Homoeopathic Philosophy - by Stuart Close
Homoeopathic Philosophy - by Stuart Close
Homoeopathic Philosophy - by Stuart Close
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Preface
Chapter XI - Symptomatology
H.I.
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Preface
A review of current literature and neighborly relations with many physicians of the
dominant school of medicine reveals not only a more friendly spirit than formerly existed, but
an active interest in what their homœopathic brethren have to offer toward the solution of
therapeutic problems and a duke to co-operate. The era of therapeutic nihilism is passing
away. Thinking men and leaders of the dominant school are ready to participate in a scientific
discussion of the theory and principles of therapeutic medication from a homœopathic
standpoint when approached in a non-sectarian spirit. They are becoming more generally
receptive of the idea of the existence of a general principle or law of therapeutic medication
than ever before and more willing to consider evidence submitted in favor of that proposition.
They rightly hold, however, that the evidence to be submitted should be prepared in such a
manner as to comply with the requirements of scientific research. Leaving that phase of the
subject to the scientific and research workers' and others to whom it may be congenial, and
not forgetting the many in our own school who are interested, it seems permissible to present
once more, as simply and attractively as possible, an exposition of the logical, historical and
philosophical principles upon which Homœopathy is based and attempt to show, at least
suggestively, its relation as a department of general medicine to other sciences. That is the
object of this book. It makes no pretensions to being "scientific." It is conceived and
submitted in a fraternal and philosophic spirit, however far it may fall short of adequate
expression.
Stuart Close.
Brooklyn, N. Y.
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Chapter I
The Psychological Point of View
To a Moses or a Luther, to a
Washington or a Lincoln, to a Plato
or a Bacon, to a Hippocrates or a
Hahnemann, each in his own Hippocrates
sphere and period, the world comes
and must come for instruction, inspiration and leadership.
Lesser lights and lesser leaders there must and always will be, to
whom, each in his own rank and degree, honor and loyalty are due;
but the disciple is never above his master. He only is "The Master",
to whom the first great revelation of truth. was made and by whom it
was first developed and proclaimed; for., such epochal men are
supremely endowed and specially prepared, -usually by many years
of seclusion, intense thought and labor. They are raised up at last to
do, a great work. They stand on the mountain tops of human
experience, from whence they have a field of view and a grasp of
truth never before attainable. Like Moses they have, as it were,
received the "Tables of the Law" direct from the hand of the
Almighty.
Having defined the qualities and attributes that enter into, the
makeup of the homœopathician the various practical problems and
technical processes of homœopathy can be taken up and discussed
from the point of view already established.
Within its sphere homœopathy is entirely adequate to, meet all its
own problems in its own way, when it is practiced in its. purity and
entirety. But homœopathy will fail if it is forced outside or beyond
its real sphere, or if it is perverted and emasculate? To know me true
sphere and limitations of homœopathy is necessary to practical
success as to know its technic and resources.
The validity of this law has been disputed by the dominant school
of medicine ever since it was first promulgated by Hahnemann; but it
has never been denied by any one who has complied with all the
conditions necessary for a scientific demonstration, of its verity. To
comply with those conditions in good faith and test the matter is to
be convinced.
The dominant school of medicine has not only denied that the so
called "homœopathic law" is a law of nature, but denied that there is
any general law which governs the relation between drugs and
disease and have ceased searching for one. The existing situation has
never been better characterized than by Mons. Marchand de Calvi in
an eloquent and stirring address to the French Academy of Medicine.
"In medicine," he said, "there is not, nor has there been for some
time, either principle, faith or law. We build a Tower of Babel, or
rather we are not so far advanced, for we build nothing; we are in a
vast plain where a multitude of people pass backwards and forwards;
some carry bricks, others pebbles, others grains of sand, but no one
dreams of the cement; the foundations of the edifice are not yet laid,
and as to the general plan of the work, it is not even sketched. In
other words, medical literature swarms with facts, of which the most
part are periodically produced with the most tiresome monotony;
these are called observations and clinical facts; a number of laborers
consider and reconsider particular questions of pathology or
therapeutics that is called original research. The mass of such labors
and facts is enormous; no reader can wade through them-but no one
has any general doctrine. The most general doctrine that exists is the
doctrine of homœopathy! This is strange and lamentable; a disgrace
to medicine – but - such is the fact."
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Chapter II
General Interpretations
The following
propositions, slightly modified
from the original, are drawn
from Von Grauvogl's Text
Book of Homœopathy.
necessity, since it can only result from its precedents and depends
upon them. This conditional necessity results from the primary
unconditional necessity of the fundamental laws of nature and their
absolute truth.
All changes in nature are the result of the reciprocal action (action
and reaction) of bodies and forces. But here an important distinction
must be made between animate and inanimate bodies and forces;
between living organisms and machines.
The machine cannot supply itself with oil, repair the losses it
suffers from rust, friction, etc., nor reproduce itself in whole or in
part. It knows no need and feels no necessity for any of these things.
The living organism, on the contrary, does know and feel its need
The law of vis inertiæ teaches that all internal changes of bodies
in nature are the results of an external cause, for without 'this all
bodies would remain in the same state in which they were placed.
The state of the body must be known before any change in it can be
known. The cause or reason of the state of the body, therefore, are
the conditions under which it can be changed by any external cause.
Hence, in the organic world, there are no simple bodies, but only
the simple, primary substance (the incorporeal life substance itself),
of which, in combination with the chemical elements, all living
organized bodies are formed. Even living cells are not simple, since
physically they are composed of chemical elements, the fundamental
forces of which differ according to their form and composition and
their reciprocal relation with the life force of the organism.
*****
Homœopathy was
founded and developed
into a scientific system by
Samuel Hahnemann
(1755-1843) under the
principles of the Inductive
Method of Science as
developed by Lord
Bacon. Its practice is
governed by the principle
of Symptom-Similarity,
Homœopathy, as a
science, rests
fundamentally upon four
general principles:
Similarity, Contrariety,
Proportionality and
Infinitesimality, reducible Dr Samuel Hahnemann
to the universal principle
of Homœosis, or Universal Assimilation. (Fincke.)
"There are two tests of the validity of any law that is claimed to
be a natural law, or law of nature.
In chemistry the
properties of potassium are
related to the properties of
sulphuric acid by the law of a
chemical affinity and definite
proportions, in the formation
of a new compound,
potassium
sulphate." (Abstracted from
Dunham, Science of
Therapeutics.)
So in Homœotherapy, we
have the phenomena of drugs
related to the phenomena of
diseases by the law of mutual
action, under the principles
of similarity, contrariety,
proportionality and Dr Carroll DUNHAM
infinitesimality; reducible
again to the principle of Universal Assimilation of Homœosis.
But while it can easily be shown that the curative action of any
agent whatsoever used in the treatment of disease, mental or
physical, conforms to the fundamental principle of Mutual Action, in
the narrower or more practical sense homœopathy must be defined
as the science of therapeutic medication, since it commonly uses
medicines or drugs alone to effect its purposes.
actual comparison.
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Chapter III
Schools of Philosophy
"If mind is the result of the motion of the molecules of the brain,
of what does that result consist? If the motion of the molecules is the
all of mind, then the mind is nothing, a nonentity, since motion itself
is a nonentity" (Hal)
Light, heat and (or) electricity are (is) substantial. (They may be
identical.) It is absurd to call them "modes of motion" or "vibratory
phenomena." Motion is a non-entity, the mere act of a thing in
changing its position in space. Motion is nothing before an object
begins to move, and nothing after it has ceased to move. Modern
science teaches that light and heat are motions or vibrations of the
ether. Physical science, therefore, tacitly teaches that the ether is
substantial; has measured it; has calculated its inertia coefficient and
its kinetic energy; has pronounced it to be the primary substance of
which matter as well as heat, light and electricity, is composed. If
science is right in this theory then light, heat and electricity are
substantial emanations from their producing bodies or substances; in
other words, they are each composed of ether, varying in its rate of
vibration But physical science (materialism) does not tell us who or
what moves the ether and determines the rate of vibration. That
remains for substantialism, which teaches that Life is a substance,
having the qualities of a real, entitative being. By its agency alone
organized, living, conscious, thinking, willing entities are created,
maintained and reproduced. Hence, Life is intelligent, else it could
not manifest these qualities.
Hahnemann's Position. -
Hahnemann has heretofore been
Ideas which now seem absurd were then matters of the most
serious moment, and in their practical working out often became
tragical. Blood-letting, the outgrowth of one of these false theories,
affords a good example. The celebrated Bouvard, physician to Louis
XIII, ordered his royal patient forty-seven bleedings, two hundred
and fifteen emetics or purgatives, and three hundred and twelve
clysters during the period of one year! During the extremes to which
the so-called "physiological medicine" was carried more than six
million leeches were used, and more than two hundred thousand
pounds of blood was spilled in the hospitals of Paris in one year. The
mortality was appalling.
ideas of his age, and ask himself a few simple, pointed questions.
"What is the real mission of the physician?" "Of what use is the
medical profession?" "Has it any real excuse to offer for its
existence?" "Surely not," he says, "if it spends its time and effort in
concocting so-called systems out of empty vagaries and hypotheses
concerning the inner obscure nature of the process of life; or the
origin of disease; nor in the innumerable attempts at explaining the
phenomena of diseases or their proximate causes, ever hidden from
their scrutiny, which they clothe in unintelligible words; or as a mass
of abstract phrases intended for the astonishment of the ignorant,
while suffering humanity was sighing for help. We have had more
than enough of such learned absurdities called theoretical medicine,
having its own professorships, and it is high time for those who call
themselves physicians to cease deluding poor humanity by idle
words, and to begin to act, that is, to help and to heal."
