Organon Of Medicine
(Aphorisms from 176 to 225)
§ 176
(Aphorisms from 176 to 225)
Here I am compiling aphorisms form 101 to 125 these aphorisms are from 5th and 6th editions. The foot notes are mentioned in the italics.
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Organon Of Medicine : Dr. Samuel Hahnemann |
§ 176
There are, however, still a few diseases,
which, after the most careful initial examination (§§ 84-98), present but one
or two severe, violent symptoms, while all the others are but indistinctly
perceptible.
§ 177
In
order to meet most successfully such a case as this, which is of very rare
occurrence, we are in the first place to select, guided by these few symptoms,
the medicine which in our judgment is the most homoeopathically indicated.
§ 178
It will, no doubt, sometimes
happen that this medicine, selected in strict observance of the homoeopathic
law, furnishes the similar artificial disease suited for the annihilation of
the malady present; and this is much more likely to happen when these few morbid
symptoms are very striking, decided, uncommon and peculiarly distinctive
(characteristic).
§ 179
More frequently, however, the
medicine first chosen in such a case will be only partially, that is to say,
not exactly suitable, as there was no considerable number of symptoms to guide
to an accurate selection.
§ 180
In this case the medicine, which
has been chosen as well as was possible, but which, for the reason above
stated, is only imperfectly homoeopathic, will, in its action upon the disease
that is only partially analogous to it - just as in the case mentioned above (§
162, et seq.) where the limited number of homoeopathic remedies renders the
selection imperfect - produce accessory symptoms, and several phenomena from
its own array of symptoms are mixed up with the patient's state of health,
which are, however, at the same time, symptoms of the disease itself, although
they may have been hitherto never or very rarely perceived; some symptoms which
the patient had never previously experienced appear, or others he had only felt
indistinctly become more pronounced.
§ 181
Let is not be objected that the
accessory phenomena and new symptoms of this disease that now appear should be
laid to the account of the medicament just employed. They owe their origin to
it 1 certainly, but they are always only symptoms of such a nature as this
disease was itself capable of producing in this organism, and which were
summoned forth and induced to make their appearance by the medicine given,
owing to its power to cause similar symptoms. In a word, we have to regard the
whole collection of symptoms now perceptible as belonging to the disease
itself, as the actual existing condition, and to direct our further treatment
accordingly.
1 When they were not caused by an
important error in regimen, a violent emotion, or a tumultuous revolution in
the organism, such as the occurrence or cessation of the menses, conception,
childbirth, and so forth.
§ 182
Thus the imperfect selection of
the medicament, which was in this case almost inevitable owing to the too
limited number of the symptoms present, serves to complete the display of the
symptoms of the disease, and in this way facilitates the discovery of a second,
more accurately suitable, homoeopathic medicine.
§ 183
Whenever, therefore, the dose of
the first medicine ceases to have a beneficial effect (if the newly developed
symptoms do not, by reason of their gravity, demand more speedy aid - which,
however, from the minuteness of the dose of homoeopathic medicine, and in very
chronic diseases, is excessively rare), a new examination of the disease must
be instituted, the status morbi as it now is must be noted down, and a second
homoeopathic remedy selected in accordance with it, which shall exactly suit
the present state, and one which shall be all the more appropriate can then be
found, as the group of symptoms has become larger and more complete.1
1 In cases where the patient (which,
however, happens excessively seldom in chronic, but not infrequently in acute,
diseases) feels very ill, although his symptoms are very indistinct, so that
this state may be attributed more to the benumbed state of the nerves, which
does not permit the patient's pains and sufferings to be distinctly perceived,
this torpor of the internal sensibility is removed by opium, and in its
secondary action the symptoms of the disease become distinctly apparent.
§ 184 Fifth Edition
In like manner, after each new
dose of medicine has exhausted its action, the state of the disease that still
remains is to be noted anew with respect to its remaining symptoms, and another
homoeopathic remedy sought for, as suitable as possible for the group of
symptoms now observed, and so on until the recovery is complete.
§ 184 Sixth Edition
In like manner, after each new
dose of medicine has exhausted its action, when it is no longer suitable and
helpful, the state of the disease that still remains is to be noted anew with
respect to its remaining symptoms, and another homoeopathic remedy sought for,
as suitable as possible for the group of symptoms now observed, and so on until
the recovery is complete.
§ 185
Among the one-sided disease an important place
is occupied by the so-called local maladies, by which term is signified those
changes and ailments that appear on the external parts of the body. Till now
the idea prevalent in the schools was that these parts were alone morbidly
affected, and that the rest of the body did not participate in the disease - a
theoretical, absurd doctrine, which has led to the most disastrous medical
treatment.
