Lectures On Homoeopathic Philosophy
Lectures On Homoeopathic Philosophy
Lectures On Homoeopathic Philosophy
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A 587508
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1837
SCIENTIA
LIBR AR Y VERITA S OF THE AN
I T Y MICHIG
S
UNIVER OF
PLURIBUSUNUM
TUEBOR
HOMOEOPATHIC
LIBRARY
B
BOS
H610.1
K37
Lectures
ON
Homœopathic
Philosophy
BY
Memorial Edition
PUBLISHED BY
EHRHART & KARL
143 North Wabash Avenue CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
1919
COPYRIGHTED 1900
BY
DR. J. T. KENT.
PREFACE
PAGE
LECTURE I- The Sick 17
LECTURE II-The Highest Ideal of a Cure 27
LECTURE III- What the Physician Must Perceive 35
Lecture IV—“ Fixed Principles." Law and Government from
Centre . 43
LECTURE V-Discrimination as to Maintaining External Causes
and Surgical Cases . 52
LECTURE VI -The Unprejudiced Observer 61
LECTURE VII -Indispositions 69
LECTURE VIII -On Simple Substance 76
LECTURE IX -Disorder First in Vital Force 88
LECTURE X - Materialism in Medicine 97
LECTURE XI - Sickness and Cure on Dynamic Plane 102
LECTURE XII- The Removal of the Totality of Symptoms Means
the Removal of the Cause 110
LECTURE XIII-The Law of Similars 117
LECTURE XIV- Susceptibility • 122
LECTURE XV-Protection from Sickness 128
LECTURE XVI-Oversensitive Patients 133
LECTURE XVII-The Science and the Art 140
LECTURE XVIII-Chronic Diseases-Psora . 146
LECTURE XIX -Chronic Diseases-Psora (Continued) 154
LECTURE XX - Chronic Diseases- Syphilis . 162
LECTURE XXI-Chronic Diseases - Sycosis . 167
LECTURE XXII—Disease and Drug Study in General 177
LECTURE XXIII-The Examination of the Patient 184
LECTURE XXIV-The Examination of the Patient ( Continued ) · 189
LECTURE XXV-The Examination of the Patient ( Continued) • 198
LECTURE XXVI-The Examination of the Patient ( Continued ) • 204
5
6 CONTENTS
PAGE
LECTURE XXVII-Record Keeping 210
LECTURE XXVIII-The Study of Provings 214
LECTURE XXIX -Idiosyncrasies 224
LECTURE XXX-Individualization 230
LECTURE XXXI-Characteristics 234
LECTURE XXXII -The Value of Symptoms 239
LECTURE XXXIII-The Value of Symptoms (Continued ) 246
LECTURE XXXIV-The Homoeopathic Aggravation . 253
LECTURE XXXV-Prognosis After Observing the Action of the
Remedy • 264
LECTURE XXXVI-The Second Prescription • 277
LECTURE XXXVII-Difficult and Incurable Cases-Palliation . 286
JAMES TYLER KENT, M. D.
Born in the State of New York, March 31 , 1849. Died
June 6, 1916, at Stevensville, Montana.
A Tribute
All hail James Tyler Kent, to all endeared,
Whom, as their chief, his pupils proudly claim.
In ages yet unborn shall be revered,
By countless hosts, his never-dying name.
We, who have groped in ignorance as blind,
Rejoice as those who have received new sight ;
This gift we owe to his colossal mind,
And through his teachings revel in the light.
The fire he kindled has been duly fanned
And cannot now be quenched by floods or seas ;
The leaping flames spread on through every land,
Restoring health and banishing disease.
Wakefield, England HENRY B. BLUNT, M. B., C. M.
7
8 KENT'S LECTURES
HAIL KENT !
Prometheus-like, thy flame so bright,
Has brought to us a ray of light
From Hahnemann's shining path, so fond
It blazes wondrous realms beyond.
Health, for poor groping human-kind,
A paradise on earth will find.
Dead? No ! Thy living law, its seeds will sow
That good, diffused, may more abundant grow.
Hail Kent !
Can anyone say "Kent is dead !" "Kent is laid away amid the
snow-capped mountains of Montana !"
Kent never died ! The earthly shrine of his immortal mind returns
to dust amid the western mountains-Kent still lives !
Kent's influence still shines a burning torch to reveal truth.
His intense desire to alleviate suffering, to eradicate disease, led
him to concentrate, by the power of his indomitable will, the forces
of his vast intellect. He gave himself unstintingly to the arduous
task of acquiring that deep knowledge by which he scaled the heights
of the Homœopathic Law of Cure. Here his unclouded vision beheld
the genius of Samuel Hahnemann. He grasped the Master's thought,
he wielded the healing power, he reached greater heights .
Kent was discoverer of Series and Degrees. He blazoned new
paths of practical research . His keen perception selected a compara-
tively few of the more receptive and studious from the larger body of
students of the medical colleges where he lectured, that he might im-
part to them the deeper lore which he had through long years
painstakingly acquired. These students of the privileged inner circle
all but idolized their learned, beloved master. They organized them-
selves November, 1910, into the Society of Homœopathicians that the
master's messages might more readily reach all, and through them be
disseminated by their own practice of pure Homoeopathy, and by the
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 9
There are many men in this world of ours, but there are few
masters. Among my pleasantest recollections are the moments spent
at the feet, as it were, of this master of Homœopathy.
Dr. Kent was a man of exceptionally keen observation. He knew
disease with all its intricacies, its complications, its peculiarities, as
very few men know it. He knew the spirit of the Materia Medica as
very few men had learned to know it. His remarkable genius of
selecting a similimum on the plane of the disease for which he pre-
scribed was really phenomenal-almost magical. It seemed to me at
times that he could give a remedy with a magical touch far exceeding
that of my comprehension.
10 KENT'S LECTURES
This was natural for him, and yet to his natural genius and power
of concentration he added years of unstinted study. This made him
one of the greatest masters in medicine the world has ever known.
May it be given to each of us to read and study this book in the
spirit in which it was written, and with the same power of concentra-
tion that discovered and revealed such remarkable truths.
G. E. DIENST.
February 21 , 1919.
certain new doctrines whereby he was able to evolve what may well
be called the "philosophy of science." Among these were the doctrines
of Series and Degrees.
Not once, but many times, Doctor Kent has said to me substantially
these words : "All my teaching is founded on that of Hahnemann and
of Swedenborg ; their teachings correspond perfectly." And also,
"Truth is not of man ; he is only the imperfect vehicle of its expres-
sion," This acknowledgment of indebtedness has been made to many
of his pupils, and needs recording here for its bearing upon both the
antecedents and the quality of his work.
Doctor Kent's work, Hahnemann's work, Swedenborg's work, is
not done ; it is just in its beginning. Ages hence, when the race shall
have been delivered from the incubus of its ills, spiritual, mental and
physical, their contributions to the happy outcome will be given a
recognition beyond our power to formulate now.
GEORGE G. STARKEY.
To the memory of the late Dr. James Tyler Kent nothing can be
said that would, in any way, do justice to his genius and skill as a
Homoeopathic physician. He was not only a physician, but above all
a man, measuring up to the highest standards of morality and honesty,
fully and thoroughly imbued with the highest ideals of his profession.
He was, through his career as a physician, an honest, painstaking
prescriber, who considered the welfare of his patient above his own
pecuniary interest ; this quality, added to his thoroughness in everything
he did, enabled him to give to the world, and especially the Homœo-
pathic profession, much valuable literature upon the subject of
Homeopathy in the way of textbooks, covering such subjects as Materia
Medica, the Philosophy of Homeopathy and his stupendous work, the
Reperatory. These are not ordinary publications, but are considered
classics by the profession. To the student of Homœopathy let me
drop a hint, and it is this : if you wish to become proficient in the
sacred calling of your profession, study diligently this little work
until you have thoroughly mastered the purport of its contents. Do
not think for one moment that one reading will give you an under-
standing of the principles therein set forth ; it will not, but will require
many careful perusals until its subject matter becomes a part of your-
self, then only will it be of service to you.
His utterances on Materia Medica and Reperatory are the tools
which will enable you to perform your work after you have grasped
the working principles contained within this valued treasure book.
ELMER SCHWARTZ, M. D.
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 15
! and
that
i
Lectures on Homoeopathic
Philosophy
LECTURE I
§ 1. "THE SICK."
1
Homœopathy asserts that there are principles which govern
the practice of medicine. It may be said that, up till the time
of Hahnemann , no principles of medicine were recognized ,
and even at this day in the writings and actions of the Old
School there is a complete acknowledgment that no princi-
ples exist. The Old School declares that the practice of medi-
cine depends entirely upon experience , upon what can be
found out by giving medicines to the sick . Their shifting
methods and theories , and rapid discoveries and abandonment
of the same, fully attest the sincerity of their acknowledg-
ments and declarations. Homœopathy leaves Allopathy at
this point, and so in this manner the great division between
the two schools is effected. That there are principles Ho-
mœopathy affirms. The Old School denies the existence of
principles and with apparent reason, looking at the matter
from the standpoint of their practice and methods. They deal
only with ultimates, they observe only results of disease, and
either deny or have no knowledge of the real nature of man,
what he is , where he came from, what his quality is in sickness
or in health . They say nothing about the man except in con-
nection with his tissues ; they characterize the changes in the
tissues as the disease and all there is of the disease, its beginning
and its end. In effect they proclaim disease to be a something
that exists without a cause. They accept nothing but what can
17
2
18 KENT'S LECTURES
be felt with the fingers and seen with the eyes or otherwise
observed through the senses, aided by improved instruments .
The finger is aided by the microscope to an elongated point,
and the microscopic pathological results of disease are noted
and considered to be the beginning and the ending, i . e., results
without anything prior to them. That is a summary of allo-
pathic teaching as to the nature of sickness . But Homœopathy
perceives that there is something prior to these results. Every
science teaches, and every investigation of a scientific character
proves that everything which exists does so because of some-
thing prior to it. Only in this way can we trace cause and
effect in a series from beginning to end and back again from
the end to the beginning. By this means we arrive at a state in
which we do not assume, but in which we know.
The first paragraph of the Organon will be understood by
an inexperienced observer to mean one thing and by a true
and experienced homœopath to mean another.
$1. "The physician's high and only mission is to restore the
sick to health, to cure as it is termed."
No controversy will arise from a superficial reading of
this statement, and until Hahnemann's hidden meaning of the
word "sick" is fully brought to view, the physician of any
school will assent . The idea that one person will entertain as
to the meaning of the word "sick" will be different at times
from that which another will entertain . So long as it remains
a matter of opinion there will be differences of opinion, there-
fore, the homœopath must abandon the mere expressions of
opinion. Allopathy rests on individual opinion and allopaths
say that the science of medicine is based on the consensus of
opinion, but that is an unworthy and unstable foundation for
the science of curing the sick. It will never be possible to estab-
lish a rational system of therapeutics until we reason from
facts as they are and not as they sometimes appear. Facts as
they appear are expressed in the opinions of men, but facts as
they are, are facts and truths from which doctrines are evolved
and formulated which will interpret or unlock the kingdoms of
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 19
Many a time have I heard this story after getting three or four
pages of symptoms. What does it mean ? It is true if that
state progresses there will be evidences of disease, i. e ., evi-
dences which the pathologist may discover by his physical
examination. But at present the patient is not sick, says the
learned doctor. "But what do all these symptoms mean ? I do
not sleep at night . I have pains and aches. My bowels do not
move."
