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The Principles of Chiropractic Philosophy

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Title: The Principles of Chiropractic Philosophy


1
The Principles of Chiropractic Philosophy
2
In review
  • The philosophy of chiropractic is derived from
    fundamental philosophical concepts

3
Philosophy What Is It?
  • Literally Love (philo) of discourse (sophos)
  • The study of the laws and causes under-lying
    reality, leading to an understanding of its
    fundamental nature.
  • The process of integrating knowledge into a
    useful world view
  • The attempt to explain phenomena using of all
    available information

4
Metaphysics
  • the way we look at all of existence the nature
    of the universe
  • Metaphysical concepts
  • 1. Materialism/physicalism
  • 2. Idealism
  • 3. Dualism

5
How does chiropractic philosophy relate?
  • dualistic interactionism mind and matter are
    mutually interdependent one cant exist without
    the other

6
Biology
  • The study of life and living things
  • Biological Concepts
  • 1. Mechanism
  • 2. Vitalism

7
How does chiropractic philosophy relate?
  • critical vitalism or organicism Living
    things, including humans are more than the sum of
    their parts life creates and maintains the
    conditions for its own existence we can not be
    described as complex, carbon-based machines
  • We are life in matter inseparably

8
Dr. Liptons ideas
  • The universe, and, hence humans in it, are most
    accurately described in terms of energy (it is a
    quantum universe)
  • The human body and its behavior (life) are not
    machine-like, and thus we are not
    controlled/victimized by our genes

9
Dr. Liptons ideas
  • The behavior of our cells, and thus of our whole
    body, is controlled by signals (energy) from the
    environment
  • For our bodys cells, these signals (energy) are
    generated by the central nervous system (brain)
    the control of behavior is therefore from
    Above-Down-Inside-Out (ADIO)

10
Laws
D E D U C T I O N
THEORY Explanation of relationships
I N D U C T I O N
RESEARCH HYPOTHESES Predicted relationships
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK Empirical generalizations
FACTS
Empirical observations
11
Philosophic Methodology
  • Philosophy works through deductive reasoning
  • Deduction to pull out of
  • To derive meaningful conclusions from general
    principles through logical reasoning
  • Based on assumptions accepted a priori as true
  • Usually reasoning from the more general principle
    to the more specific case

12
The Syllogism Philosophys Basic Argument
  • A Major Premise
  • All humans have the capacity to heal themselves
  • A Minor Premise
  • You are a human being
  • The Logical Conclusion
  • You have the capacity to heal yourself

13
Strengths of Deductive Reasoning
  • Can allow us to reason beyond our experience
  • Immeasurable, immaterial, subjective, unique
  • 100 certainty of conclusions
  • We reason to understand, in order to act
  • Our willingness to act is often based on our
    confidence in our conclusions

14
Limitations of Deductive Reasoning
  • Quality of the assumptions are they true?
  • Can come from anywhere / accepted as true
  • False assumptions lead to uncertain conclusions
  • Quality of the logic is it valid?
  • Errors can produce false conclusions from true
    premises or true conclusions from false premises!
  • Deduction is not self-testing
  • Conclusions need to be tested against reality

15
The Thirty-Three Principles
  • An Introduction
  • Originally authored by R. W. Stephenson
  • Reordered, categorized and edited by
  • David B. Koch, D.C. and the PCC Philosophy faculty

16
  • The Thirty-Three Principles are a compilation of
    B.J. Palmers philosophy, as described by R.W.
    Stephenson

Chiropractic Text Book, 1927
17
  • The original Thirty-Three Principles (see
    handout) are a study in deductive logic,
    proceeding from a major premise to specific
    applications in biology and the human body

18
  • You will examine the Thirty-three Principles and
    their application in depth in Phil 113 (4th
    trimester)

19
The Reorganized 33 Principles (see handout)
  • In 2003, Dr. David Koch, then a professor of
    philosophy at PCC, published a review of the
    Principles, in which they were renumbered,
    categorized, and edited, without changing the
    overall concepts or their intent
  • Many remain identical to the original language

20
The Principles Categorized
  • Universal Principles (1-14)
  • Biological Principles (15-30
  • Chiropractic Principles(31-33)

21
The Universal Principles
  • The first 14 principles outline the concept of an
    intelligent universe, define and characterize its
    ability to self-organize, and establish the
    relationship between its organizing intelligence
    and the matter of which the universe is composed.
    These are called the universal principles.

22
The Universal Principles
  • 1. The Major Premise
  • There is a universal intelligence in all matter,
    continuously giving to it all its properties and
    actions, thus maintaining it in existence, and
    giving this intelligence its expression.

23
The Major Premise
  • Establishes an immaterial/material duality within
    a unity of existence
  • Establishes a mutual interdependence between
    intelligence and substance
  • Avoids natural/supernatural duality
  • Chiropractic is a philosophy, science and art
    of things natural Stephensons Chiropractic
    Textbook, Article 2, p. xiii

24
A definition of intelligence
  • The property of an organized system that is
    assumed to create the specific relationships
    within that system and/or cause the organized
    actions of that system.
  • Immaterial active in brains, bushes, bacteria
  • Recognized by its effect organization
  • If intelligence causes organization, organization
    implies intelligent action

25
Universal Intelligence (Revised)
  • The principle of self-organization inherent in
    all matter.
  • Sufficient cause for all organization that has,
    does, or will exist
  • Immaterial potential only, until expressed
  • Unlimited, unchanging, non-anthropomorphic
  • The ability to relate matter together into
    integrated units of structure and function

26
Organization
  • Examples exist at every level of inorganic and
    organic activity.
  • An atom p, n0, e- in specific patterns of
    movement
  • A molecule atoms moving in specific
    relationships
  • A cell innumerable different molecules
    interacting
  • A tissue similar cells forming a unified
    structure
  • An organ specific tissues functioning in unison
  • A system specific organs acting in coordination
  • The body all organ systems interacting as one

27
Force the Interactive Interface
  • To serve as the connection between immaterial
    intelligence and physical matter, force must have
    both non-physical and physical components.
  • Force must have a physical component to cause
    matter to have motion.
  • Force must have an immaterial component to carry
    intelligences organizing intent to matter.