§ 186 Fifth Edition
Those
so-called local maladies which have been produced a short time previously,
solely by an external lesion, still appear at first sight to deserve the name
of local disease. But then the lesion must be very trivial, and in that case it
would be of no great moment. For in the case of injuries accruing to the body
from without, if they be at all severe, the whole living organism sympathizes;
there occur fever, etc. The treatment of such diseases is relegated to surgery;
but this is right only in so far as the affected parts require mechanical aid,
whereby the external obstacles to the cure, which can only be expected to take
place by the agency of the vital force, may be removed by mechanical means,
e.g., by the reduction of dislocations, by bandages to bring together the lips
of wounds, by the extraction of foreign bodies that have penetrated into the
living parts, by making an opening into a cavity of the body in order to remove
an irritating substance or to procure the evacuation of effusions or collections
of fluids, by bringing into apposition the broken extremities of a fractured
bone and retaining them in exact contact by an appropriate bandage, etc. But
when in such injuries the whole living organism requires, as it always does,
active dynamic aid to put it in a position to accomplish the work of healing,
e.g. when the violent fever resulting from extensive contusions, lacerated
muscles, tendons and blood-vessels requires to be removed by medicine given
internally, or when the external pain of scalded or burnt parts needs to be
homoeopathically subdued, then the services of the dynamic physician and his
helpful homoeopathy come into requisition.
§ 186 Sixth Edition
Those so-called local maladies
which have been produced a short time previously, solely by an external lesion,
still appear at first sight to deserve the name of local disease. But then the
lesion must be very trivial, and in that case it would be of no great moment.
For in the case of injuries accruing to the body from without, if they be at
all severe, the whole living organism sympathizes; there occur fever, etc. The
treatment of such diseases is relegated to surgery; but this is right only in
so far as the affected parts require mechanical aid, whereby the external
obstacles to the cure, which can only be expected to take place by the agency
of the vital force, may be removed by mechanical means, e.g., by the reduction
of dislocations, by needles and bandages to bring together the lips of wounds,
by mechanical pressure to still the flow of blood from open arteries, by the
extraction of foreign bodies that have penetrated into the living parts, by
making an opening into a cavity of the body in order to remove an irritating
substance or to procure the evacuation of effusions or collections of fluids,
by bringing into apposition the broken extremities of a fractured bone and
retaining them in exact contact by an appropriate bandage, etc. But when in
such injuries the whole living organism requires, as it always does, active
dynamic aid to put it in a position to accomplish the work of healing, e.g.
when the violent fever resulting from extensive contusions, lacerated muscles,
tendons and blood-vessels requires to be removed by medicine given internally,
or when the external pain of scalded or burnt parts needs to be
homoeopathically subdued, then the services of the dynamic physician and his
helpful homoeopathy come into requisition.
§ 187
But those affections,
alterations and ailments appearing on the external parts, that do not arise
from any external injury or that have only some slight external wound for their
immediate exciting cause, are produced in quite another manner; their source
lies in some internal malady. To consider them as mere local affections, and at
the same time to treat them only, or almost only, as it were surgically, with
topical applications - as the old school have done from the remotest ages - is
as absurd as it is pernicious in its results.
§ 188
These affections were
considered to be merely topical, and were therefore called local diseases, as
if they were maladies exclusively limited to those parts wherein the organism
took little or no part, or affections of these particular visible parts of
which the rest of the living organism, so to speak, knew nothing.1
1 One of the many great
and pernicious blunders of the old school.
§ 189
And yet very little reflection
will suffice to convince us that no external malady (not occasioned by some
important injury from without) can arise, persist or even grow worse without some
internal cause, without the co-operation of the whole organism, which must
consequently be in a diseased state. It could not make its appearance at all
without the consent of the whole of the rest of the health, and without the
participation of the rest of the living whole (of the vital force that pervades
all the other sensitive and irritable parts of the organism); indeed, it is
impossible to conceive its production without the instrumentality of the whole
(deranged) life; so intimately are all parts of the organism connected together
to form an indivisible whole in sensation and functions. No eruption on the
lips, no whitlow can occur without previous and simultaneous internal
ill-health.
§ 190
All
true medical treatment of a disease on the external parts of the body that has
occurred from little or no injury from without must, therefore, be directed
against the whole, must effect the annihilation and cure of the general malady
by means of internal remedies, if it is wished that the treatment should be
judicious, sure, efficacious and radical.
§ 191
This
is confirmed in the most unambiguous manner by experience, which shows in all
cases that every powerful internal medicine immediately after its ingestion
causes important changes in the general health of such a patient, and
particularly in the affected external parts (which the ordinary medical school
regards as quite isolated), even in a so-called local disease of the most
external parts of the body, and the change it produces is most salutary, being
the restoration to health of the entire body, along with the disappearance of
the external affection (without the aid of any external remedy), provided the
internal remedy directed towards the whole state was suitable chosen in a
homoeopathic sense.
§ 192
This is best effected when,
in the investigation of the case of disease, along with the exact character of
the local affection, all the changes, sufferings and symptoms observable in the
patient's health, and which may have been previously noticed when no medicines
had been used, are taken in conjunction to form a complete picture of the
disease before searching among the medicines, whose peculiar pathogenetic
effects are known, for a remedy corresponding to the totality of the symptoms,
so that the selection may be truly homoeopathic.
§ 193
By means of this medicine,
employed only internally (and, if the disease be but of recent origin, often by
the very first dose of it), the general morbid state of the body is removed
along with the local affection, and the latter is cured at the same time as the
former, proving that the local affection depended solely on a disease of the
rest of the body, and should only be regarded as an inseparable part of the
whole, as one of the most considerable and striking symptoms of the whole
disease.
