in the organs via the vegetative
nervous system. In order to find out what these conflicts leading to a particular disease
might be. it normally uses psychoanalysis. ll is no wonder that the search 10 connect
certain disiurbances with definite connict cons1ellations has been in vain. Grnnied, uniform
rules for the selection of organs had yet m be found.
An asthma attack was LypicaUy seen as an outburst of tears, high blood pressure
corresponded to an a\iack of suppressed rage. and stomach ulcers were the result of a
co11s1an1 conflict between aggression and a 1ende11cy to escape. These examples show how
far removed psychosomatics is from the NEW MEDICINE.
Unfortunately this resulted in tbe psychosomatic approach bringing its practitioners too
close lo the wake of the psychologists instead of keeping them in the realm of biology and
the behavioral analysis of primates.
There were constant discussions about stress potentials and stress research, but no
observations that stress was merely the consequence of a DJ-IS, a symptom of the CA­
phase. The popular books on psychosomatics (Brautigam, Christian, vom Rad) do not even
refer to the term sympathicotonia. Perhaps I am too scientific for the vague psychosomatic
approach. I think psycbosomatics \\�II not have a place beside the NEW MEDICINE but it
will be supplemented with hard, biological rules and absorbed into ii.
Grossart-Maticcl (' Disease tis Riography', I 979) complains about the psychosomatic
cancer researchers: .,So far, scientists have not been able to develop a method to
differen1ia1e between the psycho-social conflicts before the disease and the psycho-social

170
doveco1e. The falcon is 'programmed' into the dove's brain and. although it has not been
taught, 1he dove does 1he right thing immediately and instinctively. Basically, all animals
follow their instinct; even their predators have 1heir survival instincts pre-programmed into
them.
The owl lays fewer eggs in spring if ii feels there will not be enough mice; it will not
decimate the mice and starve as a result.
These things arc all wondedi11ly programmed in our brain and inter-connected with the
programs of our fellow creanircs.
The same is true between animals and plants, a biological equilibrium that survived
marvellously fi:>r millions of years until man began to meddle. Of all 1he creatures on earth.
it is only man who has lost his direction and disrupted the balance in this wondrous
creation. Schill.er's lines comes 10 mind:
.. Da11gemus to waken rhe lion
mi11m1s the tiger ·s 1001/t.
/Jut the mosr fearsome calflmity
ix man i11 his insanity··
It isnot my intention 10 be morose abou1 the world's biological state, but instead to suggest
that there is a need to find lhe lost paradise: 001 the one in which we were immonal, but the
one in which we were in hannony wi1h the rest of crealion. W could anain ham1ony again
by allo,,�ng our brain to react narurally to its millions-of-years-old-program.
h would take our brain a million years to account for 1he products of our civiliza1ion so
dear to us. In a million years these will become old hat, as our brain can never keep up
wiih the new discoveries. Instead of regarding this as a shmtcoming, we should ask
ourselves wherher perhaps our discoveries cannot keep up wi1h us and become integrated
into rhe code of the brain.
The consequences of this for the individual, the family, the group, 1he village, the city or
mankind as a whole still remain a completely different question. These questions should be
debated and, with our knowledge of the New Medicine, an investigarion into the behaviour
of animals and plants along with the facts of evolutionary history should be considered.
Only then could we rediscover a biologically liveable interconncc1ed existence.
The world has probably not been in its present stale of disorder for millions of years. It
docs not matter if 1he people who ask these questions are ridiculed as anti-civilization
reactionary dreamers. The whole ecological movement (which belongs in this camp) was
also ridiculed when it first staned, until people finally paid it due. respect.
Am1ed with the knowledge of these complex relationships, the doctor's main task in 1he
medicine of the fun1re will be to clarify to his patient the deeper meaning or his illness and
to explain as closely as possible the natural resolution possibilities of his biological
conflicts. Even here we have to ask if it will take a catastrophe before we begin to reflect
on ourselves. We do not have to give up all our technological achievements to recover tlte
million-year-old programming code of 1he brain and become one with ourselves again.

174
Since 1986, Dr. !lamer has not been allowed to talk to any patients. A presiding judge
of the District Court of Cologne advised him. by warrant, to !ind (at age 51) another calling
unrelated to medicine.
This made it impossible for Dr. Hamer to continue scientific research. With no financial
means, no secretary or assistants, he had to obtain CT's and corresponding records for his
research with great difficulty through other doctors. He was unable to document all cases
because the basic examinations pertinent to the investigations could not be carried out. Too
much was left to chance. Had he had a clinic and some financial suppo1t, one can hardly
imagine what would have happened.
In 1986 a cou1t sentenced the University of Ttibingen to continue the post-doctoral
thesis proceedings. Nothing happened until January 3, 1994 when the judgment ro validate
Dr. Hamer's thesis was executed, a unique process in the hiscory of universitic.s! However.
al1cr 13 years, it was unlikely that the University of Tiihingen would test the New
Medicine on the equivalent cases. On April 22, the university announced ,,a verification
within the framework of the post-doctoral thesis is not planned", (Readers who would like
more current information regarding the events associated with the thesis may request
documeatacion from the Amici di Dirk Publishers).
Dr. Hamer expanded his system in l98i co 5 biological laws covering all diseases in the
entire field of medicine, based on observation of I 0,000 cases.
Since tbe uaderlying criteria are strictly scientific. it is very easy t o check the New
Medicine as it has been named since thea. National and international physicians and
physicians' associatioas are constantly testing it and verifying, through signed
documentation, that it is correct.

176
Simonton, C.0.u. Matthews-Simonton. St. u. Creighton, J.: Wieder Gesund werdcn,
Hamburg I 993;
Spektrum der Wissenschaft: Krcbs-Tumoren, Zellen, Gene, Heidelberg 1990
Thompson, Richard F.: Das Gchirn, Heidelberg 1992
Ucxkiill, v. Th.: Grundfragcn der psychosomatischen Medizin, Hamburg, 1963 ders.:
Psychosomatische !'vledizin, Miinchen, I 990
ders. u. Wesiack: Theorie der Humanmcdizin, M(inchen 1988
Warell, D.: Lehrb. dcr lnfektionsk.rank. 1990, Anikel v. Citron und Girling

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