"No record in history equals the death roll of the World War and
the accompanying pandemic of influenza. In these two giant
convulsions man was helpless.
The words "force" and "life force" were used inaccurately in this
connection, however, making it difficult for some to form a clear
conception of what life is in its philosophical relation to
homœopathy The failure to make a distinction between power and
force has always caused confusion. The word "force" generally, as
well as in the Organon, is loosely used to express the idea of any
operating or operative power or energy; of any active agency or
power tending to change the state of matter; and this is the sense in
which Hahnemann often uses the word in the Organon when he
speaks of the "life force" as that which acts and is acted upon in
disease and cure.
effects to causes.
pace, as when one picks up a book from one side of the desk and
places it on the other side. We do not see force; we see the effects of
force upon a body in changing its position in space. We do not see
life; we see only its manifestation in organism. But knowing
intuitively and by experience that there can be no effect without a
cause, no motion without force, and no force without something or
somebody to exercise power, we assume the existence of that power,
person or thing as a primitive fact and name it, although we cannot
see the power, person or thing with the physical eye, even with the
aid of an ultra microscope. We see the primary substance, power,
person or thing with the mental eye and are satisfied.
Energy must exist before work can be done. Hence, life and mind
logically and necessarily precede organization, and thus must be not
only the cause but the controlling power of organization. Life built
the body and life preserves it, as long as it is needed for the purpose
of "our indwelling rational spirit," as Hahnemann calls it.
All schools of modern philosophy now agree that "life can come
only from previous life." As a scientific doctrine the theory of
"spontaneous generation," after centuries of stubbornly contested
existence, has been abandoned by all except a very few stubborn
persons of the materialistic school who still cling to the ancient
fallacy, unaware that the ground has been cut from under them and
that they have been left, like Mahomet's coffin, suspended in midair.
the Infinite Life and Mind of the Universe, the source and substance
of all power, the Father Eternal, to whom he owes spiritual
allegiance.
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Chapter IV
The Scope of Homœopathy
These phenomena result from and represent the action upon the
living organism of some external agent or influence inimical to life.
With the morbific agents themselves Homœopathy primarily has no
more to do than it has with the tangible products or ultimates of
disease. It is taken for granted that the physician, acting in another
capacity than that of a prescriber of homœopathic medicine, will
remove the causes of the disease and the obstacles to cure as far as
possible before he addresses himself to the task of selecting and
administering the remedy which is homœopathic to the symptoms of
the case, by which the cure is to be performed.
From this point of view, the most significant and general feature
to be observed about the phenomena or disease is the fact of motion,
action, change; change of states, forms and positions; change
resulting from the application of morbific force in the living
organism; change from a state of health to a state of disease; and the
reverse; change of symptoms and their groupings; change of order to
"The unprejudiced
observer," says Hahnemann,
"well aware of the futility of
transcendental speculation
which can receive no
confirmation from experience-
be his power of penetration
ever so great - takes note of
nothing in every individual
disease, except the changes in
the health of the body and the
mind (morbid phenomena,
accidents, symptoms) which
can be perceived externally by
means of the senses; that is to
Dr Samuel Hahnemann
say, he notices only the
deviations from a former
healthy state of the diseased individual, which are felt by the patient
himself, remarked by those around him and observed by the
physician. All these perceptible signs represent the disease in its
whole extent, that is, together they form the true and only
conceivable portrait of the disease." (Organon, Par. 6.)
When all has been said and the scope of homœopathy has been
defined as clearly as possible, it is evident that there is a border land
between homœopathy and its related sciences around which it is
impossible to draw. sharp lines of demarcation. In this region each
physician must be governed by his own individual judgment and the
circumstances of the case. It follows that there will always be
But the physician may have been newly called to the case or
family and not have had time to gain their complete confidence by
the results of his work and teaching. Patients have to be educated in
the principles and methods of homœopathy by discussion, instruction
and demonstration, and this requires time. When they have felt or
witnessed the results of competent homœopathic prescribing they
acquire confidence. Some become enthusiastic advocates and
propagandists of homœopathy, and are always ready to uphold and
cooperate with their physician in demonstrating its methods even in
the gravest emergencies. Others are interested only in quick results,
caring little or nothing about how they are obtained. The latter are
very difficult to hold in such cases and some of them will not
continue with the conscientious homœopathician, no matter what he
does. Between these two classes exists a third, the members of which
can be interested in homœopathy to a degree that will enable the
practitioner to hold them as patients and retain their confidence and
cooperation in homœopathic treatment in all but extreme cases. It is
in such cases that the pressure referred to will be brought to bear
upon him, and he may be compelled to resort temporarily to
palliation to gain time and strengthen his position. Unless he can do
this there is but one honorable course left for him to pursue-resign
the case and withdraw. In pursuing either of those courses the
conscientious practitioner is beyond the criticism of all fair-minded
persons. But he is always open and frequently subjected to the
attacks of prejudice, bigotry and jealousy, and to these the best
defense is silence and a clear conscience.
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Chapter V
The Unity of Medicine
"As our studies in
medicine penetrate
deeper into the
problems of each
individual branch or
specialty one fact
stands out with ever-
increasing emphasis;
namely, that
medicine is a unit
and incapable of real
division into
specialties. The
superior man in
medicine of the
future will not be the
great laboratory
worker, or the man Dr Samuel Hahnemann
who is known for his
studies in metabolism, or the expert gastro-enterologist or
neurologist or surgeon, or he who stands preeminently above his
confreres in his knowledge of diseases of the heart and arterial
system or of the lungs, but the man who recognizes the fact that the
truths derived from all these sources of study and investigation must
be interpreted as belonging to the patient as a whole-in other words,
the internist who appreciates the unity of medicine. The
distinguished specialist will be one who regards his field of study in
There is an old saying: "It takes nine tailors to make a man." Now
we might say: "It takes nine specialists to make a physician," if it
were not that nine would not be enough to make a good, all-around
physician of the old school.
The people realize, in a blind sort of way, that they are getting
from the medical profession a good many things they do not want,
and are not getting some very important things which they need. The
failure of the surgeon and organ specialists to do more than palliate
or remove the tangible products of disease; the rise of the seductive
serum and vaccine therapy, and the reign of the reptile an derived
hypodermic needle; the disappearance of the general practitioner
with the system of medical education which made him, and the
refusal of the profession to accept the beneficent law of therapeutic
medication and its corollaries enunciated by Hahnemann, are the
main reasons for the increase of quackery and humbug in the
practice of medicine and the rise of non-medical cults. There is
rebellion and revolution in the medical world as well as in all the
other worlds.
The cure of disease takes place in the same way. The curative
remedy, through the media of the nerves and blood vessels, acts first
upon the life principle everywhere present in the organism, and then
upon the affected parts, in a perfectly natural manner. It is only
necessary that the remedy shall be correctly selected, properly
prepared and administered by the natural channels in appropriate
dosage in order to get its curative effects. No hypodermic needle is
required. One who knows how to do these things never makes the
mistake of treating a part as if it stood alone. Before his mental eye is
always pictured the individual patient-the case as a whole.
Intuition, the highest faculty of the human mind, wings its aerial
way home, while research and investigation laboriously plod their
way along upon the ground.
Osler, writing in 1901, said: "He is the best physician who knows
the worthlessness of most medicine."
In one respect at least, the leaders of the old school are in perfect
accord with the followers of Hahnemann who have always
maintained that the use of drugs in the treatment of disease, except in
minimum doses and in accordance with the law of similars, is both
useless and injurious.
all essential points the same discovery was made, announced and put
to use in a better way more than a century ago, by one who Us been
held up to obloquy and scorn by a large part of the profession ever
since.
could never have been written by men who bad even "a speaking
acquaintance" with, sciences other than the one they professed to
represent.
All true sciences are interrelated. They touch one another at many
points. Each is dependent upon the others in many respects. They
often "exchange works" as well as words.
Had they taken pains to refer to any good dictionary they might
have learned that dynamis is a Greek noun meaning power or force;
the power or principle objectively considered applied by Hahnemann
to the life principle.
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Chapter VI
Life, Health and Disease
"Power resides at the center, and from the center of power, force
flows."
psychical action.
Since life can come only from life, biological science, in thus
placing the centrosome at the center of "a sphere of attraction,"
places it in a surrounding field of what can only be incorporeal
living substance, from which alone could it attract the wherewithal to
construct the cell and endow it with the functions of organization,
growth and reproduction.
attraction," but does not define or enumerate all the contents of that
field. Enumerating only the physical or chemical forces and the
various forms of matter of which the cell is composed, it implies that
these are all the field contains. Biology, the science of life and living
things, thus evades the acknowledgment of Life as a specific power,
principle or substance, and defines it merely as a state of the
organism, a condition; or as arising out of physical and chemical
elements and forces acting so as to result in some, unexplained way
in the evolution of the individual living beings and the development
of the species.
conditions exist.