§ 194
It is not useful, either in
acute local diseases of recent origin or in local affections that have already
existed a long time, to rub in or apply externally to the spot an external
remedy, even though it be the specific and, when used internally, salutary by
reason of its homoeopathicity, even although it should be at the same time
administered internally; for the acute topical affections (e.g., inflammations
of the individual parts, erysipelas, etc.), which have not been caused by
external injury of proportionate violence, but by dynamic or internal causes,
yield most surely to internal remedies homoeopathically adapted to the
perceptible state of the health present in the exterior and interior, selected
from the general store of proved medicines,1 and generally without any
other aid; but if these diseases do not yield to them completely, and if there
still remain in the affected spot and in the whole state, notwithstanding good
regimen, a relic of disease which the vital force is not competent to restore
to the normal state, then the acute disease was (as not infrequently happens) a
product of psora which had hitherto remained latent in the interior, but has now
burst forth and is on the point of developing into a palpable chronic disease.
1 Foot-note in *Fifth
Edition* only.
As, for instance, aconite, rhus,
belladonna, mercury, etc.
§ 195
In order to effect a radical
cure in such cases, which are by no means rare, after the acute state has
pretty well subsided, an appropriate antipsoric treatment (as is taught in my
work on Chronic Diseases) must then be directed against the symptoms that still
remain and the morbid state of health to which the patient was previously
subject. In chronic local maladies that are not obviously venereal, the
antipsoric internal treatment is, moreover, alone requisite.
§ 196
It might, indeed, seen as
though the cure of such diseases would be hastened by employing the medicinal
substance which is known to be truly homoeopathic to the totality of the
symptoms, not only internally, but also externally, because the action of a
medicine applied to the seat of the local affection might effect a more rapid
change in it.
§ 197 Fifth Edition
This treatment, however, is
quite inadmissible, not only for the local symptoms arising from the miasm of
psora, but also and especially for those originating in the miasm of syphilis
or sycosis, for the simultaneous local application, along with the internal
employment, of the remedy in diseases whose chief symptom is a constant local
affection, has this great disadvantage, that, by such a topical application,
this chief symptom (local affection)1 will usually be annihilated sooner
than the internal disease, and we shall now be deceived by the semblance of a
perfect cure; or at least it will be difficult, and in some cases impossible,
to determine, from the premature disappearance of the local symptom, if the
general disease is destroyed by the simultaneous employment of the internal
medicine.
1 Recent itch eruption,
chancre, condylomata.
§ 197 Sixth Edition
This treatment, however, is
quite inadmissible, not only for the local symptoms arising from the miasm of
psora, but also and especially for those originating in the miasm of syphilis
or sycosis, for the simultaneous local application, along with the internal
employment, of the remedy in diseases whose chief symptom is a constant local
affection, has this great disadvantage, that, by such a topical application,
this chief symptom (local affection)1 will usually be annihilated sooner
than the internal disease, and we shall now be deceived by the semblance of a
perfect cure; or at least it will be difficult, and in some cases impossible,
to determine, from the premature disappearance of the local symptom, if the
general disease is destroyed by the simultaneous employment of the internal
medicine.
1 Recent
itch eruption, chancre, condylomata, as I have indicated in my book of Chronic
Diseases.
§ 198
The mere topical employment of
medicines, that are powerful for cure when given internally, to the local
symptoms of chronic miasmatic diseases is for the same reason quite
inadmissible; for if the local affection of the chronic disease be only removed
locally and in a one-sided manner, the internal treatment indispensable for the
complete restoration of the health remains in dubious obscurity; the chief
symptom (the local affection) is gone, and there remain only the other, less
distinguishable symptoms, which are less constant and less persistent than the
local affection, and frequently not sufficiently peculiar and too slightly
characteristic to display after that, a picture of the disease in clear and
peculiar outlines.
§ 199
If the remedy perfectly homoeopathic
to the disease had not yet been discovered 1 at the time when the local
symptoms were destroyed by a corrosive or desiccative external remedy or by the
knife, then the case becomes much more difficult on account of the too
indefinite (uncharacteristic) and inconstant appearance of the remaining
symptoms; for what might have contributed most to determine the selection of
the most suitable remedy, and its internal employment until the disease should
have been completely annihilated, namely, the external principal symptom, has
been removed from our observation.
1 As
was the case before my time with the remedies for the condylomatous disease
(and the antipsoric medicines).
§ 200 Fifth Edition
Had it still been present to
guide the internal treatment, the homoeopathic remedy for the whole disease
might have been discovered, and had that been found, the persistence of the
local affection during its internal employment would have shown that the cure
was not yet completed; but were it cured on its seat, this would be a
convincing proof that the disease was completely eradicated, and the desired
recovery from the entire disease was fully accomplished - an inestimable,
indispensable advantage.
§
200 Sixth Edition
Had it still been present to
guide the internal treatment, the homoeopathic remedy for the whole disease
might have been discovered, and had that been found, the persistence of the
local affection during its internal employment would have shown that the cure
was not yet completed; but were it cured on its seat, this would be a
convincing proof that the disease was completely eradicated, and the desired
recovery from the entire disease was fully accomplished - an inestimable,
indispensable advantage to reach a perfect cure.