"Oh, well, you have constipation ." That is the first
thing that has been diagnosed . But do all these things exist
without a cause ? It would seem from one opinion that the
"constipation" is the disease per se, but from another opinion
it would appear to be the cause of disease ; the " diagnosis" is
made to apply to one as much as to the other. But this is the
character of vagaries so common to Old School whims . These
symptoms are but the language of nature, talking out as it
were, and showing as clearly as the daylight the internal nature
of the sick man or woman . If this state progresses the lungs
break down. The doctor says , "Oh, now you have consump-
tion" ; or a great change appears in the liver, and he says, "Oh,
now you have fatty degeneration of the liver" ; or albumin
appears in the urine, and he tells the patient, "Now I am able
to name your disease . You have some one of the forms of
Bright's disease." It is nonsense to say that prior to the locali-
zation of disease, the patient is not sick. Does it not seem
clear that this patient has been sick, and very sick, even from
childhood ? Under traditional methods it is necessary that a
diagnosis be made before the treatment can be settled , but in
most cases the diagnosis cannot be made until the results of
disease have rendered the patient incurable .
Again, take the nervous child. It has wild dreams , twitch-
ing, restless sleep, nervous excitement, hysterical manifesta-
tions, but if we examine all the organs of the body we will find
nothing the matter with them. This sickness , however, which
is present, if allowed to go on uncured, will in twenty or thirty
years result in tissue change ; the organs will become affected
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 21
and then it will be said that the body is diseased : but the in-
dividual has been sick from the beginning. It is a question
whether we will start out and consider the results of disease or
begin at the beginning with the causes. If we have material
ideas of disease we will have material ideas of the means of
cure. If we believe an organ is sick and alone constitutes the
disease, we must feel that if we could remove the organ we
would cure the patient. A man has a necrotic condition of
the hand ; then if we believe that only the hand is sick we
would think we had cured the patient by removing his hand.
Say the hand is cancerous . According to this idea it is can-
cerous in itself and from itself, and seeing he would later die
from the cancer of his hand we would conscientiously remove
the hand and so cure the patient. For an eruption on the skin
we would use local means to stimulate the functions of the skin
and make it heal , and believing the eruption had no cause be-
hind it we would conscientiously think we had cured the pa-
tient. But this is the reductio ad absurdum, for nothing exists
without a cause . The organs are not the man . The man is
prior to the organs . From first to last is the order of sickness
as well as the order of cure . From man to his organs and not
from organs to the man.
Well, then, who is this sick man ? The tissues could not be-
come sick unless something prior to them had been deranged
and so made them sick. What is there of this man that can be
called the internal man ? What is there that can be removed
so that the whole that is physical may be left behind ? We say
that man dies but he leaves his body behind . We dissect the
body and find all of his organs. Everything that we know by
the senses belongs to physical man , everything that we can feel
with the fingers and see with the eyes he leaves behind. The real
sick man is prior to the sick body and we must conclude that
the sick man must be somewhere in that portion which is not
left behind. That which is carried away is primary and that
which is left behind is ultimate. We say the man feels, sees ,
tastes, hears, he thinks and he lives, but these are only outward
22 KENT'S LECTURES
sential nature of the vital processes and the mode in which dis-
eases originate in the invisible interior of the organism," etc.
We know that in the present day people are perfectly satisfied
if they can find the name of the disease they are supposed to
have, an idea cloaked in some wonderful technicality . An old
Irishman walked into the clinic one day, and after giving his
symptoms, said, "Doctor , what is the matter with me ?" The
physician answered, "Why, you have Nur vomica," that being
his remedy. Whereupon the old man said, "Well, I did think
I had some wonderful disease or other. " That is an outgrowth
of the old - fashioned folly of naming sickness. Except in a few
acute diseases no diagnosis can be made, and no diagnosis need
be made, except that the patient is sick. The more one thinks
of the name of a disease so-called the more one is beclouded
in the search for a remedy, for then the mind is only upon the
results of disease, and not upon the image expressed in
symptoms.
A patient of twenty-five years of age , with gravest in-
heritances , with twenty pages of symptoms, and with only
symptoms to furnish an image of sickness, is perfectly curable
if treated in time. After being treated there will be no patho-
logical results ; he will go on to old age without any tissue de-
struction. But that patient if not cured at that early age will
take on disease results in accordance with the circumstances of
his life and his inheritances. If he is a chimney sweep he will be
subject to the diseases peculiar to chimney sweeps . If she is
a housemaid she will be subject to the disease peculiar to house-
maids , etc. That patient has the same disease he had when he
was born. This array of symptoms represents the same state
before the pathological conditions have been formed as after.
And it is true, if he has liver disease or brain disease or any of
the many tissue changes that they call disease, you must go
back and procure these very symptoms before you can make a
prescription . Prescribing for the results of disease causes
changes in the results of disease, but not in the sickness except
to hurry its progress .
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 25
else in man. If these two grand parts of man , the will and the
understanding, be separated it means insanity, disorder, death.
All medicines operate upon the will and understanding first
(sometimes extensively on both ) affecting man in his ability
to think or to will , and ultimately upon the tissues, the func-
tions and sensations . In the study of Aurum we find the affec-
tions are most disturbed by that drug. Man's highest possible
love is for his life. Aurum so destroys this that he does not
love his life, he will commit suicide. Argentum on the other
hand so destroys man's understanding that he is no longer
rational ; his memory is entirely ruined. So with every proved
drug in the Materia Medica . We see them affecting first man's
mind, and proceeding from the mind to the physical economy,
to the outermost, to the skin, the hair, the nails. If medicines
are not thus studied you will have no knowledge of them that
you can carry with you. The Materia Medica has been estab-
lished upon this basis.
Sickness must therefore be examined by a thorough scru-
tiny of the elements that make up morbid changes that exist in
the likeness of drug symptoms . To the extent that drugs in
provings upon healthy men have brought out symptoms on
animal ultimates must we study sickness with the hope of ad-
justing remedies to sickness in man under the law of similars .
Ultimate symptoms, function symptoms, sensorium symptoms
and mind symptoms are all useful and none should be over-
looked. The idea of sickness in man must be formed from the
idea of sickness perceived in our Materia Medica. As we
perceive the nature of sickness in a drug image, so must we
perceive the nature of the sickness in a human being to be
healed.
LECTURE II
primarily, that the interior must first be turned into order and
the exterior last. The first of man is his voluntary and the
second of man is his understanding, the last of man is his
outermost ; from his centre to his circumference, to his organs,
his skin, hair, nails, etc. This being true, the cure must pro-
ceed from centre to circumference. From centre to circum-
ference is from above downwards, from within outwards,
from more important to less important organs, from the head
to the hands and feet. Every homoeopathic practitioner who
understands the art of healing, knows that symptoms which
go off in these directions ' remain away permanently. More-
over, he knows that symptoms which disappear in the reverse
order of their coming are removed permanently. It is thus he
knows that the patient did not merely get well in spite of the
treatment, but that he was cured by the action of the remedy.
If a homœopathic physician goes to the bedside of a patient
and, upon observing the onset of the symptoms and the course
of the disease, sees that the symptoms do not follow this order
after his remedy, he knows that he has had but little to do
with the course of things.
But if, on the contrary, he observes after the administra-
tion of his medicine that the symptoms take a reverse course,
then he knows that his medicine has had to do with it, because
if the disease were allowed to run its course such a result
would not take place. The progression of chronic diseases is
from the surface to the centre . All chronic diseases have
their first manifestations upon the surface, and from that to
the innermost of man. Now in the proportion in which they
are thrown back upon the surface it is to be seen that the
patient is recovering. Here it is that the turmoil spoken of
above follows the true homœopathic remedy, and the ignorant
do not desire their old outward symptoms to be brought back
even when it is known as the only possible form of cure. Com-
plaints of the heart and chest and head must in recovery be
accompanied by manifestations upon the surface, in the ex-
tremities, upon the skin , nails and hair. Hence you will find
32 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE III
38 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE IV
experiences, and that which they settle upon they call science ,
no matter how far they may be from the truth. Next year
they come back and they have different ideas and have had
different experiences , and they then vote out what they voted
in before. This is the medicine of experience. They confirm
nothing, but make from experience a series of inventions and
theories. This is the wrong direction . The science of medicine
must be built on a true foundation . To be sure, man must
observe, but there is a difference between true observation
in a science under law and principle and the experience of a
man who has no law and no principle. Old- fashioned medicine
denies principle and law, calls its system the medicine of ex-
perience, and hence its doctrines are kaleidoscopic, changing
every year and never appearing twice alike.
Let me again impress the necessity of knowing something
about the internal government of man in order to know
how disease develops and travels. If we observe any
government, the government of the universe , civil government,
the government of commerce, physical government, we find
that there is one centre that rules and controls and is supreme.
A man has within him by endowment of the Divine a supreme
centre of government which is in the grey matter of the
cerebrum and in the highest portion of the grey matter. Every-
thing in man, and everything that takes place in man, is pre-
sided over primarily by this centre, from centre to circumfer-
ence. If man is injured from the external, e . g., if he has his
finger torn, it will soon be repaired ; the order which is in the
economy from centre to circumference will repair every wrong
that is on the surface caused by external violence . The order
of repair is the same in external as in internal violence. In-
juries are external violence, but diseases are internal disorder
performing violence. All true diseases of the economy flow
from centre to circumference . All miasms are true diseases.
In the government of man there is a triad, a first, second
and third , which gives direction , viz .: the cerebrum , cerebellum
and spinal cord, or when taken more collectively or generally,
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 45
the brain, spinal cord and the nerves . Considered more inter-
nally, we have the will and understanding forming a unit mak-
ing the interior man ; the vital force or vice-regent of the soul
(that is, the limbus or soul stuff, the formative substance )
which is immaterial ; and then the body which is material. Thus
from the innermost, the will or voluntary principle, through
the limbus or simple substance to the outermost, the actual or
material substance of man , which is in every cell , we have this
order of direction. Every cell in man has its representative of
the innermost, the middle and the outermost ; there is no cell
in man that does not have its will and understanding, its soul
stuff or limbus or simple substance , and its material substance.
Disease must flow in accordance with this order, because
there is no inward flow. Man is protected against things flow-
ing in from the outward toward the centre . All disease flows
from the innermost to the outermost, and unless drug sub-
stances are prepared in a form to do this they can neither pro-
duce nor cure disease. There are miasms in the universe , acute
and chronic. The chronic, which have no tendency toward
recovery, are three, psora, syphilis and sycosis ; we shall study
these later. Outside of acute and chronic miasms there are
only the results of disease to be considered . The miasms are
contagious ; they flow from the innermost to the outermost ;
and while they exist in organs yet they are imperceptible, for
they cannot exist in man unless they exist in form subtle
enough to operate upon the innermost of man's physical nature.
The correspondence of this innermost cannot be discovered by
man's eye, by his fingers, or by any of his senses, neither can
any disease cause be found with the microscope . Disease can
only be perceived by its results, and it flows from within out,
from centre to circumference, from the seat of government to
the outermost. Hence cure must be from within out.
In our civil government we see a likeness to this. Let
any great disturbance come upon our government at Wash-
ington and see how, like lightning, this is felt to the circum-
ference of the nation. How the whole country becomes
46 KENT'S LECTURES
things are such as can disturb more especially the body, such
as improperly selected food , living in damp houses , etc. It is
hardly worth while to dwell upon these things, because any
ordinary physician is sufficiently well versed in hygiene to
remove from his patients the external obstacles.
In the fifth paragraph Hahnemann says : "Useful to the
physician in assisting him to cure are the particulars of the
most probable exciting cause of the acute disease, etc." The
probable exciting cause is the inflowing of the cause as an
invisible, immaterial substance, which, having fastened upon
the interior, flows from the very centre to the outermost of
the economy, creating additional disorder. These miasms all
require a given time to operate before they can affect the
external man , and this time is called the prodromal stage.
