to a full science. So if you go to an acupuncturist and you say, “Something is wrong with my eyes,” or “Something is wrong with my head,” or “Something is wrong with my liver,” he may not bother about your liver, your head or your eyes. He will think of the whole organism; he will try to heal you – not just the part that is sick.
Acupuncture has developed an approach to seven hundred points, which were discovered in man’s body. Man’s body is a bioelectric phenomenon, alive. It has a certain electricity – hence we call it bio-electricity. This bioelectricity can be reached through seven hundred points in the body, and each point relates to some part of the body, which may be far away from it. That’s what happened in that accident: the arrow hit a bioelectric point that related to the head, and the migraine disappeared.
Acupuncture is more holistic. The difference has to be understood. When you take man as a machine you take a partial view of him. If his hand is sick, you just treat the hand; you don’t bother about his whole body, of which the hand is only a part. The mechanical outlook is partial. It succeeds, but its success is not real success because the same disease that has been repressed in the hand by medicine, surgery or other things, starts expressing itself somewhere else in a worse form. So medicine has developed tremendously; surgery has become a great science – but man is suffering from more diseases, sicknesses, than ever.