§ 201 Fifth Edition
It is evident that man's
vital force, when encumbered with a chronic disease which it is unable to
overcome by its own powers, adopts the plan of developing a local malady on
some external part, solely for this object, that by making and keeping in a
diseased state this part which is not indispensable to human life, it may
thereby silence the internal disease, which otherwise threatens to destroy the
vital organs (and to deprive the patient of life), and that it may thereby, so
to speak, transfer the internal disease to the vicarious local affection and,
as it were, draw it thither. The presence of the local affection thus silences,
for a time, the internal disease, though without being able either to cure it
or to diminish it materially.1 The local affection, however, is never
anything else than a part of the general disease, but a part of it increased
all in one direction by the organic vital force, and transferred to a less
dangerous (external) part of the body, in order to allay the internal ailment.
But (as has been said) by this local symptom that silences the internal
disease, so far from anything being gained by the vital force towards
diminishing or curing the whole malady, the internal disease, on the contrary,
continues, in spite of it, gradually to increase and Nature is constrained to
enlarge and aggravate the local symptom always more and more, in order that it
may still suffice as a substitute for the increased internal disease and may
still keep it under. Old ulcers on the legs get worse as long as the internal
psora is uncured, the chancre enlarges as long as the internal syphilis remains
uncured, just as the general internal disease continues to increase as time
goes on.
1 The
issues of the old-school do something similar; as artificial ulcers on external
parts, they silence some internal chronic diseases, but only for a short time,
without being able to cure them; but, on the other hand, they weaken and
destroy the general health much more than is done by most of the metastases
effected by the instinctive vital force.
§ 201 Sixth Edition
It is evident that man's
vital force, when encumbered with a chronic disease which it is unable to
overcome by its own powers instinctively, adopts the plan of developing a local
malady on some external part, solely for this object, that by making and
keeping in a diseased state this part which is not indispensable to human life,
it may thereby silence the internal disease, which otherwise threatens to
destroy the vital organs (and to deprive the patient of life), and that it may
thereby, so to speak, transfer the internal disease to the vicarious local
affection and, as it were, draw it thither. The presence of the local affection
thus silences, for a time, the internal disease, though without being able
either to cure it or to diminish it materially.1 The local affection,
however, is never anything else than a part of the general disease, but a part
of it increased all in one direction by the organic vital force, and
transferred to a less dangerous (external) part of the body, in order to allay
the internal ailment. But (as has been said) by this local symptom that
silences the internal disease, so far from anything being gained by the vital
force towards diminishing or curing the whole malady, the internal disease, on
the contrary, continues, in spite of it, gradually to increase and Nature is
constrained to enlarge and aggravate the local symptom always more and more, in
order that it may still suffice as a substitute for the increased internal
disease and may still keep it under. Old ulcers on the legs get worse as long
as the internal psora is uncured, the chancre enlarges as long as the internal
syphilis remains uncured, the fig warts increased and grow while the sycosis is
not cured whereby the latter is rendered more and more difficult to cure, just
as the general internal disease continues to increase as time goes on.
1 The issues of the
old-school do something similar; as artificial ulcers on external parts, they
silence some internal chronic diseases, but only for a short time, as long as
they cause a painful irritation to which the sick organism is not used, without
being able to cure them; but, on the other hand, they weaken and destroy the
general health much more than is done by most of the metastases effected by the
instinctive vital force.
§ 202
If the old-school physician
should now destroy the local symptom by the topical application of external
remedies, under the belief that he thereby cures the whole disease, Nature
makes up for its loss by rousing the internal malady and the other symptoms
that previously existed in a latent state side by side with the local
affection; that is to say, she increases the internal disease. When this occurs
it is usual to say, though incorrectly that the local affection has been driven
back into the system or upon the nerves by the external remedies.
§ 203
Every external treatment of
such local symptoms, the object of which is to remove them from the surface of
the body, while the internal miasmatic disease is left uncured, as, for
instance, driving off the skin the psoric eruption by all sorts of ointments,
burning away the chancre by caustics and destroying the condylomata on their
seat by the knife, the ligature or the actual cautery; this pernicious external
mode of treatment, hitherto so universally practised, has been the most
prolific source of all the innumerable named or unnamed chronic maladies under
which mankind groans; it is one of the most criminal procedures the medical
world can be guilty of, and yet it has hitherto been the one generally adopted,
and taught from the professional chairs as the only one.1
1 For
any medicines that might at the same time be given internally served but to
aggravate the malady, as these remedies possessed no specific power of curing
the whole disease, but assailed the organism, weakened it and inflicted on it,
in addition, other chronic medicinal diseases.
§ 204 Fifth Edition
If we deduct all chronic
affections, ailments and diseases that depend on a persistent unhealthy mode of
living, (§ 77) as also those innumerable medicinal maladies (v. § 74) caused by
the irrational, persistent, harassing and pernicious treatment of diseases
often only of trivial character by physicians of the old school, all the
remainder, without exception, result from the development of these three
chronic miasms, internal syphilis, internal sycosis, but chiefly and in
infinitely greater proportion, internal psora, each of which was already in
possession of the whole organism, and had penetrated it in all directions
before the appearance of the primary, vicarious local symptom of each of them
(in the case of psora the scabious eruption, in syphilis the chancre or the
bubo, and in sycosis the condylomata) that prevented their outburst; and these
chronic miasmatic diseases, if deprived of their local symptom, are inevitably
destined by mighty Nature sooner or later to become developed and to burst
forth, and thereby propagate all the nameless misery, the incredible number of
chronic diseases which have plagued mankind for hundreds and thousands of
years, none of which would so frequently have come into existence had
physicians striven in a rational manner to cure radically and to extinguish in
the organism these three miasms by the internal homoeopathic medicines suited
for each of them, without employing topical remedies for their external
symptoms. (See note to § 282).