This is true of psora , syphilis and sycosis and of every
acute contagious disease known to man . While the influx is
upon the innermost of the physical man it is not apparent,
but when it begins to operate upon his nerves and tissues ,
affecting him in his outermost, then it becomes apparent. Each
miasm produces upon the human economy its own character-
istics , just as every drug produces upon the human economy
its own characteristics . Hahnemann says that these must be
recognized, that the homœopathic physician must be familiar
enough with disease cause , with disease manifestations and
drug manifestations to be able to remove them in accordance
with principles fixed and certain. There should be no hypoth-,
esis nor opinion , neither should simple experience have a
place.
If the physician is dealing with acute cases he must take
into consideration the nature of the case as a malady, and so
also with chronic cases . It is supposed that he is conversant
with the disease from having observed the symptoms of a
great many cases, and is therefore able to hold before the mind
the image of the disease. When he is thoroughly conversant
with the very image of the sicknesses that exist upon the
human race he is then prepared to study Materia Medica. All
50 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE V
Now I have led up to the point where you may ask, Is it not
disorder for man to settle what is true by the senses ? Let us as
homœopaths turn our lives, our thinking abilities and our
scientific life into order that we may begin to turn the human
race into order. Let us adopt the plan of thinking of things
from their beginning and following them in a series to their
conclusions . No man is authority, but principle and law are
authority. If this cannot be seen there is no use of proceeding
any further with the study of Homœopathy. If man cannot see
this he cannot see the necessity of harmony from centre to
circumference, of government which has one head, and hence
it would be useless for him to study the human body for the
purpose of applying medicine to it . It must be accepted in
this form or it will not satisfy man , it will not sustain his ex-
pectation, it will not do what he expects it to do ; it will only
accomplish what Allopathy has accomplished, viz., the estab-
lishment of confusion upon the economy .
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 61
LECTURE VI
ble to find at the present time one who could be thus described .
All men are prejudiced . Man is fixed in his politics , fixed in
his religion, fixed in his ideas of medicine, and because of his
prejudice he cannot reason . You need only talk to him a
moment on these subjects and he will begin to tell you what he
thinks ; he will give his opinion, as if that had anything to do
with it. Men of the present day cannot recognize law, and
hence they are prejudiced ; but when men have authority on
which they can rest, then they can get rid of their prejudices.
Suppose we have a large dictionary that we say is an authority
on the spelling of words. If a club of one hundred and fifty
men have bought that dictionary, and put it into a closet and
say, "That is how we agree to spell," that is a recognition by
these men that the book is authority. There would be hence-
forth no argument on the question of spelling. But if there
were no authority one man would spell one way and another
man in another way ; there would be no standard of spelling.
Such is the state of medicine at the present day, there is no
standard authority. One book is authority in one school , and
in another school they have another book, and so there is con-
fusion.
Men cannot get rid of their prejudices until they settle upon
and recognize authority. In Homœopathy the law and its prin-
ciples must be accepted as authority. When we know these it
is easy to accept them as authority, but seeing they are not
known there is no authority and everybody is prejudiced . Men
often ask, "Doctor, what are your theories as to Homœopathy?
what are your theories of medicine ?" I have no theories . It is
a thing that is settled from doctrine and principle, and I know
nothing of theory. A woman came into my office this morn-
ing and said, "Doctor, I have always been treated by the old
school, but the doctors were unable to decide whether the
liver made my stomach sick or the stomach made the liver
sick. " This is only confusion . No organ can make the body
sick ; man is prior to his organs ; parts of the body can be re-
moved and yet man will exist. There is no such thing as one
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 63
LECTURE VII
Here is another note : "In all times, the old school phy-
sicians, not knowing how else to give relief, have sought to
combat and if possible to suppress by medicines , here and there,
a single symptom from among a number in diseases." This
course of singling out a group of symptoms, and treating that
group alone as the disease is incorrect, because it has no due
relation to the entirety of the man . A group of symptoms may
arise through the uterus and vagina, and one who is of this
understanding has a plan for removing only the group of symp-
toms that belong to his specialty, whereby he thinks he has
eradicated the trouble. Hahnemann condemns this doctrine,
and we see at once its great folly. In many instances there
are, at the same time, manifestations of "heart disease," "liver
disease," etc. (that is, speaking in their terms ; these are not
diseases at all, as we know) , so that every specialist might be
consulted, and each one would direct the assault at his own
particular region, and so the patient goes the rounds of all the
specialists and the poor man dies. An old allopathic physician
once made the remark about a case of pneumonia that he was
treating, that he had broken up the pneumonia. "Yes," said an-
other physician, "the pneumonia is cured, but the patient is
going to die." That is the way when one of these groups of
symptoms is removed ; constipation may be removed by physic ;
liver symptoms may sometimes be removed temporarily by a
big dose of calomel ; ulcers can be so stimulated that they will
heal up ; but the patient is not cured. Hahnemann says it is
strange that the physician cannot see that the removal of these
symptoms is not followed by cure, that the patient is worse off
for it.
Some patients are not sufficiently ill to see immediately
the bad consequences of the closure of a fistulous opening but
if a patient is threatened with phthisis, or is a weakly patient,
the closure of that fistulous opening of the anus will throw him
into a flame of excitement and will cause his death in a year or
two. The more rugged ones will live a number of years before
they break down, and they are held up as evidences of cure.
72 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE VIII
On Simple Substance .
§9. In the healthy condition of man, the spiritual vital force, the
dynamis that animates the material body, rules with unbounded sway,
and retains all the parts of the organism in admirable, harmonious,
vital operation, as regards both sensations and functions, so that our
indwelling, reason-gifted mind can freely employ this living healthy
instrument for the higher purposes of our existence.
ing. We find Iodine uniting with its base ; i . e., two simple
substances compounding in keeping, with their own individual
plan, reliably and intelligently in accordance with the affinities
for each other. When substances come together in that way
they do not disturb the simple substance of each other, there is
nothing destroyed, each one retains its own identity, and they
can be reduced again to their simples by reaction and reagents .
Now all of these enter into the human body and every element
in the human body preserves its identity throughout and
wherever found can be identified. Such combination, however,
merely represents a composite state. But when these composite
substances and simple substances are brought into an additional
condition ; i. e. , when they are presided over and dominated by
something, they may be said to enter into a very complex form,
and in the body a life force keeps every other force in order.
Dynamic simple substances often dominate each other in pro-
portion to their purpose, one having a higher purpose than
another. This vital force, which is a simple substance, is again
dominated by another simple substance still higher, which is
the soul . It has been the aim of a great many philosophers by
study to arrive at some conclusion concerning the soul. They
have attempted to locate it at some particular point, but we can
see from the above that it is not in a circumscribed location .
In considering simple substance we cannot think of time ,
place or space, because we are not in the realm of mathematics
nor the restricted measurements of the world of space and
time, we are in the realm of simple substance. It is only finite
to think of place and time. Quantity cannot be predicated of
simple substance, only quality in degrees of fineness. We will
see the importance of this in its special relation to Homo-
opathy, by using an illustration. When you have administered
Sulphur 55m. in infrequent doses and find it will not work any
longer you give the c.m. potency and see the curative action
taken up at once . Do we not see by this that we have entered a
new series of degrees and are dealing entirely with quality?
The simple substance also has adaptation . At this point
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 83
finest aura by its odor. This aura becomes useful and intro-
duces a prominent sphere in the study of homœopathics.
The consciousness between two simple substances is really
that atmosphere by which one knows the other, and by which
all affinities and repulsions between simple substances are
known. They are in harmony or in antagonism. Human beings
are thus classified by positives and negatives. Minerals and the
world generally are classified by positives and negatives. This
has an underlying cause. Substances are extremely powerful
when meeting other substances that are antagonistic in any
way, and also when meeting substances in a destructive way.
The formative processes are often brought about by destruc-
tion ; forms are destroyed in order that new forms may exist,
and new forms therefore are often created from simple sub-
stance.
There are two realms or worlds , the realm or world of
cause and the realm or world of ultimates. In this outermost
or physical world we can see only with the eye, touch with
the finger, smell with the nose, hear with the ear ; such is the
realm of results. The world of cause is invisible, is not dis-
coverable by the five senses ; it is the world of thought and
discoverable only by the understanding. That which we see
about us is only the world of ends, but the world of cause is
invisible. It is possible that we may perceive the innermost,
and it is important also that man may know and look from
within upon all things in the physical world, instead of starting
in the physical world and attempting to look upon things in
the immaterial world. He will then account for law and per-
ceive the operation of law. Homœopathy exists as law ; its
causes are in the realm of causes. If it did not exist in the
world of causes it could not exist in the world of ultimates . It
is in the realm of cause that we must look for the primaries
in the study of Homœopathy.
Of course it will be seen that the whole of this subject looks
toward the establishment of a new system of pathology, which
will be the ground work of Homœopathy. All disease causes
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 87
LECTURES
KENT'S
LECTURE IX
which man may know this beginning, which occurs long before
there is any visible change in the material substance of the
body.
The patient himself can feel by his sensations the changes,
and this is inimical to life, and death immediately follows ,
for life in its fullest sense is freedom . As soon as the internal
economy is deprived in any manner of its freedom , death is
threatening ; where freedom is lost death is sure to follow.
So it is when there is the inflowing of a simple sub-
stance that has the form or essence of a disease . It is in its
essence an evil that is flowing into the economy, but it is a sim-
ple substance. Everything that is a thing is substantial or real ,
and has in itself operating and perpetuating power. The fact
that it can operate and perpetuate is the evidence of power,
and if it has power it results in something. Every cause of
disease then has form. If it were not in the form of simple
substance it could not affect the forms of simple substance in
the natural state of the economy. Moreover, it has its asso-
ciation, from the finest forms of physical substance to the
crudest, from beginning to end, from the inner to the outer.
Such changes and activities as result in the very crudest forms
are but the results of disease through a series of degrees ,
coarser and coarser to the outermost man. Everything that can
be seen, that can be observed with the aid of the finest instru-
ment, is but the result. Nothing in the world of immaterial
substance can be seen with any faculty that is capable of seeing
things in the world of material substance. The employment of
instruments of precision will enable us to see the finest disease
results, which are the outcome or results of things immaterial ,
the bacteria for instance, the very finest form of animal or
vegetable life ; but the cause of disease is a million times more
subtle than these and cannot be seen by the human eye. The
finest visible objects are but results of things still finer, so that
the cause rests within. The morbific agents that Hahnemann
refers to are simply the extremely fine forms of simple sub-
stance, or to bring them down to human thought we might call
90 KENT'S LECTURES
them viruses ; but viruses are often gross because they can
sometimes be observed by the vision of man, and therefore we
must remember that within the virus is its innermost and that
this innermost is in itself capable of giving form to the outer-
most, which is the visible virus aggregated and concentrated .
The coarser forms would be comparatively harmless were it
not for their interiors. Disease products are comparatively
harmless were it not for the fact that they contain an inner-
most, and it is the innermost itself that is causative. The bac-
teria are the result of conditions within , they are, as it were ,
evolved by a spontaneous generation—literally, that is what
it is. Every virus is capable of assuming forms and shapes in
ultimates. The causes of ultimates are not from without but
from the immaterial invisible centre. Those things that ap-
pear to man's eye are evolved, just as man himself is formed
from a centre which has the power of evolving, an endowment
from the Creator, operating under fixed general laws .
It is only when the vital principle is disturbed by cause of
a disease character (that is the innermost of a virus in the
form of a simple substance ) that it gives forth any conscious-
ness of itself.
