You take all of Nature together to shed light on individual details; in the totality of her phenomena, you seek to explain the individual.
Medical Thinking and Moral Practice Afterword: Goethe\'s Thinking Applied to the Physician\'s Path of Training.
Working Principles of Therapeutic Eurythmy 7.
Clinical Pictures and Disease Patterns 6.
The Human Being and the Processes of Nature 5.
Humans and Animals 4.
Life and Consciousness: From Amphibians to Reptiles 3.
Form and Life 2. ∞ ∞ ∞
C O N T E N T S Foreword: From Reductionist Science to Living Thinking in Medicine Preface 1.
Form, Life, and Consciousness is one of those rare resources that serve as a guide for the professional while also remaining accessible to those who are interested in gaining a better understanding of the whole Human Being and a spiritual-scientific approach to Medicine and therapy.
The author uses numerous examples to illustrate how a phenomenological encounter with nature leads to a fuller understanding of the Human organism and its various clinical pictures, opening new ways toward a more holistic practice of therapies and the healing process.
This is the essence and basis of anthroposophically extended medicine.
He shows ways to recapture the Human Being within the context of life, nature, and its spiritual origin.
Husemann provides an abundance of scientific details that look at the whole person today.
Dr.
In doing so, diverse, unfamiliar perspectives open up for the practice of Medicine and other forms of healthcare and therapy.
He takes the reader on an exciting journey of discovery through the realms of minerals, plants, animals, and humankind.
Armin Husemann outlines--for doctors, therapists, students, and other interested readers--the basics and essential aspects of Anthroposophic medicine. -- Friedrich Schiller (in a letter to Goethe) Dr.
From simple levels of organization, you ascend to the more complex, ultimately assembling the most complex of all--the Human being.
You take all of Nature together to shed light on individual details; in the totality of her phenomena, you seek to explain the individual