§ 204 Sixth Edition
If we deduct all chronic
affections, ailments and diseases that depend on a persistent unhealthy mode of
living, (§ 77) as also those innumerable medicinal maladies (v. § 74) caused by
the irrational, persistent, harassing and pernicious treatment of diseases
often only of trivial character by physicians of the old school, most the
remainder of chronic diseases result from the development of these three
chronic miasms, internal syphilis, internal sycosis, but chiefly and in
infinitely greater proportion, internal psora, each of which was already in
possession of the whole organism, and had penetrated it in all directions
before the appearance of the primary, vicarious local symptom of each of them
(in the case of psora the scabious eruption, in syphilis the chancre or the
bubo, and in sycosis the condylomata) that prevented their outburst; and these
chronic miasmatic diseases, if deprived of their local symptom, are inevitably
destined by mighty Nature sooner or later to become developed and to burst
forth, and thereby propagate all the nameless misery, the incredible number of
chronic diseases which have plagued mankind for hundreds and thousands of
years, none of which would so frequently have come into existence had
physicians striven in a rational manner to cure radically and to extinguish in
the organism these three miasms by the internal homoeopathic medicines suited
for each of them, without employing topical remedies for their external
symptoms. (See note to § 282).
§ 205 Fifth Edition
The homoeopathic physician
never treats one of these primary symptoms of chronic miasms, nor yet one of
their secondary affections that result from their further development, by local
remedies (neither by those external agents that act dynamically,1 nor yet
by those that act mechanically), but he cures, in cases where the one or the
other appears, only the great miasm on which they depend, whereupon its
primary, as also its secondary symptoms disappear spontaneously; but as this
was not the mode pursued by the old-school practitioners who preceded him in
the treatment of the case, the homoeopathic physician generally, alas!, finds
that the primary symptoms 2 have already been destroyed by them by means of
external remedies, and that he has now to do more with the secondary ones,
i.e., the affections resulting from the breaking forth and development of these
inherent miasms, but especially with the chronic disease evolved from internal
psora, the internal treatment of which, as far as a single physician can
elucidate it by many years of reflection, observation and experience, I have
endeavored to point out in my work on Chronic Diseases, to which I must refer
the reader.
1 I cannot therefore
advise, for instance, the local extirpation of the so-called cancer of the lips
and face by means of the arsenical remedy of Frere Cosme, not only because it
is excessively painful and often fails, but more for this reason, because, if
this dynamic remedy should indeed succeed in freeing the affected part of the
body from the malignant ulcer locally, the basic malady is thereby not
diminished in the slightest, the preserving vital force is therefore
necessitated to transfer the field of operation of the great internal malady to
some more important part (as it does in every case of metastasis), and the
consequence is blindness, deafness, insanity, suffocative asthma, dropsy,
apoplexy, etc. But this ambiguous local liberation of the part from the
malignant ulcer by the topical arsenical remedy only succeeds, after all, in
those cases where the ulcer has not yet attained any great size, and when the
vital force is still very energetic; but it is just in such a state of things
that the complete internal cure of the whole original disease is also still
practicable.
The result is the same without
previous cure of the inner miasm when cancer of the face or breast is removed
by the knife alone and when encysted tumors are enucleated; something worse
ensues, or at any rate death is hastened. This has been the case times without
number, but the old school still goes blindly on in the same way in every new
case, with the same disastrous results.
2 Itch
eruption, chancre (bubo), condylomata.
§ 205 Sixth Edition
The homoeopathic physician
never treats one of these primary symptoms of chronic miasms, nor yet one of
their secondary affections that result from their further development, by local
remedies (neither by those external agents that act dynamically,1 nor yet
by those that act mechanically), but he cures, in cases where the one or the
other appears, only the great miasm on which they depend, whereupon its
primary, as also its secondary symptoms disappear spontaneously; but as this
was not the mode pursued by the old-school practitioners who preceded him in
the treatment of the case, the homoeopathic physician generally, alas!, finds
that the primary symptoms 2 have already been destroyed by them by means of
external remedies, and that he has now to do more with the secondary ones,
i.e., the affections resulting from the breaking forth and development of these
inherent miasms, but especially with the chronic disease evolved from internal
psora, the internal treatment of which, as far as a single physician can
elucidate it by many years of reflection, observation and experience, I have
endeavored to point out in my work on Chronic Diseases, to which I must refer
the reader.