28
Forces Physical Component
  • The physical aspect of any force is energy.
  • Energy is physical substance (E mc2).
  • Gravity
  • Electromagnetism
  • Strong and weak nuclear forces
  • Mechanical, chemical energy
  • Intelligence doesnt create energy, rather it
    uses the energy of the physical universe to
    organize the matter of the universe.

29
Forces Immaterial Component
  • The immaterial (non-physical) aspect of any force
    is information.
  • Information is the message carried by any force,
    which tells the matter upon which it acts what
    to do.
  • Intelligence creates the information in any
    force. (Principle 4)
  • The information in any force is expressed by
    matter in the specific way it responds to that
    force.

30
Universal Forces
  • Universal intelligence creates the information in
    universal forces.
  • Matter expresses the information in universal
    forces as universal laws.
  • Universal forces/laws are unswerving and
    unadapted, and have no solicitude for the
    structures in which they work (Principle 12)
    whether those structures are living things or
    not. (Principle 13)

31
The Biological Principles
  • The next 16 principles explore the topic of
    life, identifying the self-organizing
    potential of a living thing as its innate
    intelligence and describ-ing the unique,
    constructive forces created within living things
    to main-tain their organization. These are the
    biological principles.

32
The Biological Principles
  • 16. Innate Intelligence
  • A living thing has the intelligence of the
    universe inborn within it, referred to as its
    innate intelligence.

33
Innate Intelligence
  • Innate intelligence is the name we give to UI
    being expressed in living things
  • UI gives all matter all its properties and
    actions, therefore UI gives a living thing all
    its properties and actions
  • II is UI but individualized by the attention it
    pays to the unit (individual organism)

34
The Biological Principles
  • 19. Evidence of Life
  • The signs of life (assimilation, elimination,
    growth, reproduction, adaptability) are evidence
    of the innate intelligence of life.

35
Adaptability
  • the intellectual ability that an organism
    possesses of responding to all forces which come
    to it, whether Innate or Universal
  • Stephensons Chiropractic Text Book, Article
    67, p. 36
  • The ability to adapt comes from the innate
    intelligence of the organism
  • The expression of that ability comes from the
    matter (structure/function) of the organism
  • Often considered the primary sign of life

36
Expressions of Adaptability
  • Enthalpy The ability a living organism has to
    maintain itself in active organization against
    the effects of entropy.
  • Homeostasis The ability a living organism has
    to maintain constant, optimum internal conditions
    in the face of constantly changing external
    conditions.
  • Healing The ability a living organism has to
    repair and/or replace and/or compensate for
    damage to its physical structure.

37
The Biological Principles
  • 20. The Mission of Innate Intelligence
  • The mission of the bodys innate intelligence is
    to maintain the material of the body of a living
    thing in active organization.

38
Active Organization
  • In living organisms, innate intelligence is
    expressed not only through atomic and molecular
    organization, but through higher order
    interactive processes as well. These processes
    (the signs of life) involve matter and energy
    exchange with the environment, self-creation,
    self-transformation, self-maintenance, and
    reproduction.
  • This is the active organization referenced in
    Principle 20

39
Innate Forces
  • Innate intelligence creates the information (not
    the energy) in innate forces.
  • The energy and matter is assimilated from outside
    the living thing (universal forces).
  • We assimilate chemical energy (carbohydrates).
  • We assimilate building blocks (proteins,
    lipids, DNA).
  • Innate intelligence adapts (transforms) these
    universal forces into innate forces to reorganize
    the matter into the body of the living thing

40
Innate Forces
  • The matter of the living thing (its body)
    expresses the information in innate forces as
    biological function.
  • The information is immaterial until it is
    expressed as physiological function.
  • The information in nerve impulses
    (electrochemical forces) is expressed as very
    quick, very specific physiological changes.
  • The information in hormones (chemical forces) is
    expressed in slower, systemic physiological
    changes.
  • The function of a living thing, and therefore the
    health of a living thing, lies in the expression
    of the specific information in these innate
    forces.

41
The Biological Principles
  • 25. The Limits of Adaptation
  • The bodys innate intelligence adapts forces and
    matter for the bodys use as long as it can do so
    without breaking a universal law

42
The Biological Principles
  • 25. The Limits of Adaptation
  • ...in other words, its expression is limited by
    the limitations of matter and time.

43
Limits of Adaptation
  • Any organisms adaptability (its potential
    adaptive range) is limited by the form of the
    organism (Principle 25) and the time adaptive
    processes require. (Principle 25)
  • Stephensons Chiropractic Text Book, Article
    23, p. xxxii, p. xxxi
  • Any particular adaptation is limited by the
    individuals genetics, history, diet,
    neurological integrity
  • Subluxation would be considered a limiting factor
    in the expression of any specific adaptive
    response)

44
The Biological Principles
  • 30. The Cause of Dis-ease
  • Interference with the transmission of innate
    forces causes incoordination, or dis-ease.

45
The Chiropractic Principles
  • The last 3 principles are specific to living
    organisms with nerve systems and spinal columns,
    characterizing the role of the forces traveling
    over these structures and identifying the problem
    of interference and dis-ease (incoordination).
    They are termed the chiropractic principles.

46
The Chiropractic Principles
  • 33. Subluxations
  • Interference with transmission in the body is
    often directly or indirectly due to subluxations
    in the spinal column.
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