It was very easy to kill the germs-in a test tube; but to kill them in
the living organism of the cholera patient without 'killing the patient
was quite a different proposition, as they very soon learned. In spite
of -all attempts at cure based upon such crude reasoning, cholera
continued its ravages with undiminished mortality. Now hear what
Hahnemann said more than fifty years before all this happened.
house nor the cause of the house. Much less is the house identical
with the foundation. The bacillus is the proximate cause of cholera
but it is not cholera, nor the sole cause of cholera. It is only one of
several conditions necessary for the production and propagation of
cholera, all of which must be considered if we are to form just
conclusions about the nature of disease. For instance, there are
sanitary conditions to be considered, with all their numerous
implications; there are social and moral conditions, including
facilities and modes of transportation and inter-communication
between nations, communities and individuals to be considered
There are also atmospheric and telluric conditions. It is to be noted
that it was only after many trials by administration of the bacillus-
cultures that one individual was found who succumbed to the attack.
With him there was a condition of individual susceptibility and that
susceptibility was an essential condition for him, as it is in all such
cases.
Those who did not observe that point were caught napping as
many others have been when dealing with such subjects.
Note carefully exactly what he says here. He does not say that
when every tangible or visible result of the disease has been removed
the patient is cured, but that disease is cured when every perceptible
sign of suffering of the dynamis has been removed.
The tumor is not the disease, but only the "end product" of the
disease, as it were. The tumor is not the object of curative treatment,
but the disease which preceded and produced the tumor. The tumor,
in the course of successful treatment, may or may not be absorbed
and disappear. It depends upon the state of the patient's metabolism.
If the patient's vitality has not been too much exhausted by long
illness and faulty living or treatment, and if his powers of
metabolism are equal to the task, the tumor, or the effusion, or the
infarctus or whatever it may be, will be absorbed, as frequently
happens in cases treated by skillful prescribers. I have myself seen
this happen many times. But if the contrary is the case the tumor, or
other morbid product, constitutes a merely mechanical condition
which we may turn over to the surgeon for the exhibition of his
manual dexterity and technical skill-after the patient has been cured
of his disease.
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Chapter VII
Susceptibility, Reaction and Immunity
By susceptibility we mean the general quality or capability of the
living organism of receiving impressions; the power to react to
stimuli. Susceptibility is one of the fundamental attributes of life.
Upon it depends all functioning, all vital processes, physiological
and pathological. Digestion, assimilation, nutrition, repair, secretion,
excretion, metabolism and catabolism, as well as all disease
processes arising from infection or contagion depend upon We
power of the organism to react to specific stimuli.
The cure and alleviation of diseases depend upon the same power
of the organism to react to the impression of the curative remedy.
similar to their own elements. The same law holds good in excretion,
each organ excreting or throwing off elements analogous to those of
its, own basis structure.
"One man catches scarlet fever from another man, but catches it
because he is vis minor to the disease, which to him alone is vis
major. His neighbor does not catch it; his strength passes it by as no
concern of his. It is the first man's foible that is the prime reason of
his taking the complaint. He is a vacuum for its pressure. The cause
why he succumbed was in him long before the infector appeared.
Susceptibility to a disease is. sure in the individual or his race to be
(come) that disease in time. For the air is full of diseases waiting to
be employed.
"In health we live and act and resist without knowing it. In
disease we live but suffer; and know ourself in conscious or
unconscious exaggeration."
many remedies, methods and processes more or less popular even to-
day, in this ultra-scientific age, do not and cannot conform to this
standard.
"It seems therefore that the. effort must be made in the future to
enable the tissue and the bacteria to live together in peace rather
than to produce a state where the serum is destructive to the
bacteria."
These are strong and significant words from the highest authority
on pathology in America.
Inflammation and fever are not evils per se. They are merely the
signs of normal reaction and resistance to an irritant or poison by
which nature protects herself. They are not enemies to be resisted,
but friends and allies to be co-operated with in the destruction of a
common enemy.
Pain, inflammation and fever are not the real disease nor the real
object of treatment. To view them as such leads logically and
inevitably to mere palliation or suppression of symptoms, than which
there are no greater medical evils. It is based upon a false and
illogical interpretation of the phenomena of disease which mistakes
results for causes.
We may smile at the size of the dose until we recall how many
patients in a similar condition have died under tablespoonful doses
of brandy, or hypodermics of strychnia and whiskey. Dr. Wells knew
how to correctly measure a patient's susceptibility and he knew how
to conserve the last, feeble, flickering remnant of vitality in such
cases and make the best of it. He knew better than to waste it by
violent measures, as is so often done in cases of shock when
hypodermics of brandy and strychnine and other powerful stimulants
are used.
The idea held by many that large and powerful doses and
strenuous measures are necessary in such cases is entirely wrong.
The conception of disease and the interpretation of symptoms is
wrong. The resultant treatment is wrong. The imaginary Idea of
violence, of the malignity and rapidity of the disease, is forced to the
front and dwelt upon until it seems rational to believe that the
treatment must also be violent, active, "heroic." This is practicing
homœopathy with a vengeance!
"Never," said Dr. Wells, "give brandy or any other stimulant with
a hard and wiry pulse."
Excessive reaction, or
irritability, is a condition sometimes
Bœnninghausen
met where the patient seems to
suffer an aggravation from every
remedy, without corresponding improvement. There is a state of
general hypersensitiveness.
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Chapter VIII
General Pathology of Homœopathy
The history of the progress of natural history shows how men first
approached nature; how the facts have been collected, and how these
facts have been converted into science by successively broader and
broader generalizations leading to the discovery of basic laws of
nature.
Classifications and
nomenclature were being
changed constantly according to
the varying opinions and theories
of individuals, none of whom
were guided by any general
principle. The situation was
exactly like that which
confronted Cuvier in natural
history and Linnæus in botany.
Hahnemann was so far ahead of his time that his teaching, in its
higher phases, could not be fully understood until science in its
slower advance had elucidated and corroborated the facts upon
which he based it; and this science has done in a remarkable manner.
For the suggestion of bacteriology as the basis of a rational modern
interpretation of Hahnemann's Theory of the Chronic Diseases we
are indebted to the late Dr. Thomas G. McConkey, of San Francisco.
His paper, "Psora, Sycosis and Syphilis," published in the December,
1908, number of The North American Journal of Homœopathy, laid
the profession under a deep obligation to him. The critical insight,
originality, open-mindedness and evident comprehension of the deep
significance of the facts of the case displayed in that brief but
suggestive paper add poignancy to our regrets that he did not live to
work out a fuller exposition of the subject himself.
Vaccine treatment, for example, the latest, most general and most
widely adopted theory and practice growing out of bacteriology is
now acknowledged by the highest representative authority of regular
medicine to be a failure.
non-venereal diseases.
Hahnemann held that all chronic diseases are derived from three
primary, infectious, parasitic sources. "All chronic diseases," he
says, "show such a constancy and perseverance * * * as soon as they
have developed and have not been healed by the medical art, that
they evermore increase with the years and during the whole of man's
lifetime; and they cannot be diminished by the strength (resistance)
belonging even to the most robust constitutions. Still less can they be
overcome and extinguished. Thus they never pass away by
themselves, but increase and are aggravated even until death. They
must therefore have for their origin and foundation constant chronic
miasms, whereby their parasitical existence in the human organism
"Each infectious disease has its own variety, diffused around the
person which it has attacked, and liable to convey the disease at
different distances, according to the nature of the complaint, or to the
predisposition of the object exposed to it."
and ere they have time to give an account of those who have died of
the pestilence on board the ship, those who have approached nearest
to them are suddenly carried off by the cholera. The cause of this is
undoubtedly the invisible cloud that hovers closely around the sailors
who have remained free from the disease, composed of probably
millions of those miasmatic animated beings, which, at first
developed on the broad, marshy bank of the tepid Ganges, always
searching out in preference the human being to his destruction and
attaching themselves closely to him, when transferred to distant and
even colder regions, become habituated to these also, without any
diminution either of their unhappy fertility or of their fatal
destructiveness :"
We have thus:
"At that time (Moses) and later on among the Israelites, the
disease seems to have mostly kept the external parts of the body for
its chief seat. This was also true of the malady as it prevailed -in
uncultivated Greece, later in Arabia, and, lastly, in Europe during the
Middle Ages. * * * The nature of this miasmatic -itching eruption
always remained essentially the same."
Europe for several centuries and then reassumed the form of leprosy,
through the leprosy which was brought back by the returning
crusaders in the thirteenth century. After that it spread more than
ever. It was gradually modified by greater personal cleanliness, more
suitable clothing and general improvement in hygienic conditions,
until it was reduced to a "common itch," which could be and was
more easily removed from the skin by external treatment.
But Hahnemann points out that the state of mankind was not
improved thereby.
"Psora has thus become the most infectious and most general of
all the chronic miasms," says Hahnemann. The disease, by
metastasis from the skin, caused by external palliative treatment,
attacks internal organs and causes a multitude of chronic diseases the
cause of which is generally unrecognized.
"Only during the last few centuries has mankind been flooded -
with these infirmities, owing to the causes first
mentioned" (Hahnemann, Chronic Diseases).
individual character.
In the eager quest for the specific bacterial causes of the various
diseases the principles of logic have not always been applied, and
particularly that principle known as the Law of Causation, which
teaches that every effect has a number of causes, of which the
specific cause is only the proximate or most nearly related in the
preceding series. It also teaches that the specific cause may be
modified in its action on the subject by collateral causes or
conditions affecting both the subject and the antecedent causes, so
that no specific cause can be said to act unconditionally.
*****
Homœopathy should have taught them this long ago. Few seem to
realize that a very large part of the disease met with in ordinary
practice is the result of what may be called involuntary poisoning.