1 I cannot therefore
advise, for instance, the local extirpation of the so-called cancer of the lips
and face (the product of highly developed psora, not infrequently in conjunction
with syphilis) by means of the arsenical remedy of Frere Cosme, not only
because it is excessively painful and often fails, but more for this reason,
because, if this dynamic remedy should indeed succeed in freeing the affected
part of the body from the malignant ulcer locally, the basic malady is thereby
not diminished in the slightest, the preserving vital force is therefore
necessitated to transfer the field of operation of the great internal malady to
some more important part (as it does in every case of metastasis), and the
consequence is blindness, deafness, insanity, suffocative asthma, dropsy,
apoplexy, etc. But this ambiguous local liberation of the part from the
malignant ulcer by the topical arsenical remedy only succeeds, after all, in
those cases where the ulcer has not yet attained any great size, and when the
vital force is still very energetic; but it is just in such a state of things
that the complete internal cure of the whole original disease is also still
practicable.
The result is the same without
previous cure of the inner miasm when cancer of the face or breast is removed
by the knife alone and when encysted tumors are enucleated; something worse
ensues, or at any rate death is hastened. This has been the case times without
number, but the old school still goes blindly on in the same way in every new
case, with the same disastrous results.
2 Itch eruption, chancre
(bubo), condylomata.
§ 206 Fifth Edition
Before commencing the
treatment of a chronic disease, it is necessary to make the most careful
investigation 1 as to whether the patient has had a venereal infection (or
an infection with condylomatous gonorrhoea); for then the treatment must be
directed towards this alone, when only the signs of syphilis (or of the rarer
condylomatous disease) are present, but this disease is very seldom met with
alone nowadays. If such infection have previously occurred, this must also be
borne in mind in the treatment of those cases in which psora is present,
because in them the latter is complicated with the former, as is always the
case when the symptoms are not those of pure syphilis; for when the physician
thinks he has a case of old venereal disease before him, he has always, or
almost always, to treat a syphilitic affection accompanied mostly by
(complicated with) psora, for the internal itch dyscrasia (the psora) is far
the most frequent (most certain) fundamental cause of chronic diseases, either
united (complicated) with syphilis (or with sycosis), if the latter infections
have avowedly occurred; or, as is much more frequently the case, psora is the
sole fundamental cause of all other chronic maladies, whatever names they may
bear, which are, moreover, so often bungled, increased and disfigured to a
monstrous extent by allopathic unskillfulness.
1 In
investigations of this nature we must not allow ourselves to be deceived by the
assertions of the patients of their friends, who frequently assign as the cause
of chronic, even of the severest and most inveterate diseases, either a cold
caught (a thorough wetting, drinking cold water after being heated) many years
ago, or a former fright, a sprain, a vexation (sometimes even a bewitchment),
etc. These causes are much too insignificant to develop a chronic disease in a
healthy body, to keep it up for years, and to aggravate it year by year, as is
the case with all chronic diseases from developed psora. Causes of a much more
important character than those remembered noxious influences must lie at the
root of the initiation and progress of a serious, obstinate disease of long
standing; the assigned causes could only rouse into activity the latent chronic
miasm.
§ 206 Sixth Edition
Before commencing the
treatment of a chronic disease, it is necessary to make the most careful
investigation 1 as to whether the patient has had a venereal infection (or
an infection with condylomatous gonorrhoea); for then the treatment must be
directed towards this alone, when only the signs of syphilis (or of the rarer
condylomatous disease) are present, but this disease is very seldom met with
alone nowadays. If such infection have previously occurred, this must also be
borne in mind in the treatment of those cases in which psora is present,
because in them the latter is complicated with the former, as is always the
case when the symptoms are not those of pure syphilis; for when the physician
thinks he has a case of old venereal disease before him, he has always, or
almost always, to treat a syphilitic affection accompanied mostly by
(complicated with) psora, for the internal itch dyscrasia (the psora) is far
the most frequent fundamental cause of chronic diseases. At times, both miasms
may be complicated also with sycosis in chronically diseased organisms, or, as
is much more frequently the case, psora is the sole fundamental cause of all
other chronic maladies, whatever names they may bear, which are, moreover, so
often bungled, increased and disfigured to a monstrous extent by allopathic
unskillfulness.
1 In
investigations of this nature we must not allow ourselves to be deceived by the
assertions of the patients of their friends, who frequently assign as the cause
of chronic, even of the severest and most inveterate diseases, either a cold
caught (a thorough wetting, drinking cold water after being heated) many years
ago, or a former fright, a sprain, a vexation (sometimes even a bewitchment),
etc. These causes are much too insignificant to develop a chronic disease in a
healthy body, to keep it up for years, and to aggravate it year by year, as is
the case with all chronic diseases from developed psora. Causes of a much more
important character than those remembered noxious influences must lie at the
root of the initiation and progress of a serious, obstinate disease of long
standing; the assigned causes could only rouse into activity the latent chronic
miasm.
§ 207
When the above information
has been gained, it still remains for the homoeopathic physician to ascertain
what kinds of allopathic treatment had up to that date been adopted for the
chronic disease, what perturbing medicines had been chiefly and most frequently
employed, also what mineral baths had been used and what effects these had
produced, in order to understand in some measure the degeneration of the
disease from its original state, and, where possible, to correct in part these
pernicious artificial operations, or to enable him to avoid the employment of
medicines that have already been improperly used.
