|
19th century physiologist, Professor Claude Bernard, stated that the
environment of the cell determined the cell's function and integrity.
This premise was advanced in 1953 by French scientist, Professor Louis-Claude
Vincent, who determined that the body's internal environment at the cellular
level has a specific correlation to the overall state of health and disease.
Vincent hypothesized that the biocellular environment determines the body's
tendency toward developing various metabolic imbalances that can lead to
disease.
According to Vincent this biocellular environment can be likened to the terrain
of the soil in which a farmer grows crops. If the soil is too acid or too
alkaline, has too much or too little oxygen or nitrogen, or has an imbalance of
other nutrients, the crops either will not grow, or will become weakened and
more susceptible to microbes and other forms of disease.
Instead of results for terrain imbalance (i.e. the sick plant), he stated
that the better approach is to work with the various factors that determine the
overall terrain of the soil, and in this way prevent the imbalance form
occurring. The same approach is true for biological organisms.
|