Symptoms are constantly appearing in our clinical records which are
the product of drugs, either self-administered or ignorantly
prescribed by that class of physicians who are forever prescribing for
the results of their own drugging without knowing it. There are
many, even in the homœopathic school, who do not realize this fact
and who fail to see that the problem before them is as often one of
antidoting a drug as of curing a true natural disease. This has a very
practical bearing on the case, for the first step in such cases is to seek
out and stop the use of drugs and antidote them, rather than to
blindly proceed to give more drugs. Nature unaided will often
remove many of the symptoms in such cases if the dosing is stopped
and a little time is given. The remainder becomes the basis of
homœopathic prescribing under accepted homœopathic principles,
and the case as a whole affords an opportunity for the discerning
physician to impart some wholesome instruction in the rules of right
living.
Hering said: "The last taken drug affords the best indication for
the next prescription." The experienced homœopathic physician
therefore, gives particular attention in the examination Of cases to
ascertaining what drugs have been previously used, with a view to
stopping their use and antidoting such as have been most influential
in producing disorder, as revealed by a study of the symptoms.
and awaited the, curative reaction, he would have found his patient
much improved on the following day. Without knowing it he was
then witnessing that "slight aggravation of the symptoms" following
the exhibition of a well-selected remedy of which Hahnemann warns
us. Better still would it have been if he had given the Belladonna in
the thirtieth or two hundredth potency in the first instance, instead of
be 3X. There would then have been no aggravation, the patient
would have been better on the second day, and would probably; have
gone on to rapid recovery. Instead of this, however, the doctor
misinterpreted the facts, thereby doing himself, his patient and
homœopathy injustice. Believing that he had made a wrong
prescription, he changed it. In his beginning confusion be further
departed from sound principles by giving two medicine in
alternation, thus multiplying the sources of error and confusion.
From this point on, like a man lost in the woods, he was simply
"walking, circles around himself "-hopelessly lost as far as his own
efforts were concerned, until somebody came and guided him home.
It was said of the pork packers that they had learned to utilize
every part of the pig except his squeal. Then came an enterprising
phonograph firm whose agents invaded the slaughter house and
actually recorded the squeals for reproduction, thus completing the
work of salvage.
As long as drugs retain their power to make well people sick, and
as long as doctors continue to make such generalizations as these, so
long must both be recognized and dealt with as causative factors in
the production of human ills. And so, as our allopathic neighbours
and our homœopathic brethren with allopathic proclivities remain as
yet in a large majority, there will continue to be plenty of work for
the real followers of Hahnemann to do in dealing with the results of
their medical obtuseness for some time to come. True it is that if the
use of crude drugs could be entirely done away with, the sum of
human ills would be greatly reduced; or, as Dr. Oliver Wendell
Holmes wittily said: "If all the drugs in the world were dumped into
the sea, it would be better for mankind and the worse for the fishes."
In either case probably two-thirds of the existing ornaments of the
medical profession would shine in other spheres with at least equal
radiance.
These are some of the things to look for among the possible
Main
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Chapter IX
Cure and Recovery
Here Hahnemann took his stand. From this point be viewed his
field. By this standard he measured all physicians, all medical
theories, methods and systems and he desired and demanded the
same measurement for himself and his own method. He asked but
one question, applied but one test, Do they cure the sick? Experience
and observation of the men and methods of his day showed clearly
that they did not cure. In the light of a vast and comprehensive
knowledge and a bitterly disappointing personal experience, be
pronounced the medicine of his day a failure and set about its
reformation.
Cure was not then, as it has since become in the dominant school
of medicine, an obsolete term. Physicians still talked and wrote of
"cures," but vainly sought to find them. "The Art of Healing" or
"The Healing Art" were familiar phrases, but the thing itself, like a
will-o'-the-wisp, eluded them-then as it has ever since.
homœopathy.
caused his hemorrhoids are not removed the patient is not cured; and
so of innumerable other morbid conditions. Cure refers to the
patient, not to some symptoms of his disease, nor to what may be
called "one of his diseases." To say that a patient is cured of his
hemorrhoids, but still has his heart disease is absurd. Cure means
complete restoration to health.
There are no cures for "diseases," no remedy for all cases of the
same disease. Cure relates to the individual patient, not to the
disease. No two cases of the same disease are exactly alike.
Differences of manifestation in symptoms and modalities always
exist in individuals. It is these differences which give each case its
individuality, and create the need for an individual remedy.
Cure takes place in much less time than natural recovery, without
pain, physiological disturbance or danger from the use of the remedy
employed and without sequelæ. The restoration of health is complete
and lasting.
Many great truths have had their rise, acceptance and period of
sway, followed by a long period of decline and obscurity; but never
has a, great truth been lost. There is always a "Remnant in Israel"
who survive to hold the truth committed to them as a precious
possession and cherish it until a revival comes.
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Chapter X
Indispositions and the Second Best Remedy
In short, Hahnemann has done his best to make it clear that the
use of common sense is not incompatible with homœopathic
practice, his enemies and some of his overzealous followers to the
contrary notwithstanding.
details he robs his work of, its vitality-kills it. It is the same in
treating a case. The problem is to give just enough medicine and not
too much. Too many doses may spoil the case. I have referred to the
class of people who expect and demand medicine, and are not
satisfied unless they get it, until they have been taught better.
Now just here comes in the second best remedy without which no
good homœopathist could long practice medicine. Its technical name
is saccharum lactis officinalis; abbreviated sac. lac. or s. I.; just plain
sugar of milk! The young homœopath's best friend, the old doctor's
reliance and a "very present help in time of trouble!"
Marvelous are the results witnessed from the resort to this remedy
in cases where it is indicated. I have seen it bring sleep to the
"insomniac," when even morphine had failed. I ha e heard patients
declare that it was the most effective cathartic the had ever taken and
beg for a generous supply for future use which supply I have usually
refused on the ground that it was too powerful a remedy to be
entrusted to the hands of the unskilled. It is indeed too powerful and
too useful a remedy to be held 'lightly, or to be lightly used. The
knowledge of its use is too dangerous to be disseminated among the
laity. It should be as jealously guarded as a "trade-secret" worth
millions. Never admit its use to any but the initiated, if you value
your influence and reputation, but never fail to use it when your
judgment dictates it.
When you have worked out your case and found the remedy, you
return. Then you enter the patient's presence as master of the
situation-unless the Master of Destiny has ordained otherwise.
Does anybody consider that lost time? It is a pity that more time
is not lost in that way! Thousands of cases might have been saved
and many a professional reputation, by following such a course,
instead of yielding to the silly panic-impulse to "do something
quick," which almost invariably results in doing the wrong thing.
We may give enough sac. lac. powders to last during the interval
between visits, or a vial of blank tablets or pellets; but be sure to
moisten the tablets and pellets with alcohol, or put some
unmedicated pellets in the sac. lac. powders. Patients have a way of
investigating powders sometimes and counting the pellets. If they
find no pellets they may become suspicious.
properly labeled for such use. One friend of mine always carries a
duplicate case of vials containing blank pellets, but labeled as
medicines to disarm suspicion.
These are some of the ways to use the second best remedy. If you
follow the right course you will find more and more use teaching and
thinking on therapeutic subjects. The use of placebo is simply one
form, and a very powerful form of therapeutic suggestion; or, to use
the still more recent term, psycho-therapy. In the habitual, systematic
and judicious use of the harmless little powder of sac. lac. the
homœopathist antedated all the modern cults of drugless healing, and
even they have devised no more powerful nor efficient measure.
Recall the words of Him who said: "Woe unto you, Scribes and
Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithes of mint and anise and
cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law,
judgment, mercy and faith; these ought ye to have done, and not to
leave the other undone. Ye blind guides which strain at gnat and
swallow a camel!"
He who said that, anointed the eyes of a blind man with "clay
mixed with spittle," bade him go and wash in the pool of Siloam, and
he recovered his sight-healed by faith; awakened by the therapeutic
suggestion of a clay placebo and an order to take a bath!
But what shall we say of the men who have been so pained at the
thought of using the placebo, when we find them violating every
fundamental law and principle of the art whose name they profess
before the world, by using powerful drugs in such a manner in their
treatment of the sick, in both public and private practice, as to do
irreparable injury?
And what about the young men who have come from far and
wide to the colleges connected with such hospitals, and pay their
money in good faith for such instruction in the methods and
principles of homœopathy, who are called upon to witness such
perversions of all true therapeutic principles, to say nothing of
homœopathy? Should they not be considered?
These two great leaders, each in his own way, have thus voiced
the principles of common honesty in the conduct of public and
private affairs. The people have listened and responded. The world is
waking up, for, as President Lincoln said: "You can fool some of the
people all of the time; you can fool all of the people some of the
time, but you cannot fool all the people all of the time."
It is not many years since the late Judge Barrett, of the Supreme
Court, in a decision which he handed down in a certain case,
declared that the legal obligation rested upon every professedly
homœopathic physician to practice according to homœopathic
principles; and that he was liable at law if he did not do so. The
people who give their money to found and sustain homœopathic
institutions have some right in this matter which should be respected.
We have now a "pure food law" which requires that all goods
shall be "true to label.", The time may come, and perhaps is not far
distant, when we shall have a "pure practice law," which will require
that a man who represents himself as a graduate of a homœopathic
school and a practitioner of homœopathy, shall be required to
practice in accordance with the principles of that school or suffer the
penalty of his misrepresentation-in other words, that he shall be "true
to label." He will not be able in that day, as he is now, to advertise,
"57 varieties!" There is but one variety of homœopathy, and that is
the homœopathy of Hahnemann, the principles of which are plainly
laid down in the Organon. All other varieties are fraudulent,
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Chapter XI
Symptomatology
The Homœopathic
Materia Medica. - The
Materia Medica of Hahnemann
is an enduring monument to
the genius of its author,
original in its conception and
design and unique in its form
and contents. Its foundation is
on the bedrock of natural law.