§ 208
The age of the patient,
his mode of living and diet, his occupation, his domestic position, his social
relation and so forth, must next be taken into consideration, in order to
ascertain whether these things have tended to increase his malady, or in how
far they may favor or hinder the treatment. In like manner the state of his
disposition and mind must be attended to, to learn whether that presents any
obstacles to the treatment, or requires to be directed encouraged or modified.
§ 209
After this is done, the
physician should endeavor in repeated conversations with the patient to trace
the picture of his disease as completely as possible, according to the
directions given above, in order to be able to elucidate the most striking and
peculiar (characteristic) symptoms, in accordance with which he selects the
first antipsoric or other remedy having the greatest symptomatic resemblance, for
the commencement of the treatment, and so forth.
§ 210
Of psoric origin are almost
all those diseases that I have above termed one-sided, which appear to be more
difficult to cure in consequence of this one-sidedness, all their other morbid
symptoms disappearing, as it were, before the single, great, prominent symptom.
Of this character are what are termed mental diseases. They do not, however,
constitute a class of disease the condition of the disposition and mind is
always altered 1, and in all cases of
disease we are called on to cure the state of the patient's disposition is to
be particularly noted, along with the totality of the symptoms, if we would
trace an accurate picture of the disease, in order to be able therefrom to
treat it homoeopathically with success.
1 How
often, for instance, do we not meet with a mild, soft disposition in patients
who have for years been afflicted with the most painful diseases, so that the
physician feels constrained to esteem and compassionate the sufferer! But if he
subdue the disease and restore the patient to health - as is frequently done in
homoeopathic practice - he is often astonished and horrified at the frightful
alteration in his disposition. He often witnesses the occurrence of
ingratitude, cruelty, refined malice and propensities most disgraceful and
degrading to humanity, which were precisely the qualities possessed by the
patient before he grew ill.
Those who were patient when
well often become obstinate, violent, hasty, or even intolerant and capricious,
or impatient or disponding when ill; those formerly chaste and modest often
frequently become lascivious and shameless. A clear-headed person not infrequently
becomes obtuse of intellect, while one ordinarily weak-minded becomes more
prudent and thoughtful; and a man slow to make up his mind sometimes acquires
great presence of mind and quickness of resolve, etc.
§ 211
This holds good to such an extent,
that the state of the disposition of the patient often chiefly determines the
selection of the homoeopathic remedy, as being a decidedly characteristic
symptom which can least of all remain concealed from the accurately observing
physician.
§ 212
The Creator of therapeutic agents
has also had particular regard to this main feature of all diseases, the
altered state of the disposition and mind, for there is no powerful medicinal
substance in the world which does not very notably alter the state of the
disposition and mind in the healthy individual who tests it, and every medicine
does so in a different manner.
§ 213
We shall, therefore, never be
able to cure conformably to nature - that is to say, homoeopathically - if we
do not, in every case of disease, even in such as are acute, observe, along
with the other symptoms, those relating to the changes in the state of the mind
and disposition, and if we do not select, for the patient's relief, from among
the medicines a disease-force which, in addition to the similarity of its other
symptoms to those of the disease, is also capable of producing a similar state
of the disposition and mind.1
1 Thus
aconite will seldom or never effect a rapid or permanent cure in a patient of a
quiet, calm, equable disposition; and just as little will nux vomica be
serviceable where the disposition is mild and phlegmatic, pulsatilla where it
is happy, gay and obstinate, or ignatia where it is imperturbable and disposed
neither to be frightened nor vexed.
§ 214
The instructions I have to
give relative to the cure of mental diseases may be confined to a very few
remarks, as they are to be cured in the same way as all other diseases, namely,
by a remedy which shows, by the symptoms it causes in the body and mind of a healthy
individual, a power of producing a morbid state as similar as possible to the
case of disease before us, and in no other way can they be cured.
§ 215
Almost all the so-called
mental and emotional diseases are nothing more than corporeal diseases in which
the symptom of derangement of the mind and disposition peculiar to each of them
is increased, while the corporeal symptoms decline (more or less rapidly), till
it a length attains the most striking one-sidedness, almost as though it were a
local disease in the invisible subtle organ of the mind or disposition.
§ 216
The cases are not rare in
which a so-called corporeal disease that threatens to be fatal - a suppuration
of the lungs, or the deterioration of some other important viscus, or some
other disease of acute character, e.g., in childbed, etc. - becomes transformed
into insanity, into a kind of melancholia or into mania by a rapid increase of
the psychical symptoms that were previously present, whereupon the corporeal
symptoms lose all their danger; these latter improve almost to perfect health,
or rather they decrease to such a degree that their obscured presence can only
be detected by the observation of a physician gifted with perseverance and
penetration. In this manner they become transformed into a one-sided and, as it
were, a local disease, in which the symptom of the mental disturbance, which
was at first but slight, increases so as to be the chief symptom, and in a
great measure occupies the place of the other (corporeal) symptoms, whose
intensity it subdues in a palliative manner, so that, in short, the affections
of the grosser corporeal organs become, as it were, transferred and conducted
to the almost spiritual, mental and emotional organs, which the anatomist has
never yet and never will reach with his scalpel.