If there were no disturbing influence in the interiors of
man he never would have symptoms. As you sit there in your
seats in a perfect state of quietude or tranquility you are not
conscious of your eyes, of your limbs, of your hair. You have
to stop and think whether you feel or not. When all the func-
tions are carried on in a perfectly orderly way you have no
consciousness of your body, which means that you are in free-
dom. When not in freedom the individual says , "I feel." It is
this disturbance of an invisible character which comes from
cause, and appears by changes in the activities of the body,
changes in sensations, changes in functions. It is in accordance 1
with all-wise Providence that these sensations should appear
to the physician who shall be intelligent enough to read them
and know what they mean. They are a warning, they are
for use, for purpose . No feeling a man can have is without
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 91
were observed years ago from those things that are observed
today, noting how they have changed and why changed. Some-
times they have been changed by drugs so that the whole nature
of the economy is giving out a different group of symptoms.
The physician must learn the changes all along the line,
from beginning to end ; what symptoms represented this sick
man ten years ago, and what symptoms represent him now.
Perhaps now he has morbid anatomy, pathological conditions in
his lungs, liver or kidneys. The physician who has been for
twenty years observing previous and present conditions in this
manner, by hearing the symptoms can practically locate the
morbid anatomy ; he can tell where it will appear, knows when
pus is in organs and where, and he can foretell pretty well what
is soon to go on in the economy. I would rather trust to a care-
ful study of the symptoms than most physicians ' written diagno-
sis of phthisis, or organic diseases of the liver or of the heart.
The symptoms do not lie, they do not exist from opinions of
men who have thumped and pounded over the human body to
find out what is going on inside, which is in many instances
confusing even to the best diagnosticians . A considerable ob-
servation amongst medical men will lead one to discover that
the dollar is the chief end of the practice of medicine when
practiced in the old way ; there is nothing else in it, nothing
to admire or cherish .
To become conversant with symptoms, to judge of the
sphere and progress of disease by the study of symptomatology,
is the requirement necessary for the homœopath. Of course,
bystanders will say to the patient , "That doctor cannot know
much ; he did not give you a physical examination. " After the
examination of the symptoms has been made there is no reason
why you should not make a physical examination of the pa-
tient ; but do not let this deprive you of becoming thoroughly
educated in studying symptoms, because the real study of
sick man is the meditation on his symptoms, and to become
wise in symptoms is to become an able prescriber. Study phys-
ical diagnosis to your heart's content , but weigh carefully what
96 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE X
the Organon at first and see anything in it but words, and yet
the oldest practitioner of pure Homœopathy finds nothing in
it to change and the older he grows and becomes more active
in work the more he depends upon it and the more consistent
it becomes. Although I have been teaching the Organon for
many years, I never go over it without discovering some new
thought in harmony with the general teaching . The continued
study of the Organon brings a deeper and deeper understand-
ing of it , because it is true.
In the 15th paragraph another thought comes up which
still further shows the unit of government which we have
dwelt upon so much in past lectures. Everything that flows
from a centre must be considered in connection with that
centre. Man in his healthy state is but the result of the normal
activities of a unit , and he must be considered as a unit . In
other words, his healthy vital force is the result of action from
a centre. On the other hand , when man becomes diseased , in
his disordered or diseased state he is still a unit and has to be
considered collectively. It is not to be considered that his
physiological action produces his morbid actions, but that his
morbid actions so completely dominate him that he is one mor-
bid state. This is again illustrated when he is dominated by
the action of a drug ( when a drug instead of a disease pos-
sesses him ) , then we see a morbid state, but it is still a unit of
action.
There are three different subjects forming a union of
study, the study of man in his natural state, the study of man in
his sick state from natural disorder, and the study of man in
his sick state from artificial disorder. Each remedy must be
studied as a unit first and then those units may be compared.
To intermingle comparative Materia Medica without a full
knowledge of units is a mistake. This I have found out by
experience in my earlier teaching. I have taught much com-
parative Materia Medica , thinking that a wise course to pursue,
but have since abandoned that plan and now study each remedy
as a unit, just as I advise the study of each disease as a unit.
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 101
LECTURE XI
§ 16. ( 1 ) ' Healthy state. (2 ) How made sick. (3 ) How cured. Only
deranged and cured in dynamic planes.
LECTURE XII
the Organon and its doctrines, talk good English , if you are
English, and use simple forms of speech. One technical word
will sometimes mean a whole sentence, and can be constituted
to mean a good many different things . Technicalities are a
sort of scapegoat to carry off the sins of our ignorance.
The "totality of the symptoms" means a good deal. It is
a wonderfully broad thing. It may be considered to be all that
is essential of the disease. It is all that is visible and represents
the disease in the natural world to the eye , the touch and exter-
nal understanding of man . It is all that enables the physician
to individualize between diseases and between remedies ; the
entire representation of a disease is the totality of the symp-
toms , and the entire representation of a drug is the totality of
the symptoms . It does not mean the little independent symp-
toms, but it means that which will bring to the mind a clear
idea of the nature of the sickness . Many of the little symptoms
that occur can be left out of the total without marring, but the
essence, the characteristics, the image must be there, as that
is of importance to the physician, being to him the sole indica-
tion in the choice of the remedy. It is true that the old pre-
scriber may be able to perceive the totality if he can see only
a small portion of it. Prescribing in that way, however, is very
often a mistake, for when that which was wanting is brought
out the physician sees that he has prescribed only for the side
view, as it were. You become well acquainted with old friends
and know them by even a partial view or by the gait, or voice ,
but it is not so with strangers . Strangers have to be studied,
criticized and examined. It requires a long time to know the
stranger's methods, to find out how he performs his business,
whether he is cheerful or not , to know the character, to know
the man. So it is with the totality of the symptoms, for to a
great extent every sickness is a new sickness. If the patient
has nothing to conceal he will delineate his symptoms cheer-
fully, but if he has something to conceal it becomes a hard
matter to obtain the totality of his symptoms. But this
totality must be obtained , for there is no other means of ascer-
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 113
LECTURE XIII
LECTURE XIV
SUSCEPTIBILITY.
Organon § 30.
The human body appears to admit of being much more powerfully
affected in its health by medicines (partly because we have the regula-
tion of the dose in our own power ) than by natural morbid stimuli-
for natural diseases are cured and overcome by suitable medicines.
§ 31. The inimical forces, partly psychical, partly physical, to
which our terrestrial existence is exposed, which are termed morbific
noxious agents , do not possess the power of morbidly deranging the
health of man unconditionally ; but we are made ill by them only when
our organism is sufficiently disposed and susceptible to the attack of
the morbific cause that may be present and to be altered in its health,
deranged and made to undergo abnormal sensations and functions,
hence they do not produce disease in every one, nor at all times.
§ 32. But it is quite otherwise with the artificial morbific agents
which we term medicines . Every real medicine, namely, acts at all
times , under all circumstances , on every living human being, and pro-
duces in him its peculiar symptoms ( distinctly perceptible if the dose
be large enough) so that evidently every living human organism is
liable to be affected, and, as it were, inoculated with the medical dis-
ease, at all times and absolutely (unconditionally ), which, as before
said, is by no means the case with the natural disease.
LECTURE XV
Organon § 35 et seq.
From these paragraphs we see that there are several kinds
of protection from sickness . When a violent epidemic is raging
we all know that , although the number of victims is large, they
are few compared to those who go through the epidemic un-
scathed, and the question always arises, why is it ? We suppose,
and probably rightly so, that a large number of the immune
have escaped because they were unusually strong and vigorous,
or in a state of very good order. But we find among those who
have escaped the epidemic a number of persons who are any-
thing but strong, really invalids, one in consumption, another
1 in the last stages of Bright's disease, another with diabetes. We
call them all together and find that none of them have had
dysentery or smallpox, or whatever disease was epidemic . They
have not been susceptible to the epidemic influences . How are
you going to explain this ? The reason is that they have a sick-
ness that it is impossible for the epidemic to suppress. The
epidemic is allopathic , or dissimilar to their diseases, and can-
not suppress their disease because of its virulency. Now if
they have some mild form of chronic disease, a severe attack
of dysentery will cause that disease to disappear temporarily,
and the new ( epidemic ) disease will take hold and run its
course, and when it subsides the old symptoms will come back
and go on as if they had not been meddled with . This is an
illustration of dissimilars , and shows that dissimilars are un-
able to cure ; they can only suppress . If the chronic disease is
stronger than the epidemic disease, i. e., if it has an organic
hold upon the body, it cannot be suppressed. This is essentially
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 129
whether each one of these drugs has established its own dis-
ease.
Not every drug that is administered is capable of estab-
lishing a disease. It is always prudent, when symptoms are
only partially developed , and when the drug which caused the
suppression of symptoms is known, to include the antidotal
relation to the drug with the rest of the symptoms ; that is to
say, select a drug which has a well -known antidotal relation to
the drug that caused the suppression of the symptoms, provid-
ing it is also the most similar of all drugs to the few symptoms
that are present. In that way we make as much of similitude
as is possible. The similar remedy is most likely of all others
to antidote that drug. Do not be led aside to administer right
away the drug that caused the trouble. The principle of Similia
is first.
§ 43. Totally different, however, is the result when two similar dis-
eases meet together in the organism ; that is to say, when to the disease
already present a stronger similar one is added . In such cases we see
how a cure can be effected by the operations of nature, and we get a
lesson as to how man ought to cure.
LECTURE XVI
OVERSENSITIVE PATIENTS .
Organon § 44 et seq.
cured. The miasms can cure all similar diseases, and the cur-
ing substances are in attenuated form. The evils that arise
from these swamps are similar to the evils of the economy of
the patient, and that similitude is antidotal, is curative, and
causes change back into order in accordance with the eternal
law that governs the action of similars.
There was a time in the earlier days of Homœopathy when,
taking into view the great array of disease forms to be con-
tended with and the very few medicines then at his command,
the homoeopath was worried to find remedies similar to all of
his cases . That cannot be true now. If the homoeopath will
work in a systematic way , he will be able to command enough
of the Materia Medica to meet all the diseases that he comes
in contact with, the symptoms of which are sufficiently ob-
served.
Every man should put himself to the task of studying
the Materia Medica ; he has no time to lose, no time to fool
away. The physician can really have no excuse at the present
day to leave our proved medicines, the medicines that are
recorded in our books ; he can have no reasonable excuse for
stepping aside into ways that are dark, treacherous and recom-
mended only by tradition. Some physicians hold that it is liberal
to do anything for a patient . This is a pitfall , a rock, that will
destroy any physician that will not avoid it. We know that
there are doctors, who claim to be homœopaths, who attempt
to justify, upon some ground or other, the administration of
remedies merely to palliate and relieve suffering. With such
men there must be a lack of sturdiness in listening to the suffer-
ings of a patient. It seems to me that no one who is honest,
and who has knowledge of the stupidity that comes after
the administration of a medicine that will cause the symp-
toms to disappear, will actually tie his hands against the
finding of a remedy that will be suitable to cure. As surely
as the voice of the symptoms is hushed, so surely does the
physician put out of his way the opportunity for select-
ing a homœopathic remedy. When the index to the remedy
136 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XVII
10
146 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XVIII
CHRONIC DISEASES-PSora.
forms of psora are those that are inherited . Amongst the sim-
ple forms of psora, after the eruptions disappear , catarrhal
troubles come on, with their varying manifestations . You pre-
scribe for all these symptoms, and presently the eruptions of
childhood come back, especially in a younger person. If it is in
a more complicated state , we do not get the patient back to the
original form of psora , because the parent had the simple form
of psora, and the child gets a complex form , so that when the
symptoms come back from the advanced states of psora we
only get a less complex form from those which were present
when the patient came to you. You will seldom see the vesicular
form or simple form brought back except in those who have
had the simple form, but forms approximating the simple will
return if the vital energy of the economy is being turned into
order.