It is constructed of the cut
stones of accurately observed
facts, laid up in the cement of
irrefragible logic. Over its
portals are graven the words,
Similia Similibus Curantur; Dr Samuel Hahnemann
Simplex Simile Minimum.
The Day Books of the provers are not the Materia Medica. Not
until this mass of material has been analyzed, sifted, classified
according to its anatomical, physiological and pathological relations
and had its general and particular characteristics logically deduced,
does it become materia. medica for practical use. Many things in a
Confusion arose and still exists through the inability on the part
of many to reconcile the teaching of this paragraph with the
apparently conflicting doctrine of The Totality of the Symptoms as
the only basis of a true homœopathic prescription. These have taken
refuge either in the mechanical "symptom covering" already referred
to, as fulfilling their conception of the "totality;" or in what is knows
as "keynote prescribing," which, as they practice it, means
prescribing on some single symptom which they (perhaps
whimsically) regard as the "keynote" of the case.
It does not mean that the keynote of the case alone is to be met by
the keynote of the remedy alone and that the other features of the
case or remedy are to be ignored, The keynote is simply the
predominating symptom or feature which directs attention to the
totality. Its function is merely suggestive. A prescription is not based
This case is a beautiful example of the kind of work for which Dr.
Lippe was famous. It illustrates the necessity of being familiar with
the natural history, symptomatology and diagnosis of disease. Dr.
Lippe could not have decided that these two symptoms were peculiar
and characteristic if he had been unfamiliar with the symptoms of
cholera. Neither could he have selected these two symptoms as
peculiar if he had not had the rest of the symptoms before him for
comparison. The mistake of arbitrarily picking out some "freak"
symptom, and giving a remedy which has a corresponding symptom,
should be avoided. Dr. Guernsey did not teach prescribing on a
single symptom.
A milking stool will stand upon one leg-if you sit on it and thus
provide your own two legs as the other necessary props; but even
then, as every farmer's boy knows by bitter experience, a vicious
kick, or a "corkscrew swat" from the old cow's tail may upset the
youthful milker and his pail of milk and bring him to grief.
Bœnninghausen's
Therapeutic Pocketbook -
Bœnninghausen's famous
Therapeutic Pocketbook was
devised primarily to deal with
just, such cases. The. materia Boenninghausen
medica contains a great
number of incomplete symptoms. Until Bœnninghausen's time this
constituted one of the greatest obstacles to successful homœopathic
prescribing. Bœnninghausen first conceived the idea of completing
these symptoms partly by analogy, and partly by clinical observation
of curative effects. He discovered that many if not all of the
modalities of a case were general in their relation, and were not
necessarily confined to the particular symptoms with which they had
Out of this grew the idea that all other combinations of symptoms
might be thus made. By classifying the characteristic features of
medicines-in certain general relations to each other, in such a way
that one part could be used to complete another, the prescriber might
always be able to construct a related totality, even with apparently
fragmentary symptoms.
When all the symptoms have been collected and arranged in this
form under the name of the medicine, it represents a sick man,
whose likeness may be met almost any day in the actual world. The
drug symptoms are in fact disease symptoms, artificially induced. In
other words they are symptoms of a drug disease. The significant
thing is that drug diseases or poisonings accidentally or intentionally
produced, are similar to natural diseases-so similar that it is
sometimes difficult to distinguish them. A person poisoned to a
certain degree by arsenic, or camphor, or veratrum album, for
example, presents an appearance so similar to one suffering from
cholera, that any one but an expert might be deceived. If this is so
strikingly true of the gross and violent phenomena produced by
poisonings, it is equally true of the milder, finer and less obvious
symptoms which result from proving drugs in small or moderate
doses.
any real therapeutic value has ever been learned by experiment upon
animals-that could not have been learned better more -simply and
more humanely by harmless experiments upon human beings; while
the knowledge gained in such experiments on human beings is
equally valuable for use in the treatment of sick animals.
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Chapter XII
Examination of the Patient
In this spirit we may all co-operate for the best interests of our
profession and our patients, and agree with Hahnemann in the
instruments give us very little, as yet, that is directly available for the
selection of the remedy. Their principal value is in determining the
diagnosis and pathology of the case as bearing upon the prognosis
and general auxiliary treatment. They also point out or more
accurately define the anatomical basis of the prescription and aid us
in correctly localizing symptoms.
We must first gain the patient's confidence and relieve him, as far
as possible, from the sense of restraint and embarrassment. This is
favored in a general way by a calm, dignified, but at the same time
quiet and sympathetic manner on the part of the examiner; a
demeanor confident, but not pompous; simple and direct, but not
aggressive; cheerful, but not flippant; serious, but not grave or
funereal. We should try to put the patient at his ease by adapting
ourselves to his personality and mood.
One thing at a time and all things in order, with an eye to the
outcome. First, the analysis-facts from the patient's statements, then
the nurse's, relative's or friend's statements, and then our own
observations. Then comes the synthesis-the review and study of the
symptoms and construction of the case, classifying symptoms as we
generalize. Comparison of the symptoms of the patient with the
symptoms of the materia medica in repertory work follows, and
finally the selection of the indicated remedy by the exclusion process.
experts put it. That means that he must acquire and hold a thorough
belief in and conviction of the usefulness, indispensability and value
of the goods be has to sell. For him it means study, effort, personal
self-discipline, until he develops a genuine enthusiasm for his goods,
his house and his work. It means Confidence-in himself and is his
goods.
Although the facts must be gathered from the patient, their form,
relations and value depend almost altogether upon the examiner. The
patient, unaided, will usually give only rough, disconnected
statements, crude generalities, single concrete facts and a few details-
a mere formless mass. The trained examiner patiently and skillfully
analyzes and completes the statements, brings out details, connects
the whole and constructs the case logically and scientifically, giving
it a typical form, according to a preconceived idea. That is art and
true art is always scientific.
*****
we will often be baffled in our attempts to cure and find our patients
making slow and imperfect recoveries from seemingly simple acute
diseases, or settling down into states of more or less confirmed
invalidism.
We should not forget to inquire if and when the patient has been
vaccinated and learn what course the implanted disease took. At the
same time we should inquire if any other inoculations with serums or
vaccines have been performed. Many troubles may be traced back to
vaccinations and inoculations, intentional or accidental.
The kind of treatment the patient has had for the diseases
experienced and the principal drugs used should be learned, if
possible. It may be necessary to antidote some of them.
The occupation and habits of the patient; diet, exercise, sleep, use
of tea, coffee, tobacco, stimulants, narcotics, etc., should. be noted.
Patients like to feel that their physician, "knows all about them;"
that be is not interested in them and their families, personally and
professionally, but that he takes pains to learn and keep in touch with
all their individual peculiarities There is no surer way to build up a
permanent, lucrative and substantial practice than by doing this
work. It goes without saying that the fee for such a first examination
must be commensurate with the time and skill employed and that it
will be paid without grumbling, for every intelligent patient will see
that he is getting good service and good value for his money.
All these and their allied conditions are most valuable and
characteristic as therapeutic indications. They should be observed
and noted carefully. Every case should be approached with this
thought and the mind kept active and alert while talking with the
patient and his friends.
Such work as this has its pleasures, aside, from its scientific
relations. "The greatest study of man is man." Most of us like to
"study human nature" and rather pride ourselves on our sagacity in
"sizing up" the people we meet by a study of their physiognomy,
manner, etc. The homœopathic prescriber will find it to his
advantage to cultivate the art of psychological analysis, and may
well take pride in it when he is able to do as part of his medical work
systematically also.
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Chapter XIII
Homœopathic Posology
reduced to the lowest possible degree and a true cure brought about,
if the case has not passed beyond the curative stage. It is not to be
understood that infinitesimal doses are not capable of producing
symptoms in healthy susceptible persons; for that is not true.
Infinitesimal doses will produce symptoms in certain highly
sensitive persons, and many of our most valuable provings have been
made with more or less highly potentiated medicines. Indeed, no
remedy can be regarded as having been thoroughly proven until it
has been proven in the potencies as well as in crude form.
Another reason for the small dose lies in the fact that disease
renders the affected parts abnormally sensitive, as we see in an
inflamed eye, which is painfully sensitive to a degree of light to
which it reacts, normally in health..
Since Hahnemann's day the potency makers have been busy and
we now have potencies ranging up to the millionth centesimal, and
ever higher. Men with the confidence, courage and zeal to
experiment with these altitudinous preparations and publish their
results have not been lacking. Physicians of unquestioned honesty,
ability and experience have testified that, they obtained curative
results from the use even of the very highest potencies. It is not just
for us to question this testimony until we have put the matter to the
test. In the light of experience and of recent revelations in other
departments of science of the power of the infinitesimal, there is
nothing inherently improbable about it, and it is unquestionably to
our advantage to have as large an armamentarium as possible.
help us to choose the best potency for a given case? There is little
teaching but many opinions. Practitioners who publicly boast of their
liberality on this subject, will too often be found, on more intimate
acquaintance, to practice an obstinate exclusivism in the use of some
particular potency, generally a very low or a very high one; and to
harshly criticize those who differ with them. This is unfortunate,
because such practitioners undoubtedly deprive themselves and their
patients of many agents of cure which are easily within their reach.
