Edward Bach

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Edward Bach
Born(1886-09-24)24 September 1886
Died27 November 1936(1936-11-27) (aged 50)
NationalityBritish
EducationUniversity College Hospital
OccupationMedical Research
Known forBach Flower Remedies
Medical career
ProfessionMedical Doctor
FieldMedicine
ResearchPlants Vibration Remedies

Edward Bach (/ˈbæ/ BATCH; 24 September 1886 – 27 November 1936) was a British medical doctor, bacteriologist, homeopath, and spiritual writer, best known for developing the Bach flower remedies, a form of alternative medicine inspired by classical homeopathic traditions.[1][2]

Biography[edit]

Born in Moseley, Worcestershire, he studied medicine at the University College Hospital, London, and obtained a Diploma of Public Health (DPH) at Cambridge.[3]

In 1917 Bach had a malignant tumour removed from his spleen. It was predicted that he had only three months left to live, but instead he recovered. Bach died in his sleep on 27 November 1936 in Wallingford, Berkshire, at the age of 50.[3][4]

Many of the Bach Flower remedies were designed whilst living in the Norfolk coastal town of Cromer in the 1930s.

The last house where Bach lived in Brightwell-cum-Sotwell in Oxfordshire, now privately owned by the Ramsell family[5][6]

Bach nosodes[edit]

Starting in 1919, he worked at the London Homeopathic Hospital, where he was influenced by the work of Samuel Hahnemann.[1] In this period, he developed seven bacterial nosodes known as the seven Bach nosodes. Their use has been mostly confined to British homeopathy practitioners.

These bowel nosodes[7] were introduced by Bach and the British homeopath John Paterson (1890–1954)[8] and Charles Edwin Wheeler (1868–1946)[9] in the 1920s. Their use is based on the variable bowel bacterial flora associated with persons of different homeopathic constitutional types.[10]

Bach flower remedies[edit]

In 1930, at the age of 43, he decided to search for a new healing technique. He spent the spring and summer discovering and preparing new flower remedies – which include no part of the plant but simply what Bach claimed to be the pattern of energy of the flower. In the winter he treated patients free of charge.

Rather than being based on medical research, using the scientific method, Bach's flower remedies were intuitively derived[11] and based on his perceived psychic connections to the plants.[1] If he felt a negative emotion, he would hold his hand over different plants, and if one alleviated the emotion, he would ascribe the power to heal that emotional problem to that plant. He believed that early morning sunlight passing through dew-drops on flower petals transferred the healing power of the flower onto the water,[12] so he would collect the dew drops from the plants and preserve the dew with an equal amount of brandy to produce a mother tincture which would be further diluted before use.[13] Later, he found that the amount of dew he could collect was not sufficient, so he would suspend flowers in spring water and allow the sun's rays to pass through them.[12]

While he recognised the role of the germ theory of disease, defective organs and/or tissue, and other known and demonstrable sources of disease, Bach wondered how exposure to a pathogen could make one person sick, while another was unaffected, when to all appearances and analysis they were in equal states of health. He postulated that illness was the result of a conflict between the purposes of the soul and the personality's actions and outlooks. This internal war, according to Bach, leads to emotional imbalances and energetic blockage, which causes a lack of harmony, thus leading to physical diseases. Bach's remedies focus on treatment of the patient's personality, which he believed to be the ultimate root cause of disease.

The Bach Centre[edit]

The Bach Centre house, Mount Vernon, in Brightwell-cum-Sotwell, Oxfordshire, is owned today by a Registered Charity controlled by the Ramsell family set up by John Ramsell in 1989.[6][5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Wood, Matthew (2000). Vitalism: The History of Herbalism, Homeopathy, and Flower Essences. North Atlantic Books. p. 185186. ISBN 978-1-55643-340-5.
  2. ^ Hutton, Frankie (1 January 1955). Rose Lore: Essays in Semiotics and Cultural History. Lexington Books. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-7391-3015-5.
  3. ^ a b Staff writer (19 December 1936). "Edward Bach, M.B. Lond". The Lancet. 228 (5912): 1492. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)82157-1.
  4. ^ Mechthild Scheffer (2001). The Encyclopedia of Bach Flower Therapy. Rochester, Vermont: Healing Arts Press. pp. 13–15.
  5. ^ a b "Bach FAQ's". www.bachcentre.com. Archived from the original on 3 March 2000.
  6. ^ a b "The Bach Centre". www.bachcentre.com. Archived from the original on 20 January 2013.
  7. ^ John Paterson The Bowel Nosodes
  8. ^ John PATERSON (1890–1954) PHOTOTHÈQUE HOMÉOPATHIQUE Homéopathe International
  9. ^ Charles Edwin Wheeler PHOTOTHÈQUE HOMÉOPATHIQUE Homéopathe International
  10. ^ Prescribing on the basis of Nosodes & Bowel Nosodes Homoeopathy Clinic website
  11. ^ Graham, Helen (1999). Complementary Therapies in Context: The Psychology of Healing. Jessica Kingsley Publishers. pp. 254. ISBN 1-85302-640-9.
  12. ^ a b Larimore, Walt; O'Mathuna, Donal (2007). Alternative Medicine: The Christian Handbook, Updated and Expanded (Christian Handbook). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. p. 293. ISBN 978-0-310-26999-1.
  13. ^ Robson, Terry (2004). An Introduction to Complementary Medicine. Allen & Unwin Academic. pp. 184–185. ISBN 1-74114-054-4.

External links[edit]