Since this, then, is the natural form of recovery, we
see we are gradually traveling back towards the beginning of
psora or its earlier forms. If you are treating a vicious form
of scaly eruption , dry hard horny scales , you will , under ac-
curate prescribing, notice these scaly formations disappear, but
after the vital force has become strong enough you need not
be surprised to see vesicular eruptions develop , for the original
so-called disease had changed from its vicious squamous form
to the milder vesicular form. Different names have been given
to the skin diseases, but we see that names are of very little
value . The different eruptions change into varying forms, but
they are all from one cause , and will come back in their suc-
cessive stages under true homœopathic treatment. This is seen
quite often enough to demonstrate what I am talking about,
and from this alone we can ascertain that psora begins with
the simple isolated vesicular form of eruption . At times you
will be treating the more advanced and complicated forms of
psora, where there are organic changes ; after the patient gets
the homœopathic remedy for a while he comes to a stand still ,
seems to be doing nothing , but in the course of time vicious
ugly eruptions come out upon the body. This is a good sign ;
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 153
LECTURE XIX
true of all drugs. We find in the drugged world that those who
have been mercurialized become more susceptible to Mercury
and are more easily poisoned by it . Those poisoned with Rhus
are so sensitive to it that they cannot go within a whiff of it ;
those that have been poisoned in their earliest beginning with
Psora become more sensitive to it, so that in childhood the
slightest whiff of it from their school friends will bring on a
crop of vesicles between the fingers attended with the acarus.
Of course, some persons will say that the acarus is prior to
the eruption, but they don't know that a healthy person will not
be affected by the acarus . The miasm is simply evolved out of
a state and the acarus is in turn its ultimate. It is the state
that is prior, the itch-bug is not prior. The human race becomes
increasingly sensitive generation after generation to this inter-
nal state, and this internal state is the underlying cause which
predisposes man to syphilis. If he had not psora he could not
take syphilis ; there would be no ground in his economy upon
which it would thrive and develop.
The will and the understanding are prior to man's ac-
tion. This is fundamental . The man does not do until
he wills ; he wills what he carries out . If man did what he did
not will , he would be only an automaton. He wills to go to a
house of prostitution, or seeks for a prostitute with whom to
copulate, and from her he takes the syphilitic miasm. This
action of his will and this disease corresponds to the man.
There is a state in which he thinks it only , in which he wills ,
but in which he has not yet arrived at the state in which he can
act. First there was the thinking of falses and willing of evils ,
thinking such falses as led to depraved living and longing for
what was not one's own, until finally action prevailed . The
miasms which succeeded psora were but the outward repre-
sentations of actions, which have grown out of thinking and
willing.
Psora is the oldest outward expression of the dis-
eases of the human race representing this vital beginning, and
next exists that state that corresponds to action . Thinking,
158 KENT'S LECTURES
willing and acting are the three things that make up the science
of life of the human race. Man thinks, he wills and he acts .
Now, that aura which is given out from the human race at any
period of its history is that which corresponds to the state of
the human race. The children inherit it from their parents and
carry it on and continue it. As the internal is so is the external ,
and the external cannot be except as a result of the internal.
The internal state of man is prior to that which surrounds
him ; therefore, environment is not cause ; it is only, as it were,
a sounding board ; it only reacts upon and reflects the internal.
One who has the prior, which is internal, may have that which
can follow upon the external ; it flows , as it were, from the
internal and effects its forms upon the skin, upon the organs,
upon the body of man. Such is influx and the inflowing is
always in the direction of the least or no resistance ; so that it
is in the direction of man's affection, man's loves. Things flow
in the direction that he wants them to flow. Diseases corre-
spond to man's affections, and the diseases that are upon the
human race today are but the outward expression of man's
interiors, and it is true if the diseases are such they represent
the internal forces of man. Man hates his neighbor, he is will-
ing to violate every commandment ; such is the state of man
today. This state is represented in man's diseases. All diseases
upon the earth, acute and chronic, are representations of man's
internals. Otherwise he could not be susceptible , or could not
develop that which is within him. The image of his own in-
terior self comes out in disease.
This state has continued to progress , and it has accumulated
and become complex. The original simple psora has added to
it syphilis and sycosis, and these progress and have now ef-
fected a state, they have continued to effect a state in man-
kind, whereby the race is so susceptible to acute affections
that many of our citizens have every little thing that comes
along, and every little epidemic of influenza brings them down
with an acute attack. This could not be but for the complica-
tions that man has caused himself to get into , or has taken upon
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 159
himself. This was not done in one generation, but has been
accumulating upon the face of the earth so long as we have a
history of man. Otherwise man would not be sick, for he
should be a perfect animal in his animal nature. Look at the
perfection of all things put upon the earth ; see the plants, how
perfect they are ; but man by his thinking evils and willing
falses has entered upon a state wherein he has lost his freedom ,
his internal order, and is undergoing changes which the animal
kingdom in its period, and the vegetable kingdom in its period,
did not take on.
The miasms that are at the present day upon the human
race are complicated a thousandfold by allopathic treatment.
Every external manifestation of the miasm has in itself a ten-
dency to straighten mankind, but the human race is being
violently damaged and diseases are being complicated for the
reason that these outward expressions are forced to disappear
by the application of some violent or stimulating drug. At the
present day nobody will acknowledge that he had the itch in
his childhood , until it is seen by some intelligent mother that
it is wise to tell the doctor everything. The itch is looked
upon as a disgraceful affair ; so is everything that has a similar
correspondence ; because the itch in itself has a correspond-
ence with adultery, only one is adultery as to internals and
the other as to externals ; one succeeds the other. So it is
with all miasms .
And now we have the great miasms before us to treat ,
as physicians, in all their complications. For instance, if
a true sycotic gonorrhoea appears to us second hand it ap-
pears in its suppressed form, which is a thousand times worse
than the original form . All the outward manifestations have
been made to disappear. So it is with the external forms of
psora, the vesicular and squamous eruptions, and all the out-
growths and outcroppings of psora. Every conceivable thing
has been resorted to to destroy its manifestations, and the
disease has grown and grown until nobody can tell what its
outcome will be. How long can this thing go on before the
160 KENT'S LECTURES
human race will be swept from the earth with the results of
the suppression of psora? From the suppression of psora we
have cancerous affections, organic diseases of the heart and
lungs, phthisis, and general destruction of the body. How long
can it go on ? If Homœopathy does not spread, if it does not
establish its doctrines upon the earth so that sick folks can be
healed under its principles, this threatening state and condition
will increase . Allopathic physicians are multiplying rapidly,
and they are all doing the same thing, even more so now than
at the time of Hahnemann. It does seem as if Homœopathy
had become a necessity, but the kind of Homœopathy that
is preached in the majority of our schools will not check the
progress of psora . The majority of the college teachers sneer
at the doctrine of psora ; they sneer at the miasms and con-
tinue in their efforts to establish Homœopathy upon an allo-
pathic basis. Homœopathy as taught in the colleges at the
present day is simply an attempt to establish Homœopathy
upon an allopathic basis, using allopathic names , calling chronic
affections by different names, and treating diseases of organs
by name. No study is made of psora, but allopathic books are
their text-books . Syphilis is not treated from cause to effect,
but simply in the way of driving it back or holding it in abey-
ance, without any effort to permanently cure it. The patient is
filled with Mercury, the Iodides and other strong drugs, drugs
that are well known to subdue it temporarily by an allopathic
effect.
Psora has progressed until it has become the most conta-
gious of diseases , because the more complicated it becomes
the more susceptible are our children to its beginnings, and its
contagion adds to the old disease ; and while it goes on the
children become increasingly sensitive to the other miasms.
The human race at the present day is intensely susceptible to
psora, to syphilis and sycosis. " Psora," says Hahnemann ,
"became, therefore, the common mother of man's chronic
diseases. It can be said that at least seven-eighths of the chronic
maladies existing at the present day are due to psora."
ON HOMOEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 161
11
162 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XX
takes it in that stage ; she takes from him the stage he has to
offer.
This is equally true of psora and sycosis . Such things
never occur in the acute miasms, but the three chronic miasms
have contagion in the form in which they exist at the time.
The state is transferred , so that one in the advanced stages of
psora will transfer to his good wife the psora which he has ,
and she takes it up and progresses with it and adds it to her
own, and it progresses in her in accordance with her peculiar-
ities .
But the law of protection by dissimilars often comes in
here and saves the wife's system from receiving a new infec-
tion of either syphilis, psora or sycosis. The disorders already
present in her economy may be so wholly dissimilar that they
protect her from contagion. Thus it is that a woman may
have coition with a man that has sycosis in the form of gleet,
and yet not have it inflicted upon her ; thus she may have pro-
tection against forms of chancre. She may remain in contact
with him as wife, and even have a child by him, and that child
be black with syphilis , while she has no symptoms of syphilis.
The reason of that is that the child is from the seed of the
father and the mother only furnishes the groundwork.
There are plenty of physiological facts that demonstrate
these things. I have seen several cases where the child was
born black with syphilis, and have looked for the mother to
come down with syphilitic symptoms, but no trace of it could be
observed. When infection takes place in the primary stage there
is no way of disguising it, but if it occurs in the secondary or
tertiary stage there is really no way of detecting it immediately,
because it goes on so insidiously. If the husband has the pri-
mary sore the primary sore will manifest itself in the wife, but
if he gives the disease to his wife in the tertiary stage, with
every manifestation suppressed or passed by, then you will not
be able to know whether she has taken the disease or not. We
have seen already in studying the Organon that when the dis-
eases are dissimilar to each other one repels the other ; so that
164 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXI
CHRONIC DISEASES-SYCOSIS.
and when it has attacked him so violently his tendons will begin
to contract, they will shorten, the muscles of the calves will
become sore, the muscles of the thighs will become so sore
that they cannot be touched or handled ; sometimes there is
infiltration of the muscles and hardness, and this soreness ex-
tends to the bottom of the feet so that it is impossible for the
patient to walk. He is compelled to sit or lie or crawl around
on his hands and knees , so violent are some cases. These cases
will go on for years. I have known the external applications of
the allopathic physician to be applied to these sore feet and
limbs for weeks and months and even years, and yet they
give no relief ; but a correct prescription made by a homœopath,
carefully taking in account and covering the whole nature of
sycosis, will take the soreness out of the feet and bring back
the gonorrhoeal discharge . The return of old symptoms means
recovery. When the discharge comes back the relief of these
horrible symptoms comes, and do not consider any patient
cured until the discharge is brought back.