The more similar the remedy, the more clearly and positively the
symptoms of the patient take on the peculiar and characteristic form
of the remedy, the greater the susceptibility to that remedy, and the
higher the-potency required.
development, and the most sensitive organs are those which are
being developed. Therefore the medicines which have a peculiar
affinity for those organs should be given in the medium or higher
potencies.
given in potentiated form and small doses, resort to the crude drug
and increase the dose to the point of reaction.
This does not in the least degree invalidate nor violate the
principle of the minimum dose in such cases, The principle of similia
as applied in the selection of both remedy and dose is eternally and
universally true. It is as true in terminal conditions in chronic
diseases marked by gross pathological lesions and symptoms as it is
in any other kind of cases. The homœopathic physician fails and falls
short of his duty if, at such a crisis, he throws tip his hands and lets
his patient die or pass into other hands; or if he weakly yields,
abandons the principle of similia and resorts to the routine measures
of allopathic practice, based upon theoretical assumptions.
Occasionally an allopathic physician is called in who gives so-called
physiological doses of some common drug and restores the patient.
He merely does what the homœopathic physician should have the
discernment and common sense to namely give the drug that is really
homeopathic to the case, but give it in the stronger doses required at
that stage of the case to excite the curative reaction. He does what
the homœopathic physician is perhaps too timid, too ignorant or too
prejudiced to do. Result: the allopath gets the honor, the family and
the emolument; the homœopath "gets the laugh;" and homœopathy
"gets a black eye." The occasional successes of allopathic physicians
in such cases are nearly always accomplished with drugs which are
essentially, although crudely, homœopathic. The homœopath who
habitually uses high potencies is apt to forget or overlook the fact
that a terminal case may reach a point where the symptoms call for
material doses because the susceptibility is so low that it will react to
no other, but will react to them.
This patient was not cured in the sense that his structurally
damaged heart valves were restored, for that is an impossibility. Put
the action of the indicated drug was curative in its nature, as far as it
was possible to go, his life was saved and prolonged, and he was
restored to a measure of comfort and usefulness, when otherwise he
would have died.
The, patient was a girl eighteen years of age, in the late stages of
incurable heart disease. She had been under allopathic treatment for
over a year, steadily growing worse. When first seen by the writer
she was confined to a chair unable to lie down or remain in bed.
General œdema, ascites and hydrothorax existed. Urine was almost
entirely suppressed, only about four ounces being passed in twenty-
four hours. Tachycardia and dyspnœa were most distressing and
death seemed imminent. The history and anamnesis of her case
revealed unmistakable Calcarea symptoms. She was give n a single
dose of Calcarea carb., C.M. Fincke. The reaction and response to
the remedy was surprising. Within forty-eight hours urine began to
be secreted copiously. For several days she passed from one hundred
and twenty to one hundred and fifty ounces per day. Dropsy rapidly
disappeared and she was soon able to lie down and sleep
comfortably. In about four weeks she was able to go out f or a ride in
a carriage, and not long after was out walking. She lived thirteen
months in comparative comfort and happiness and then died quite
suddenly of heart failure, after a slight over exertion.
high potency of the same or a similar drug may prove to be the best
antidote.
Idiots, imbeciles and the deaf and dumb have a low degree of
susceptibility, as a rule.
The seat, character, and intensity of the disease has some bearing
upon the question of the dose. Certain malignant and rapidly fatal
diseases, like cholera, may require material doses or low potencies of
the indicated drug. Hahnemann's famous prescription of Camphor in
drop doses of the strong tincture, given every five or ten minutes,
with which so many thousands of lives have been saved, is an
illustration. Later, after reaction has been established and other
remedies, corresponding to the symptoms of later stages of the
disease come into view, the higher potencies are required.
What has been said of the use of higher potencies in cholera, after
reaction has been established by camphor tincture, is applicable in
many other diseases of malignant character and rapid progress. In the
beginning, when torpor or collapse indicate the dangerously low
vitality and deficient reaction, a few doses of a low potency may be
required until reaction comes about, after which the potency should
be changed to--a higher one if it is necessary to repeat the remedy.
The question is entirely one of susceptibility. The higher the
susceptibility, the higher the potency. We must learn how to judge
the degree of susceptibility if we would-be successful as
homœopathic prescribers; and this applies not only to the normal
susceptibility of the patient as evidenced by his constitution,
temperament, etc., but to the varying degrees of his susceptibility as
modified by the character and stages of his disease and by previous
treatment. At one stage he may need a low potency, as already
pointed out, and at another a high potency. The man who confines
himself to the use of a single potency, or two or three potencies, be
they low or high, is not availing himself of all the measures of his art
and will frequently fail to cure.
Attempts have been made to lay down rules governing the dose
based upon a pathological classification of diseases; as, for example,
that the lower preparations should be used in chronic disease with
tendency to disorganization of tissues and in acute diseases; or that
the high potencies should be used in purely functional and nervous
affections; but these classifications are not reliable. They only serve
to confuse the mind of the student and distract his attention from the
main point, which is to determine the degree of susceptibility of the
Thus the whole matter of the dose, like the selection of the
remedy, resolves itself into a problem of individualization, which, as
a principle, governs all the practical operations of homœopathy.
Looking at this subject broadly and having the highest degree of
success in view, it is seen that it is as necessary to individualize the
dose as it is the remedy, and that the whole scale of potencies must
be open to the prescriber.
The only rule which can be laid down with safety is to repeat the
dose only when improvement ceases. To allow a dose, or a remedy,
to act as long as the improvement produced by it is sustained, is
good practice; but to attempt to fix arbitrary limits to the action of
medicine, as some have done, is contrary to, experience.
Young practitioners and many old ones too, for that matter, give
too many doses, repeat too frequently, change remedies too often.
They give no time for reaction. They get doubtful, or hurried, or
careless and presently they get "rattled" if the case is serious. Then it
is "all up with them," until or unless they come to their senses and
correct their mistakes. Sometimes such mistakes cannot be corrected
and a patient pays the penalty with his life. It pays to be careful and
"go slow" in the beginning; then there will not be so many mistakes
to correct. We should examine our case carefully and systematically,
select our first remedy and potency with care, give our first dose, if
the single dose is decided upon and then watch results. If the remedy
and dose are right there will be results. We need have no doubt on
that score. The indicated remedy and potency, even in a single dose
cannot be given without some result and the result must be good.
Generally speaking, it may be taken for granted that if there is no
perceptible result after a reasonable time, depending upon the nature
of the case, either the remedy or the potency was wrong.
The more accurate the selection of the medicine, the greater must
be the care exercised not to injure the patient by prescribing
potencies too low and doses too numerous. Medication should be
stopped on the first appearance of such aggravations. An antidote
should be administered if they do not speedily diminish. The careless
prescriber rarely recognizes such aggravations. When he notices the
symptoms he usually attributes them to the natural course of the
disease or calls it a "complication."
reappear, old ulcers break out again, old fistulæ re-open, old
discharges flow again, swollen tubercular glands become inflamed,
break down and suppurate away; old joint pains return; the patient's
heart, lung, kidney, liver, spleen or brain symptoms in the meantime
improving; then we know that both remedy and dose were right and
a true cure is in progress. But if we find superficial symptoms
disappearing and vital organs showing signs of advancing disease,
we know we have failed.
The law might be stated thus: The curative dose, like the remedy,
must be similar in quantity and quality to the dose of the morbific
agent which caused the disease.
Von Grauvogl says: - "The sole and simple question can only be
what quantity of a substance is necessary, in order to induce that
chemical or physical counter-motion in any diseased part of the
organism, which is equal in intensity, and opposite in direction, to
that (motion) which is induced by the morbific cause, in order to
cheek this latter forthwith, or at least to delay it, and then, by
repetition, to remove it?" Stated in this form, the question conforms
to the fundamental principle of homœopathy, Similia Similibus
Curantur, which is a statement, in equivalent terms, of the third law
of motion, "action and reaction are equal and opposite." Grauvogl
goes on to state that "the task is only to discover the equivalent of
motion between the amount of motion excited by the morbid matter,
and the amount of motion which we have to oppose it by some
drug." "For the solution of this problem," he says, "we have the
natural law, according to which the quality contains the measure of
the motion and the counter-motion; and hence, for the purpose of
therapeutics, the right dose must and can be nothing else than that
amount of the indicated quality (or remedy) which is equal to the
amount of the force of the cause of the disease, and qualitatively
runs counter to its course and motions." We possess thus, in the very
dose, or quantity of the morbid cause, the measure for the quantity of
the dose of the drug to be used." (And vice versa.)
that, in dry seasons, all mineral waters are relatively richer in solid
constituents than in wet seasons.
"He must, hence, begin with the smallest quantity of acid, highly
diluted and add it, drop by drop, and count every drop till the
experiment is concluded."
I was taught, for example, that "low potencies acted best in acute
diseases." I accepted that generalization and acted upon it for some
time before I discovered that it was altogether too broad, if not
entirely false. It was not long before I witnessed a cure of an acute
disease by a two hundredth potency so rapid and brilliant that I was
encouraged to put it to the test myself. I succeeded in a number of
cases and then I failed in a certain case. When I reflected upon the
exception and sought for a reason why the high potency had acted in
ten similar cases and failed in one, I found it in the grosser type of
the individual and his lower degree of susceptibility, as well as in the
lower grade of his disease process. He required a grosser, more
material, lower form of a remedy to cure him.