§ 217
In these diseases we must be
very careful to make ourselves acquainted with the whole of the phenomena, both
those belonging to the corporeal symptoms, and also, and indeed particularly,
those appertaining to the accurate apprehension of the precise character of the
chief symptom, of the peculiar and always predominating state of the mind and
disposition, in order to discover, for the purpose of extinguishing the entire
disease, among the remedies whose pure effects are known, a homoeopathic
medicinal pathogenetic force - that is to say, a remedy which in its list of
symptoms displays, with the greatest possible similarity, not only the
corporeal morbid symptoms present in the case of disease before us, but also
especially this mental and emotional state.
§ 218
To this collection of
symptoms belongs in the first place to accurate description of all the
phenomena of the previous so-called corporeal disease, before it degenerated
into a one-sided increase of the physical symptom, and became a disease of the
mind and disposition. This may be learned from the report of the patient's
friends.
§ 219
A comparison of these previous
symptoms of the corporeal disease with the traces of them that still remain,
though they have become less perceptible (but which even now sometimes become
prominent, when a lucid interval and a transient alleviation of the psychical
disease occurs), will serve to prove them to be still present, though obscured.
§ 220
By adding to this the state
of the mind and disposition accurately observed by the patient's friends and by
the physician himself, we have thus constructed the complete picture of the disease,
for which in order to effect the homoeopathic cure of the disease, a medicine
capable of producing strikingly similar symptoms, and especially an analogous
disorder of the mind, must be sought for among the antipsoric remedies, if the
physical disease have already lasted some time.
§ 221
If, however, insanity or
mania (caused by fright, vexation, the abuse of spirituous liquors, etc.) have
suddenly broken out as an acute disease in the patient's ordinary calm state,
although it almost always arises from internal psora, like a flame bursting
forth from it, yet when it occurs in this acute manner it should not be
immediately treated with antipsoric, but in the first place with remedies
indicated for it out of the order class of proved medicaments (e.g., aconite,
belladonna, stramonium, hyoscyamus, mercury, etc.) in highly potentized,
minute, homoeopathic doses, in order to subdue it so far that the psora shall
for the time revert to its former latent state, wherein the patient appears as
if quite well.
§ 222
But such a patient, who has
recovered from an acute mental or emotional disease by the use of these
non-antipsoric medicines, should never be regarded as cured; on the contrary,
no time should be lost in attempting to free him completely 1 by means of a prolonged antipsoric treatment,
from the chronic miasm of the psora, which, it is true, has now become once
more latent but is quite ready to break out anew; if this be done, there is no
fear of another similar attack, if he attend faithfully to the diet and regimen
prescribed for him.
1 It
very rarely happens that a mental or emotional disease of long standing ceases
spontaneously (for the internal dyscrasia transfers itself again to the grosser
corporeal organs); such are the few cases met with now and then, where a former
inmate of a madhouse has been dismissed apparently recovered. Hitherto,
moreover, all madhouses have continued to be chokefull, so that the multitude
of other insane persons who seek for admission into such institutions could scarcely
find room in them unless some of the insane in the house died. Not one is ever
really and permanently cured in them! A convincing proof, among many others, of
the complete nullity of the non-healing art hitherto practised, which has been
ridiculously honored by allopathic ostentation with the title of rational
medicine. How often, on the other hand, has not the true healing art, genuine
pure homoeopathy, been able to restore such unfortunate beings to the
possession of their mental and corporeal health, and so give them back again to
their delighted friends and to the world!
§ 223
But if the antipsoric
treatment be omitted, then we may almost assuredly expect, from a much slighter
cause than brought on the first attack of the insanity, the speedy occurrence
of a new and more lasting the severe fit, during which the psora usually develops
itself completely, and passes into either a periodic or continued mental
derangement, which is then more difficult to be cured by antipsorics.
§ 224
If the mental disease be not
quite developed, and if it be still somewhat doubtful whether it really arose
from a corporeal affection, or did not rather result from faults of education,
bad practices, corrupt morals, neglect of the mind, superstition or ignorance;
the mode of deciding this point will be, that if it proceed from one or other
of the latter causes it will diminish and be improved by sensible friendly
exhortations, consolatory arguments, serious representations and sensible
advice, whereas a real moral or mental malady, depending on bodily disease,
would be speedily aggravated by such a course, the melancholic would become
still more dejected, querulous, inconsolable and reserved, the spiteful maniac
would thereby become still more exasperated, and the chattering fool would
become manifestly more foolish.1
1 It
would seem as though the mind, in these cases, felt with uneasiness and grief
the truth of these rational representations and acted upon the body as it
wished to restore the lost harmony, but that the body, by means of its disease,
reacted upon the organs of the mind and disposition and put them in still
greater disorder by a fresh transference of its sufferings on to them.
§ 225
There are, however, as has just
been stated, certainly a few emotional diseases which have not merely been
developed into that form out of corporeal diseases, but which, in an inverse
manner, the body being but slightly indisposed, originate and are kept up by
emotional causes, such as continued anxiety, worry, vexation, wrongs and the
frequent occurrence of great fear and fright. This kind of emotional diseases
in time destroys the corporeal health, often to a great degree.
Organon Of Medicine (Aphorisms from 176 to 225)
Reviewed by Dr.Satishkumar
on
October 03, 2019
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