With reference to the woman, in whom you know that the
contagion has taken place in the stage in which it existed in
the husband, supposing she has inflammation of a fibrinous
character and goes into the very worst forms of anæmia, with
all the sallowness and waxiness and patchy condition of the
skin and the withering and the organic troubles, if a homœo-
pathic prescription be made that is truly anti- sycotic you need
not expect that a gonorrhoeal discharge will appear in her
case ; it is not necessary, she can get well without it . If she
had no discharge she can get well without its return . The
reverse order of the symptoms in her case means only the re-
verse order of those she has had. She may not have had the
primary, but all that that patient has had she must go back
through, stage by stage and symptom by symptom. The woman
is the most grievous sufferer ; she is an innocent person , and
when there are anæmic conditions and a going- down steadily
in the wife that has come on a few years after marriage you
should always be suspicious of this disease, at least do not
174 KENT'S LECTURES
You know that everybody is psoric, but those that have lived
a proper life have escaped the two contagious diseases which
man acquires in the first place by his own seeking. When a pa-
tient has gone to the end of typhoid or some lingering disease,
you know that he is psoric ; but if you also know that he is
syphilitic, or that he is sycotic, you can conduct his convales-
cence into a speedy recovery, and if he denies these things you
may be puzzled. The sycotic patient may go into a state of do-
nothing and decline at the end of a typhoid fever ; convales-
cence will not be established, he will lie with an aversion to
food ; he does not react, he does not repair, there is no tissue-
making, no assimilation ; there is no vitality, he lies in a sort of
semi-quiescent state ; there is no convalescing in the matter. If
you know he is a sycotic patient, he must have an anti-sycotic
remedy, and then he will begin to rally. If a syphilitic patient,
he must have an anti-syphilitic remedy. If neither of these
miasms are present, a remedy looking towards his psoric state
will cause him to rally. The nature of these cases must be kept
in view ; you must remember that these chronic miasms are
present in the economy and after an acute illness very often
have to be fought. If this is not known, many patients will
gradually sink and die for apparent want of vitality to con-
valesce.
Of course, the anti-sycotic treatment for the infant will
bring back, as you will readily see, only that stage which the
infant began with. It will not bring out a discharge in the
infant. The infant has only the interior nature of the disease ,
and has not the primary and outermost forms of it . You will
also remember another thing, that these infants when they
grow up are increasingly sensitive to sycosis ; that they are
already prepared for a sycotic gonorrhoea whenever the first
exposure comes. The susceptibility is laid by this inheritance,
just as the susceptibility to psora is laid by our parents and the
susceptibility to syphilis is laid by our parents . Man can only
have one attack in his natural life-time of one of the three
chronic miasms ; a man cannot take syphilis twice, he cannot
176 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXII
12
178 KENT'S LECTURES
and not of the law. This is about the kind of a test that is made
today in this enlightened day and age of the world. They
have neither the knowledge nor the state of mind to make a
test . They do not know what to observe, or how to select a
remedy. If we should look up all the remedies that have vomit-
ing we would find a pretty good list, but to make use of that
list the mind must be prepared to see which one in it is similar
to this individual patient.
purpose of bringing out the truth, the whole truth and nothing
but the truth. His prejudices lead him to snap the patient up
as soon as he begins to tell his story. He will thump him all
over, from head to foot, and then tell him what is the matter
with him. A prescription that has no earthly relation to the
constitutional state of the patient follows, but no examination
has really been made.
It might readily and truthfully be said that the true
man has no prejudices . It is certain that the true man is one
freest from prejudices, one who can listen, who can examine
evidence and who can meditate . What would we think of a
judge who would go into a case with strong prejudice ? The
law provides that a judge cannot sit in judgment over his
brother, or over his wife, or over his other relatives. In a
homoeopathic physician an unprejudiced mind can only be at-
tained by learning all the truth and all the doctrines of Homo-
opathy. If the physician goes in with a prejudice for a certain
potency or a certain disease, or a prejudice against certain
principles, he is not in a rational state , he is not in freedom
with the patient and he goes into the examination in ignorance,
and if he cannot free himself from prejudice he cannot pre-
scribe. If a man has arrived at a degree of sound understand-
ing concerning the doctrines of Homœopathy, concerning the
doctrines of potentization , concerning the doctrines that relate
to chronic and acute disease, concerning the Materia Medica ,
he goes into it with full freedom, with an intention to examine
the case in all its length and breadth, and to listen patiently. He
listens to the patient, he listens to the friends of the patient
and he observes without prejudice, with wisdom and with
judgment. He must go into the case without forming any judg-
ment whatever until all the witnesses have told their tale and
all the evidence is before him. Then he commences to study
the whole case. That is doing it without prejudice, and for
this a sound understanding is necessary, with a clear knowledge
of all the things relating to the subject and to all of his duties.
If an allopathic physician was to come in and listen to the
182 KENT'S LECTURES
7
184 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXIII
§ 84. The patient details his sufferings ; the persons who are about
him relate what he has complained of, how he has behaved himself,
and all that they have remarked in him. The physician sees, hears and
observes with his other senses whatever there is changed or extraor-
dinary in the patient. He writes all this down in the very words which
the latter and the persons around him make use of. He permits them
to continue speaking to the end without interruption, except where
they wander into useless digressions, taking care to exhort them at the
commencement to speak slowly that he may be enabled to follow them
in taking down whatever he deems necessary.
LECTURE XXIV
13
194 KENT'S LECTURES
life and habit must be studied with a view to going into the
slightest particulars . To illustrate that more particularly, and
to bring it down to a practical basis, we may say that the exam-
ination of every woman relates to her eating , her stool , her
menstruation, her bathing, her dress , because these are the
things natural to her. These are the circumstances in which
her symptoms may come, or may not come.
Until the woman is educated to it she does not under-
stand. "What do you mean, Doctor ?" she says . Then I
may say, "You have given me these symptoms ; you say you
have headache, stomachache, etc. Now will you proceed to
relate to me under what circumstances this headache appears,
how it is affected by your changes in dress, by the changes in
weather, how it is affected before, during or after your monthly
indisposition and so on." Now, these are the natural circum-
stances.
In addition to these another group of circumstances
comes up, a group of circumstances somewhat different, in
relation to ordinary occupation . Every person will have cir-
cumstances more particular than those in general. Occupation
will make changes in the circumstances of young women. She
may be standing upon the floor of Wanamaker's store all day,
and this has produced a condition of prolapsus ; or she may
lead a sedentary life at her work as seamstress , or she may be
at some other occupation, the circumstance of which will de-
velop her psoric manifestations . Modes of life mean a great
many different things. They come in as supernumeraries over
and above the natural conditions and circumstances of life.
The natural functions and circumstances of life have to be
considered in relation to the mode of life . The mode of life
comes in as the exciting cause of disease, whereby psora which
is in the economy is developed in a certain peculiar direction.
The domestic relation is often the cause of trouble in the
woman ; there may be marriage to a man who is intemperate
with her sexually ; she may have a domestic situation that can-
not be cured, and it must be examined as to its permanency
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 197
LECTURE XXV
comes back month after month and you give her Sulphur,
Lycopodium and a good many medicines. You can sometimes
find out whether she is a chilly or hot-blooded patient, and
thus you can get a little closer among the common remedies ;
but the patient says one day, "Doctor, it seems strange that my
urine smells so queer, it smells like that of a horse." Now at
once you know that is Nitric acid. "How long have you had
this ?" "Oh, I have always had it, I did not think it amounted
to anything." If you examine the common things belonging to
Nitric acid you will find that it possesses all the features of
the case .
This is how a guiding symptom can be used. Nitric
acid has a keynote "urine smelling strong like that of a horse" ;
but if you should give it upon that alone, and the general symp-
toms were not there, you would probably remove the particular
symptoms only, and they would come back after a while . Use
a keynote to examine the remedy to see if it has all the other
symptoms that the patient has. What I have described to you
is a hypothetical case. In a busy day you will have several of
these cases that you have been working at for months, and the
patients have spent a lot of money to no account. You might
just as well have given Sac. lac. until you found the right
remedy. You can hardly say, why did I not see the remedy be-
fore, because it was not possible to see it. You can only go over
a case and say, why did I not ask her if there was any odor
to the urine, and if so , what it was like. I have had this very
symptom come out when I have asked a dozen times about the
smell of the urine, and they did not know, and yet would say
afterwards their urine smelled like a horse's urine, and they
knew it all the time. "On the other hand, the patients are so
accustomed to their long sufferings that they pay little or no at-
tention to the lesser symptoms which are often characteristic
of the disease and decisive in regard to the choice of a remedy."
Of course the trouble that we have to contend with in as-
certaining symptoms from patients could be drawn out to
great length. You might suppose that it would be the educated
200 KENT'S LECTURES
class that would tell their symptoms best, but you will find
the ignorant class often do better, they are simpler ; they do
not disguise the symptoms ; they come out and tell the little
details in a better way, in a way that conforms to the language
of our remedies . Our remedies have been recorded in simple
language to a great extent, and this simple language is often
better observed by the simple-minded, uncultivated people than
among the aristocrats. People who have plenty of means and
much education are more excitable, they have more fear and
they have tried a great many doctors. Any physician who has
a reputation is consulted for a chronic disease ; and the patient
who has plenty of money goes around amongst the doctors ,
and when he comes to tell his symptoms he tells them in the
technicalities of his numerous physicians, so that when he has
finished his story nothing has been gained. Only gradually can
the physician lead him back into a language simple enough to
describe his sufferings. They who have been sick long with
their chronic ailments and have become somewhat hypochon-
driac will go through with this list of their diseases. They have
paid lots of money, and have lots of names, and they are loaded
with drugs. The physician must deal very carefully with these
slippery people, because if they are irritated they will run off .
§ 96. There is another kind of patient spoken of here,
those that " depict their sufferings in lively colors, and make
use of exaggerated terms to induce the physician to relieve
them promptly." This is especially characteristic of the native
Irish as a class. You will find that they will exaggerate their
symptoms, really and sincerely believing that the doctor will
give them stronger medicine if they are very sick and will pay
more attention to them ; and if they do not exaggerate violently,
probably he will turn them off with a simple remedy. Then we
have the exaggeration of symptoms by sensitive people. It is
an insane habit, such as belongs to hysteria. The physician will
be helpless in the hands of these exaggerators, because Homœ-
opathy consists in securing the whole truth and nothing but
the truth ; it is just as detrimental to get too much as to get too
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 201
LECTURE XXVI
scribe first for the acute attack, and the symptoms that belong
to it. It is well, however, for the physician to know all the
symptoms that the patient has of a chronic character, that he
may know what to expect, that he may look at the close of the
acute attack for the coming out of the old manifestations of
psora, although often an entirely new group of symptoms will
appear. When at the close of scarlet fever troubles come
about the ears or dropsical conditions come on ; these are not a
part of the scarlet fever itself, but of the state of the economy.
The dropsical condition , or acute Bright's disease, must be
associated with the psoric state and the symptoms then will
lead you to a constitutional remedy. If you have in view sim-
ply the Bright's disease, you will make a mistake. You will fall
into prescribing for ultimates if you have but the name of the
trouble in mind, for instance giving Apis , which the books say
is such a wonderful remedy for Bright's disease, following
scarlet fever.
It is a great mistake for anyone to fit remedies for com-
plaints or states . It is a fatal error for the physician to go to
the bedside of a patient with the feeling in his mind that he
has had cases similar to this one, and thinking thus : " In the
last case I had I gave so and so , therefore I will give it to this
one." The physician must get such things entirely out of his
mind. It is a common feature among oculists who profess to
be homœopaths to say : "I cured such and such a case with
such and such a remedy. I will now give this patient the same
remedy." I have many times met physicians in consultation
who said : "I had another patient, Mr. X or Mr. Z, who had a
similar state of affairs, just such a disease as this, and I gave
him so and so, but it does not work in this case."
§ 100. "With regard to a search after the totality of the
symptoms in epidemic and sporadic cases, it is wholly indif-
ferent whether anything similar ever existed before in the
world or not, under any name whatever." Keep that in your
mind, underscore it half a dozen times with red ink, paint it
on the wall, put an index finger to it. One of the most im-
208 KENT'S LECTURES
14
210 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXVII
RECORD KEEPING.
§ 103, etc.
You should endeavor to have a good knowledge of both the
acute and chronic miasms. First of all the image of psora
should be studied from all the symptoms that we can gather,
and especially from the symptoms that Hahnemann has given
in the Chronic Diseases. Next we have to make out a similar
anamnesis of syphilis, which can be done from books, from
clinics, from observation, and all other possible sources , and
then an anamnesis has to be made of sycosis . These are things
most general , and will bring before the mind, in one, two or
three images, a grand picture of all the chronic diseases of the
human race.