I was taught also that infants and aged persons, being of low
vitality and feeble reactive powers, required low potencies for their
cure. Again I found that the generalization was altogether too broad;
for I have cured the most desperate cases of croup, diphtheria,
cholera infantum, etc., with a few doses of a high potency after they
have been given up to die by those who had been prescribing
tinctures and low potencies without avail; and I have seen as brilliant
curative effects of high potencies in the aged as in the young, when
both the remedy and the potency were indicated. Again we must
individualize. Low potencies will not cure all acute diseases, all
infants, nor all aged persons. Nor will high potencies cure all forms
of disease in all persons. All potencies are required for the cure of
disease, and any potency may be required in any given case.
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Chapter XIV
Potentiation and the Infinitesimal Dose
Homœopathic potentiation is a mathematico-mechanical process
for the reduction, according to scale, of crude, inert or poisonous
medical substances to a state of physical solubility, physiological
assimilability and therapeutic activity and harmlessness, for use as
homœopathic healing remedies.
By this process the most virulent and deadly poisons, even the
serpent venoms, are not only rendered harmless but are transformed
into beneficent healing remedies. Substances which are medicinally
inert in their crude natural state, such as the minerals, charcoal, or
lycopodium, are thus rendered active and effective for healing the
sick. Other drugs, more or less active in their natural state, have their
medicinal qualities enhanced and their sphere of action broadened by
being submitted to the process.
least possible."
called, did not, like Minerva, spring "full armed and grown from her
father's brain;" nor was the idea, like Minerva, "immediately
admitted to the assembly of the gods." It was a gradual growth, a
development. In some other respects, however, the idea was like
Minerva. "The power of Minerva," we are told, "was great in
heaven; she could hurl the thunders of Jupiter, prolong the life of
men, bestow the gift of prophecy and was the only one of all the
divinities whose authority and consequence were equal to those of
Jupiter."
This is only the recognition that in its highest aspects, the doctrine
and the fact of potentiation is one of those "mysteries of the faith"
which have ever been the strength and at the same time the
weakness, of every great church or school of thought; the strength
because in their highest and broadest reaches they exercise the
highest powers of the human mind; the weakest because they are the
most liable to misunderstanding and perversion.
We may always rely upon our enemies to discover and attack the
most vital and weakest part of our defenses, The proof of this
statement lies in the fact that the doctrine of potentiation and the
infinitesimal dose has always been the central point of attack -upon
homœopathy by its enemies.
"We have all heard the story of how Archimedes detected the
alloy in King Hiero's crown; how a certain weight of gold had been
given by the King to an artificer to make over into a crown; how the
King, suspecting a cheat, asked his friend Archimedes if he could tell
whether base metal had been out in with the gold; how Archimedes,
sorely puzzled, stepped one day into his bath, observed how the
water ran over, forgot everything and ran home naked through the
streets of Syracuse shouting, Eureka!
By this he not only exposed the tricky goldsmith, but was led to
all sorts of investigations, and finally to the discovery of the Lever."
It is perhaps not quite fair to, imply that the dominant school has
not recognized such a possibility. That it has done so is evidenced by
its, attempts to prepare certain morbid products, mostly of animal
origin, for use as therapeutic agents by submitting them to a
biological process which may be regarded as somewhat analogous to
homœopathic potentiation. I refer to the processes by which the
various serums and vaccines are prepared. The old time vaccination
in which the patient was inoculated directly with the so-called
"humanized" vaccine virus, represents its first attempt in this
direction. So many evils arose from the practice that it was soon
discontinued, and the more modern method devised. By this method
an animal, usually a calf, was inoculated with pus from a fully
developed human smallpox pustule. After the ensuing disease thus
set up in the animal had developed, serum or pus from one of the
resulting pustules was again inoculated into another healthy animal
to undergo the same or similar organic modifications. This process
having been repeated a varying number of times, through a series of
animals, the final product was used to inoculate human beings. With
many technical modifications and extensions this is essentially the
process used to-day in the preparation of the sera and vaccines.
Even the soil itself can only receive and yield its chemical
constituents in the form of a solution. As Liebig says, "If rain water,
which contains ammonia, potash, phosphoric acid, silicic acid, in a
state of solution, is brought into contact with the soil, then these
substances leave the solution almost at once; the soil appropriates
them from the water. If the soil did not possess this property, then
these three chief nutritive substances could not be kept in the earth."
It would seem from this that the velocity of all reactions, between
electrolytes is greater, the greater the dilution and this is so with
certain restrictions. Theoretically, the relative reactivity is greatest at
infinite dilution because then the degree of ionization is greatest.
Practically, however, there is a limit to this, because, after a certain
degree of dilution has been reached, the actual reactivity becomes
too small to be of moment.
The smallest material thing in the world, the last in the series of
little things known to modern science, is the electron, or electric
corpuscle. It is supposed that the chemical atoms are composed of a
collection of electrons having orbital motions in a sphere of positive
electrification. The electron is conceived to be billions of times
smaller than the atom. A French scientist compares the electrons in
the atom to gnats in the dome of a cathedral.
Sir Oliver Lodge says, "the waves of light are not anything
mechanical or material, but are something electrical and magnetic
they are, in fact, electrical disturbances periodic in space and time,
and traveling with a known and tremendous speed through the ether
of space. Their very existence depends upon the ether, their speed of
propagation is its best known quantitative property."
Speaking of the ether, Lodge says:-"the ether has not yet been
brought under the domain of simple mechanics-it has not yet been
reduced to motion and force, and that probably because the force
aspect of it has been so singularly elusive that it is a question
whether we ought to think of it as material at all." * * *
"Undoubtedly, the ether belongs to the material or physical universe,
but it is not ordinary matter. I should prefer to say it is not 'matter' at
all. It may be the substance or substratum, or material of which
matter is composed but it would be confusing and inconvenient not
to be able to discriminate between matter on the one hand and ether
ort the other." He further says,-"we do not yet know what electricity
is, or what the ether is. We have as yet no dynamical explanation of
either of them; but the past century has taught us what seems to their
student in overwhelming quantity of facts about them, And when the
present century, or the century after, lets us deeper into their secrets,
and into the secrets of some other phenomena now in course of being
rationally investigated I feel as if it would be no merely material
prospect that will be opening on our view, but some glimpse into a
region of the universe which science has never entered yet, but
which has been sought from far, and perhaps blindly apprehended,
by painter and poet, by philosopher and saint." (Lodge-The Ether or
Space.)
today we have Sir Oliver Lodge, the greatest living correlator and
interpreter of the facts of science, defining the ether of space, as the
most tenuous and refined substance known to science, and
submitting mathematical computations of its physical properties.
"As the whole organism draws upon digestion, as the source of its
nutrition, so every part and particle of the organism draws upon the
various materials successively worked out by the different processes
of animal chemistry for its own proper nutriment, and assimilates
them for its own particular use and subsistence. Thus, the lacteals
draw upon the chyle prepared by digestion; the lymphatics upon the
transudation of the capillaries, the blood upon the fluids of either of
these; and the nerves upon the blood."
"Those parts of the organism which do not satisfy their wants are
"A flexible chain, set spinning, can stand up on end while the
motion continues."
result of the collision. Not speed, but sudden change of speed is the
necessary condition for generating waves in the ether by electricity."
***
The philosopher, the physicist and chemist, each in his own way,
analyzes, divides and subdivides matter until he can go no farther,
and then finds himself confronted by a mystery, incapable of
solution by physical means. Shall he stop there an hush the question
that will arise in his mind when be has penetrated thus far?
Something within him rebels at the arbitrary limitation of thought.
Aspiration, intuition, reason, analogy, the logical faculty, all urge
him forward. Up to this point his investigation has revealed what can
only be regarded logically as secondary causes. The primary cause
eludes him. The physician and pathologist also has his mystery. The
microbe, the bacillus, the bacterium, all forms of microorganisms
and all other proximate causes of disease carried back even to the
formless bit of protoplasm or living matter, must themselves be
accounted for. That which lies beyond cannot be seen by the
microscope. At this point, it is necessary to substitute the telescope
of intuitional reasoning for the microscope of physical demonstration.
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Chapter XV
The Drug Potential
For the clearest and most concise definition of the Theory of the
Potential I quote the Standard Dictionary:
To this we may now perhaps add that the drug potential, due to
the attraction of the living organism, determines, in a similar manner,
the direction and kind of action of the drug prescribed or taken.
Here is a suggestion for our research workers. Let them lay aside
for a time their unfruitful studies of serums, vaccines and micro-
organisms, and devote their attention to the subject of vital energy as
manifested in living organisms. Let them learn bow to measure the
actions and reactions of that fundamental, entitative power and
principle called Life in the same way that the electrical scientist
measures the force with which he deals in his department.
Does a crude drug in massive dose act under the same law as a
material body and tend to move in the direction of increasing
potential? And does an infinitesimal dose obey the law which makes
a positive electrical charge tend to move in the opposite direction
toward a decreasing potential, and thus effect cure of disease? We
know that the direction of action of the massive dose is opposite to
the action of the infinitesimal dose, as we know that the direction of
the organic forces of health is opposite to that of disease.
of the dynamical theory of life, the law of similars and the law of
potentiation. Taken together they make up the great triad of
fundamental principles in the Hahnemannian philosophy. If we view
life from the standpoint of dynamics, considering health as orderly,
balanced and harmonious action and disease as unbalanced or
disorderly action of the life principle, then we must also consider the
agents which change or modify the action of the life principle from
the same standpoint. Any agent or substance which modifies the
action of the life principle medicinally must do so by virtue of its
inherent dynamic energy; and that action must be governed
fundamentally by the same dynamical laws which govern the
operation of the life principle physiologically and pathologically.
These laws are related to all the vital functions, and to all the
agents which act upon and modify them. The organs of nutrition,
growth and repair; digestion, absorption and excretion; innervation
and enervation; respiration, circulation, sleep; intellect, emotion,
memory., reason, judgment and will all react to appropriate stimuli
under the law of attraction and mutual action, stated by Sir Isaac
Newton in the formula, "action and reaction are equal and opposite."
These same laws, in the last analysis, govern all the agents and
substances which act upon the living organism. They are related to
the germination, growth and reproduction, and the development of
the inherent properties of all the plants and forms of vegetable life
from which we derive our drugs; to the functional and organic
development and existence of all the insects, reptiles, and other
forms of animal life which furnish their secretions for our medicinal
use; and to the origin, formation and constitution of all the minerals
and inorganic substances which make up a part of our materia
medica. The embodied dynamic energy of each and all of these
becomes available and useful through Hahnemann's discovery of the
drug potential and his invention of the mechanical process of
homœopathic potentiation.
The knowledge that drugs act upon the living organism, and that
the organism reacts to drugs; and the further knowledge that the
organism reacts in a different manner to each drug, led to the
recognition of the specific character of drug action and to the
Hahnemann's first great discovery was that the quality of the drug
action is governed by the quantity of the drug used.
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Chapter XVI
The Logic of Homœopathy
The logical principles which
underlie homœopathic
prescribing are commonly
overlooked. Apparently there
are almost as many methods of
prescribing as there are
prescribers. The remarkable
cures performed by such men
as Bœnninghausen, Lippe,
Dunham and Wells are
commonly regarded as having
been due to some mysterious
power possessed by them as
individuals. That similar results
are attainable by anyone who
will master the method is
difficult for many to believe;
yet a clear and comprehensive Dr Carroll Dunham
statement of the principles
involved and an identification of the source from which they are
drawn will be sought in vain in homœopathic literature.
How many, for example, recall and realize the practical bearing
of the fact that the science of logic exists in two parts-the logic of
form and the logic of reality or truth; or, technically, Pure or Formal
Logic and Inductive Logic.
Each of these can and does take his stand against the world, on
the ground that he is logical and consistent. His conclusions are
consistent with his premises; and there you have the psychology of
it, with the secret of the arrogance of the average medical man:
He does not know, nor wish to know what some of us may have
learned and forgotten-that Inductive Logic, the Logic of Bacon, Mill
and Hahnemann, has a higher function than the Logic of Aristotle,
which exists and is used largely for the purpose of mere
argumentation.
Inductive Logic does concern itself with facts, with reality. Its
primary purpose is the discovery and use of Truth.
The purpose of this part of the work is not to instruct the reader in
the elements of logic, but simply to define and discuss some of the
more general relations of logic to the various processes of applied
homœopathy and to point out the great advantage that accrues to the
physician who consciously and definitely uses the methods of
inductive logic in his daily work.
"There are and can exist," says Bacon, "but two ways of
investigating and discovering truth. The one hurries on rapidly from
the senses and particulars to the most general axioms; and from them
as principles and their supposed indisputable truth derives and
discovers the intermediate axioms. This is the way now in use. The
other constructs its axioms from the senses and particulars, by
ascending continually and gradually, till it finally arrives at the most
general axioms, which is the true but unattempted way." (Nov. Org.
Axiom, 19.)
"These ideas are called first truths. They are given by the senses,
the consciousness and the reason, and they are innumerable. I exist.
There is an external world. This body is solid, extended, round, red,
warm or cold, are first truths."
"At first these ideas are particular, but afterward the mind unites
those which are similar, or which agree in some respect, into,
classes. This is called generalization. To express this we no longer
say this or that body, but body; not coat, shirt, trousers, etc., but
clothes."
To show that all reasoning is, in the last analysis, deductive, True
uses the following illustrations: "I infer that heat in such a degree as
will cause, the mercury in the thermometer to rise to the point
marked two: hundred and twelve degrees Fahrenheit will always
cause water to boil; in other words, it is proved by induction to be a
law of nature that two hundred and twelve degrees Fahrenheit will
cause water to boil.
of the boiling of water, but with a few instances combined with the
principle that like causes will produce like effects; for if this
principle were not true, then forty thousand instances of water
boiling would not prove that another case would happen. But now I
know like causes will produce like effects, and I know by
observation that two hundred and twelve degrees Fahrenheit did
once or twice cause water to boil. Admit the premises and the
conclusion is unavoidable; and to do this is simply to affirm
something of a class, then to refer the individual to that class, and
then to affirm the same thing of the individual." "Now the first
premise is the general principle, which is intuitively true. The only
question is about the second premise; namely: whether two hundred
and twelve degrees was the cause of the boiling in the instances
observed."
Jevons truly says: - "It is true that we cannot use our eyes or ears
without getting some kind of knowledge, and the brute animals can
do the same. But what gives power is the deeper knowledge called
Science. People may see, and hear, and feel all their lives without
really learning the nature of, the things they see. But reason is the
mind's eye and enables us to see why things are, and when, and how
events may be made to happen or not to happen. The logician
endeavors to learn exactly what this reason is which makes the
power of men. We all must reason well or ill, but logic is the science
of reasoning and enables us to distinguish between the good
reasoning that leads to the truth, and to bad reasoning which every
day betrays people into error and misfortune."
This would give a scientific basis, and indeed the only possible
basis, for a comparison between the symptoms of drugs and the
symptoms of disease.
Accordingly, as every
homœopathist knows, he
began to experiment With
"good cinchona bark" upon
himself, that drug having been
suggested to him while he was
translating Cullen's work on
materia medica, where it was
highly recommended as a cure
for intermittent fever. Finding
his theory strikingly
confirmed by repeated
experiments, he began to
search medical literature for
Every disease is the result of the action upon the living organism
of some definite, specific, individual agent or influence from without
and the phenomena of its action as a whole take on individualizing
general characteristics. By these we identify, name and classify
diseases as well as medicines. The names, pneumonia, diphtheria,
measles, smallpox, typhoid fever, and many others, represent
pathological forms which are, in their characteristic general features,
constant in all ages and countries. They owe their existence to causes
which are constant, although particular symptoms and the conditions
of their manifestations may vary in individual cases and at different
periods. We must not lose sight of this essential fact: - that
pathological symptoms in definite diseases derive their meaning and
relative value from their connection with a definite, general
pathological condition or state, exactly as pathogenetic symptoms
derive their meaning and value from an individual definite drug, the
action of which upon the vital substance they manifest and express.
It was not because they were unwilling, nor that they did not try
to reveal the secret of their great skill and power as prescribers. To
some of their personal students, with whom they were in peculiar
sympathy, they at least partly succeeded in imparting their secret. It
is probable, however, that most of these fortunate students received
more by unconscious absorption or by intuition than they did by
direct verbal instruction. It is doubtful if they themselves, always
recognized and identified the mental process by which they did their
work. If they did, they neglected to name it.
These seem like truisms until we watch the work of the ordinary
prescriber and find that instead of doing this, he is merely using his
memory of a few facts and a few inadequate or erroneous rules
which he has picked up. This is empiricism, not science. In an art
which has to do with the saving of human life, it is a crime.
The greater includes the less. Generals are more important than
particulars in constructing a case and as a basis for prescriber
prescribing The generals, which include and are derived from the
particulars, constitute the only reliable basis of a curative
prescription. Generalizing, therefore, is one of the most important
functions performed by the homœopathic prescriber in selecting the
curative medicine.
The most intimate and interior things; the things that lie nearest to
the heart of man; the things that touch and express the centers of life,
are among the generals.
"Modalities, or conditions of
aggravation and amelioration
applying to the case as a whole, or
the patient himself, are generals of
high rank." (Kent.)
8. The facts having been ascertained and clearly stated, they are
to be arranged in their natural relation to each other and to the
subject of. the inquiry by comparison and generalization
"Of all truths relating to phenomena the most valuable are those
which relate to the order of their succession. On a knowledge of
these is founded every reasonable anticipation of future facts, and
whatever power- we possess of influencing those facts to our
advantage., From the same knowledge do we derive our power to
make the most effective use of past and present facts."
"In such cases it is very common to single out one only of the
antecedents under the domination of Cause, calling the others merely
Conditions: Thus, if a person eats of a particular dish, and dies in
consequence, that is, would not have died if he had not eaten of it,
people would be apt to say that eating of that dish was the cause of
his death. There need not, however, be any invariable connection
between eating of the dish and death; but there certainly is, among
the circumstances which took place, some combination or other on
which death is invariably consequent; as, for instance, the act of
eating of the dish, combined with a particular bodily constitution, a
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Chapter XVII
The Development of Hahnemannian
Philosophy in the Sixth Edition of "The
Organon"
practical rules and methods which had stood the test of more than a
century of experience and proved their permanent value in the cure
of innumerable cases of disease. They expected that the changes
would consist of a further development and elucidation of those
theories and concepts which constituted the latest former additions to
his system-abstruse subjects which did not appear or were only
lightly touched upon in the early editions; subjects., for example, like
those of vitality, dynamism and potentiation, which were the last to
be developed and introduced into the "Organon."
science and art of medicine and psychology. Prom that time forward,
and for the first time, man could be studied and treated scientifically
as an individual, in all his personal and peculiar actions and reactions.
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