Take psora first, for that is the very foundation of human
sickness . It would appear that the human race is one enor-
mous leper. Now, add to that the state of syphilis and we
have a bad matter made worse ; then add to that the state
of sycosis and we will see the extent of human sickness .
We then have to advance and carefully study each of the
acute miasms from the books, from observation , and from
every source of information , carefully arranging it on paper so
that it can appear before the mind as an image. Smallpox has
few features and it can be made to appear as an image before
the mind, and so with all the acute miasms , the infectious dis-
eases, cholera, yellow fever, etc. , the diseases that have hereto-
fore appeared in epidemic or endemic form. These have all to
appear before the mind as images. It may be said of them that
they are all true diseases seen by the examination of the totality
of the symptoms. No physician can know too much about the
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 211
LECTURE XXVIII
§ 105, et seq.
It may be well for you now to review thoroughly the first
portion of the study of the Organon, containing the doctrines
in general that may be hereafter found to be useful in the
application of Homœopathy, including the oldest established
rules and principles . The first step may be called theoretical
Homœopathy, or the principles of Homœopathy , after which
we take up the homœopathic method of studying sicknesses .
In this we have found that the study of sickness in our school
is entirely different from the study of sickness under the old
school. But up to this time the doctrines have not exhibited
their purpose ; we only get their purpose when we come to the
third step, which deals with the use of the Materia Medica.
We have seen that we must study sickness by gathering the
symptoms of sick patients, relying upon the symptoms as the
language of nature, and that the totality of the symptoms con-
stitutes the nature and quality and all there is that is to be
known of the disease.
The subject we will now take up and consider is, how
to acquire a knowledge of the instruments that we shall make
use of in combating human sicknesses. We know very well
that in the old school there is no plan laid down for acquiring
a knowledge of medicines except by experimenting with them
upon the sick. This Hahnemann condemns as dangerous, be-
cause it subjects human sufferers to hardship and because of
its uncertainty. Though this system has existed for many
hundreds of years, it has never revealed a principle or method
that one can take hold of to help in curing the sicknesses of
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 215
pass off entirely, and the prover is very often left much better
for it. A proving properly conducted will improve the health
of anybody ; it will help to turn things into order. It was
Hahnemann's advice to young men to make provings.
Another portion of the class will not get symptoms, no mat-
ter how they abuse the remedy, and if it be Arsenicum they will
have to take a crude dose of it to get any effect , and then the
symptoms given forth are only the toxic effects, from which
little can be gained. The toxicological results of poisons are
provings of the grossest character ; they do not give the finer
details . For instance, you give Opium in such large doses that
it immediately poisons ; you see nothing but the grosser, over-
whelming symptoms ; the irregular, stertorous breathing, the
unconsciousness, the contracted pupil and the mottled face
and the irregular heart . The details are not there, you only
have a view of the most common things.
The reproving of remedies is of great value. The Vienna
Society did not fully endorse Hahnemann's provings. This
society thought it impossible that such wonderful things could
be brought out upon the sensations of people. The society did
not endorse the 30th potency that was recommended by Hahne-
mann for proving. So this society gathered itself together and
resolved to prove remedies, and to test the 30th potency, and it
so happened that the society was honest. Natrum mur. , Thuja
and other remedies were proved, and W- was honest enough
to say that although his convictions were decidedly against the
provings he had to admit that the symptoms gathered from
the 30th potency were very strong. The Vienna Society dem-
onstrated by these reprovings that the polychrests of Hahne-
mann had been fully proved . Their provings of the 30th of
Natrum mur. was a wonderful revelation to them ; but W—,
in spite of this result, held on to his prejudices. He acknowl-
edged that he was wrong ; but he continued to use potencies
lower than the 15th . He could not get his mind elevated to
the 30th ; his prejudice was too strong. Dunham says of
some of these, that in spite of the fact that they had seen
222 KENT'S LECTURES
better results from the 30th and higher potencies even, they
were so prejudiced they could not bring themselves to a state
of yielding. As Dunham humorously expressed it, "they are
ossified in their cerebral convolutions as well as in their bony
structure." That is to say, their minds were inelastic, they
could not expand . We talk from appearance when we say the
eyes are closed ; it is the mind that is closed , the understand-
ing that is closed.
Read §§ 107-112 .-When the patient is under the poi-
sonous influence of a drug it does not seem to flow in the di-
rection of his life action , but when reaction comes then the
lingering effects of the drug seems to flow, as it were, in the
stream of the vital action . Then the symptoms that arise are
of the best order, and hence it is necessary in proving a drug
to take such a portion of the drug only as will disturb and not
suspend, as will flow in the stream of the vital order, in the
order of the economy, establishing slightly perverted action ,
and causing symptoms, without suspending action , as we would,
for example, with a large dose of Opium. When a state of
suspension exists in the dynamic economy, then we have a be-
clouding of all the activities of the economy ; so giving a large
dose of medicine to palliate pains and sufferings is dangerous.
We have a suspension of the vital order when we give a medi-
cine that does not flow in the stream of the vital influx. Homo-
opathy looks towards the administration of medicines that are
given for the purpose of either creating order, and then always
in the higher potencies, or for the purpose of disturbing, and
then in the lower potencies. We should never resort to crude
drugs for provings, unless for a momentary or temporary ex-
periment. It should not be followed up, and no great weight
should be put upon the provings that are made from the crude
medicines. They only at best give a fragmentary idea. Unless
the proving that has been made with strong doses becomes en-
larged with the symptoms from small doses the information
remains fragmentary and useless . If we had only the poi-
sonous effects of Opium, we would be able only to use it in
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 223
LECTURE XXIX
IDIOSYNCRASIES.
leads into the study of protection as well. There are two forms
of protection from sickness. Man is protected from sickness
in two ways, by Homœopathy and by use. The physician and
the nurse who go into the district of 'yellow fever or typhoid
or diphtheria or smallpox, who keep busy, who have, in the
highest sense of the word, the true love of the use, who have
gone into the work as mediums of mercy, will largely be pro-
tected just simply from their love of the work, from their de-
light in it. They have no fear. Fear is an overwhelming cause
of sickness ; those who fall prey to fear are likely to become
sick, but those who face disease with no fear are likely to re-
main well ; they do sometimes fall sick, it is true , but I believe
it is because they begin to have fear in the work.
The other and greater prophylactic is the homœopathic rem-
edy. After working in an epidemic for a few weeks, you will
find perhaps that half-a-dozen remedies are daily indicated and
one of these in a larger number of cases than any other. This
one remedy seems to be the best suited to the general nature
of the sickness. Now you will find that for prophylaxis there
is required a less degree of similitude than is necessary for cur-
ing. A remedy will not have to be so similar to prevent disease
as to cure it, and these remedies in daily use will enable you
to prevent a large number of people from becoming sick. We
must look to Homœopathy for our protection as well as for our
cure.
230 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXX
INDIVIDUALIZATION .
opathy, for without these no man can individualize and see dis-
tinctions. After gathering all the particulars, one strong general
rules out one remedy and rules in another. Physicians by the
questions they ask often show that they have not been able to
grasp this idea of individualization. They pick out two symp-
toms, or one symptom common to two remedies, and say,
"Now, both of these remedies have this same symptom, how
are you going to tell them apart ?" Well, if you are acquainted
with the Materia Medica, with the art of individualization,
you will at once easily see how to get the generals ; the generals
of one are so and so , and the generals of the other are so and
so, and this will enable you to distinguish one of these remedies
as best adapted to the constitution , when the two remedies
have the one symptom in any equal degree. Now, this rules out
the idea of substitution. If one does not work, they say, try
all down the list alphabetically, until you hit it. Why a remedy
that has never been known to produce that symptom may cure
the case, because it is more similar to the generals of that case
than any other. This is the art of applying the Materia Medica .
Many times a patient brings out that which is so strange and
rare that it has never been found in any remedy. You have to
examine the whole case and see which remedy of all remedies
is most similar to the patient himself . From beginning to end,
the homoeopath must study the patient. If he become con-
versant with symptoms apart from the patient, he will not be
successful.
Par. 118 reads : "Each medicine produces particular effects
in the body of man, and no other medicinal substance can
create any that are precisely similar. " That is the beginning
of a doctrine showing that there can be no substitution . There
are cases that are so mixed that man, no matter how much he
study, can not see the distinctions ; but, remember one thing,
there is one remedy that is needed in the case, whether it is
known or not ; it is needed in the case, and it has no substitute ,
for that remedy differs from all other medicines, just as this
individual differs from all other individuals. It may be that
232 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXXI
CHARACTERISTICS .
subside, I have not found the right remedy. That will force
the honest homoeopathic physician to seek the proper remedy.
Let not the blame be placed upon the failure of the system and
of law and order, but let it be placed upon the one who prac-
tices it. Just so sure as you find the homoeopathic remedy in a
case of scarlet fever, just so sure you will see that fever fall
and that child improve ; while the rash will remain out, nothing
of the malignancy of the case will remain , in an ordinary case
of scarlet fever ; we find that in a few days the child is so much
better he wants to go to school. But then we treat the child
and not the fever. Just so sure as the physician has in mind
the rash of scarlet fever or of measles as the main element of
the disease, he will make a failure, and the patient will not
recover so speedily ; but as a matter of fact , the homœopathic
physician prescribes for the patient on that which characterizes
the sickness, even though it be what is called a self -limiting
disease.
§ 150. This treats of one of the difficulties we have to
contend with . "If a patient complains of slightly accessory
symptoms which have just appeared , the physician ought not
take this state of things for a perfect malady that seriously de-
mands medicinal aid ," etc. , etc. It is right for you, when your
patients are under constitutional treatment, to prescribe for a
cold, but only when it is not an ordinary one. If the cold is
likely to cause serious trouble, then you must prescribe for it ;
slight indispositions, however, should not receive remedies .
You will have patients that will come to you at every change
of the wind, at every attack of snuffles the baby has , at every
little headache or every little pain . If you then proceed to
change your remedy or prescribe for each one of these little
spells of indisposition , you will , in the course of a little while ,
have such a state of disorder in the individual that you will
wonder what is the matter with this patient. You had better
give her no medicine at all , and if she is wise and strong
and can feel confidence you can say to her that she does
not need medicine for this attack ; but occasionally give
238 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXXII
General.
Nature of Symptoms. Common.
Particular.
First Grade.
General. Second Grade.
Third Grade.
First Grade.
Grades of Symptoms. Common. Second Grade.
Third Grade.
First Grade.
Particular. Second Grade.
Third Grade.
Par. 153 is the one that teaches more particularly how the
process of individualization or discrimination shall be carried
out. It treats of characteristics, it treats of grades . The homo-
opathic physician may think he has his case written out very
well, but he does not know whether he has or not until he has
mastered the idea of this paragraph . He may have page after
page of symptoms , and not know what the remedy is, and if
he takes the record to a master the master will say : "You have
no case !" "Why, I have plenty of symptoms. " "But you have
no case. You have left your case out ; you have left the image
of the sickness out, because you have failed to get anything that
characterizes it. You have plenty of symptoms , but have not
anything characteristic. You have not taken your case prop-
erly." Now, after you have mastered this paragraph you will
know whether you have taken your case properly, you will
know whether you have something to present to a master, a
likeness of something. The lack of this knowledge is the cause
of non-success with the majority of homoeopathic physicians.
240 KENT'S LECTURES
those that appear in all cases of measles, that you would expect
to find in measles. It would be strange to have measles without
any rash ; that would be peculiar. We know that the absence
of rash is a striking state of affairs and means trouble , and is
peculiar. Either it is not measles , or the absence of the rash is
a serious state. Suppose it is a fever. The patient has intense
heat, an ordinary fever coming in the afternoons and running
through the night, with hot hands and feet, high temperature,
dry tongue, etc. What would you say concerning the presence
or absence of thirst ? You would say it is common if he has
thirst, because almost anybody who has fever would want
water. Nothing is so natural to put fire out with as water, and
the absence of thirst in a fever is strange, is rare and uncom-
mon, peculiar and striking. You would ask yourself at once,
is it not strange that he does not have thirst with such a high
temperature? You at once strike to the remedies that are thirst-
less. You would not think of hunting up a remedy that has
thirst.
So the absence of the striking features of disease con-
stitutes a peculiarity that relates to the patient. Well, then,
that which is pathognomonic is common, because it is common
in that disease, but an absence of the pathognomonic character-
izes that particular disease in that patient, and therefore means
the patient, and in proportion as you have that class of symp-
toms just in that proportion you have things that characterize
the patient, and the specific remedy for the patient will be the
simillimum. It is necessary to know sicknesses , not from
pathology, not from physical diagnosis, no matter how im-
portant these branches are, but by symptoms, the language of
nature.
A true homœopathic prescription cannot be made on pa-
thology, on morbid anatomy ; because provings have never been
pushed in that direction . Pathology gives us the results of dis-
ease, and not the language of nature appealing to the intelli-
gent physician. Symptomatology is the true subject to know.
No man, who is only conversant with morbid anatomy and
16
242 KENT'S LECTURES
strange ? If you think but a moment, you will see that it would
be a very strange thing for a highly inflamed gland not to be
sore, and that soreness upon pressure is not something to be
prescribed for, but something to be known , to be taken into the
general view of the case, and the remedy indicated in the case
would be suitable if it have inflammation and soreness of the
gland ; there is nothing striking in that ; quite a group of rem-
edies have produced hardness , soreness and tenderness of the
gland ; it may be one of those, or it may be one which has
never produced these things, if it have the characterizing fea-
tures of the patient .
In sicknesses the symptoms that cannot be explained
are often very peculiar ; the things that can be accounted for
are not so often peculiar ; peculiar things are less known to
man. For instance, a patient can sit only with his feet up on
the desk, or with his feet elevated ; he is a great sufferer, and
because of this suffering he is compelled to put his feet up. The
symptoms hence will be put down, worse from letting the feet
hang down. "Well , what do you mean by that ?" "Why, if I
let my feet hang down, I find I bring the nates down upon
the chair, and there is a sore place there." Now that is quite
a different thing. You may find if it is an old man that he has
a large prostate gland, which is very painful at times and very
sore, and when he lets the feet hang down the gland comes in
contact with the chair. So we see that the real summing up of
the case is that this enlarged and sore prostate gland is worse
from pressure, and all you have learned from that symptom is
that the gland is sensitive to touch, which is a common symp-
tom . There are instances , however, where by letting the feet
hang down the patient is ameliorated ; for instance , you take a
periostitis and the pain is relieved by letting the limbs hang.
No one can tell why that limb is better when hanging over the
bed. He lies across the bed with the foot hanging over the side,
and why it is that he cannot lie upon his back nobody can
figure out. Now that condition is found in Conium , and you
will not be astonished after you know that Conium has that
244 KENT'S LECTURES
that symptom qualifies all the symptoms and is the very centre
of all his states and conditions . When he has a desire to com-
mit suicide, which is the loss of the love of his life, we see that
that is in his very innermost. Medicines affect man primarily
by disturbing his affections, by disturbing his aversions and
desires. The things that he loved to do are changed, and now
he craves strange things. Or the remedy changes his ability
to comprehend, and turns his life into a state of contention
and disturbance ; it disturbs his will and may bring upon him
troublesome dreams, which are really mental states. Dreams
are so closely allied to the mental state that he may well say,
"I dreamed last night " ; that is a general state. The things that
lie closest to man and his life, and his vital force , are the things
that are strictly general, and as they become less intimately
related to man they become less and less general, until they
become particular.
The menstrual period gives us a state which we may call
general. The woman says, "I menstruate," so and so ; she does
not attribute it to her ovaries or to her uterus ; her state is , as
a rule, different when she is menstruating. So the things that
are predicated of self, of the ego, the things described as "I
do so and so," "Dr., I feel so and so," "I have so much thirst,"
"I am so chilly in every change of the weather," "I suffocate
in a warm room, " etc., these are all generals. The things that
are general are the first in importance. After these have been
gathered, you may go on taking up each organ, and ascertaining
what is true of each organ . Many times you will find that the
modalities of each organ conform to the generals. Sometimes ,
however, there may be modalities of the organ , which are par-
ticular that are opposed to the generals. Hence we find in
remedies they appear to have in one subject one thing, and in
another subject the very opposite of that thing. In one it will
be a general , and in another it will be a particular.
246 KENT'S LECTURES
LECTURE XXXIII
strongly, that will be the remedy that will cure the case. There
may be a lot of little particulars that may appear to contra-
indicate, but they cannot ; for nothing in particulars can contra-
indicate generals. One strong general can overrule all the
particulars you can gather up. "Aggravation from heat" will
throw out Arsenicum, from consideration in any case.
It may be advisable to dwell again for a little upon the
common symptoms . Sometimes we find in women the common
symptom, prolapsus . It is a common thing for them to say,
"Doctor, I have such a dragging down in my bowels , as
if my insides were coming out. " That is a common feature ,
and it is a common symptom. There is nothing about that
alone that will enable you to find a remedy, but for these
common symptoms we have a class of remedies. When you
see a rubric containing a dozen, fifteen or twenty remedies ,
you may often know it is a common symptom. We would
say that all women who have prolapsus have to a great extent
a dragging down feeling, as if the uterus would come out. If
we were to take this symptom and follow it up, we would see
that it works in various directions ; we would see that it runs
into generals, and into particulars. How shall we decide when
to give Sepia, when Lil tig., when Murex., when Bell., when
Puls., when Nux, and when Natrum mur. ? To enable you to
pick out of that group of remedies the one that will cure yoù
must study both the generals and the particulars of the patient
and the generals always first. If it be a Nux vomica patient
who has the prolapsus of the uterus , what will she say of her-
self that will make you see Nur in it ? She would be chilly, full
of coryza, with stuffing up of the nose in a warm room ; she
would be very irritable, snappish, want to kill somebody, want
to throw her child into the fire , want to kill her husband. She
would probably have constipation and every pain that she had
with it would make her want to go to stool ; urging to stool ,
but only a little is passed and she wants to go frequently. You
at once see that she has the generals of Nux, and whatever
particulars she has are in harmony with those generals , and so
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 249
LECTURE XXXIV
lead. Unless man has truth in his mind his experiences are
false. Truth in the mind is first and then experiences are good.
If his mind is in a state of truth, experiences are true. You
cannot trust the experiences of men who do not know what
is true, neither can they be led into truth by these fallacious
experiences.
264 KENT'S LECTURES 1
LECTURE XXXV
week and says he has done well, that he has been improving
all the time from the cm. of Sulphur, but at the end of the
fourth week he comes back and says, "I have been running
down," the physician must then pass judgment. Has this
patient done something to spoil the action of this medicine?
Has he been on a drunk? Has he handled chemicals ? Has
he been in the fumes of Ammonia ? No, he has done none of
these things.
This condition is really an unfavorable one. To have a
medicine act but a few weeks, whereas it ought to act for
months thereafter, will make you suspicious of that patient.
If nothing has taken place to interfere with this medicine in
his economy you may be suspicious of this case. This sixth
observation is too short relief of symptoms. The relief after
the constitutional remedy does not last long enough, does not
last as long as it ought to. If you examine the third obser-
vation you find that there you have the quick aggravation
followed by long amelioration ; but in this, the sixth, you
have the amelioration , but of too short duration. In instances
where you have an aggravation immediately after, and then a
quick rebound, you will never see, absolutely never see, too
short an action of that remedy ; or, in other words, too short an
amelioration of the remedy. If there is a quick rebound, that
amelioration should last ; if it does not last, it is because of
some condition that interferes with the action of the remedy ;
it may be unconscious on the part of the patient, or it may be
intentional. A quick rebound means everything in the remedy,
means that it is well chosen, that the vital economy is in a good
state, and if everything goes well, recovery will take place.
In acute cases we may see this too short amelioration
of the symptoms ; for instance, a dose of medicine given in a
most violent inflammation of the brain may remove all the
symptoms for an hour, and the remedy have to be repeated,
and at the end of that repetition we find only an amelioration
of thirty minutes. You make up your mind, then, that that
patient is in a desperate condition, it is too short an ameliora-
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 273
LECTURE XXXVI
Do not give Calcarea during the paroxysm, but after the wire
edge has been rubbed off by Bell. give him that constitutional
remedy that is complementary to Bell., which is Calcarea.
Many remedies associate with each other and become cognates
after this fashion.
Then there are series of remedies, as, for instance, Sul-
phur, Calcarea and Lycopodium. A medicine always leads to
one of its own cognates, and we find that the cognates are
closely related to each other, like Sepia and Nux vomica. A
bilious fever in a Sepia constitution is likely to call for Nux,
and as soon as that bilious fever or remittent fever has sub-
sided the symptoms of Sepia come out immediately, showing
the complementary relation of Nux and Sepia . If the patient
has been under the influence of Sepia some time, and comes
down with some acute inflammatory attack, he is very likely
to run towards Nur or another of its cognates. The whole
Materia Medica abounds with these complementary and cog-
nate relationships .
The second prescription also takes into consideration the
change of plan of treatment. The plan of treatment consists
in assuming that the case is a psoric one, if looming up before
the eyes, all the symptoms in the case and its history indicate
psora. The treatment has probably consisted of Sulphur, Gra-
phites and such medicines as are well known to be anti-
psorics. The symptoms have run to these remedies ; but, be-
hold, after you have made the patient wonderfully well, and
you have effected marked changes in his system, so that the
psoric symptoms have disappeared , he comes into your office
with an ulcerated sore throat , with dreadful head pains and
with the constitutional state and appearance that will lead you
to say, "My dear sir, did you ever have syphilis ?" "Yes, twenty
or thirty years ago, and it was cured with Mercury." Now,
the psoric condition has been subdued and this old syphilitic
condition has come up. This , then, indicates a second prescrip-
tion . You have to adjust your remedies to an entirely new
state of things. So it is also with regard to sycosis ; these states
ON HOMEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY 285
LECTURE XXXVII
JUN 18 1920
30th POTENCIES
Hand Made Potencies
We have 900 remedies run up to the 30th potency. These are
made by hand, run up step by step from the tincture, homoeopathic
alcohol being used as a menstrum . Each potency receives ten
downward, powerful, successive strokes. They are sold :
KENT POTENCIES
10M 50M CM
(10,000) (50,000) (100,000)
We have 900 remedies run up to the 10M, 50M, CM. These
potencies are made with the Dr. James Tyler Kent potentizer.
This machine is the most accurate centesimal potentizing imple-
ment ever invented . The starting point of these potencies is com-
menced with the 1000 Ehrhart's hand made potency. The motive
power is water pressure. The menstrum which is used for potentizing
is filtered water.
There are four dials on this machine. The dials indicate the
actual number of times the receiver has been emptied. This ma-
chine differs from all others as the remedy being potentized receives
quite a succussion, this no other machine will do. These are the
only machine made high potencies on the market that are made
with filtered water ; all others that we know of are made with the
ordinary tap water.
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