TM
NIRVANA
TO DREAM ANYTHING YOU WANT TO DREAM....THAT IS THE BEAUTY OF HUMAN MIND...... THE REAL FREEDOM THAT'S NIRVANA
Aboutus |
Hahnemann |
The
Internet has essentially changed means of communications, including those
in Homeopathy. Homeopathic physicians can exchange experiences and ideas
in discussion forums, newsgroups and mailing lists.
The 1st effort at structuring the information was made by Emile Van Galen with his "Homeopathic Internet Resource List" which has been accessible on the net since 1995. |
HOMEOPATHY AS A SCIENCE
THE, art of medicine claims great antiquity,
but the science of medicine yet awaits a discoverer. More than a century ago,
Hahnemann's labors initiated the genuine art of medicine. But not one of his
theories has ever stood the test of experience.
What he stated as facts stand as firmly now as when they were promulgated. But
science, defined as knowledge "methodically digested and arranged",
was never aided by his theories. Where has the consistently explained the law
of cure? Was his psoric theory scientific? True, the facts announced in his
Organon as to the way to treat the sick, how to select and change the remedy,
to make provings, etc., are undoubtedly correct. Equally true is it that
remedies acting from within out, from more to less vital parts, will be most
likely indicated in chronic diseases. But his itch hypothesis is readily
disproved. The same applies to all subsequent attempts at establishing
Homoeopathy as a science.
What is this? Is it because Homoeopathy is not a science?
No. It is because genuine
science does not appear at the present day. It is because investigators are
plunging more and more deeply into materialism. Darwin's inexcusable offence
does not consist in his promulgation of the absurd theory of the origin of
man, but rather in the anti-spiritual direction of his whole line of study.
With an utter contempt of revelation, he
manufactures the moral sense of men out of the necessities of their living
together peacefully. And yet we know that true morality springs not from man
but from heaven. But Darwin is not an isolated example of falsity in science.
Huxley and
Tyndall, Proctor, and indeed the entire corps of investigators from A to Z,
turn their conceited minds earthward only, and so learn nothing of higher
import than what appertains to the plan of their senses. No the same pall
overhangs Homoeopathy. Hahnemann did not belong to the materialistic school.
To him the plant or root from which he made his tincture was not inert matter
alone, but contained a living principle which was not nature but life. He knew
that he was dealing with forces which transcended his natural senses, except
in so far as their activities were displayed in their workings through matter.
Hence his studies led him to the process of potentization of drugs. These are
not claimed as spirit. We cannot escape from matter while we are in this
world. So his method did nothing but rid spiritual forces of weighty matter,
allowing them to act in the finest particles of matter only. Thus disenthralled,
his remedies were free to act above the crude laws of physics, independent of
gravity and of chemistry, but still within the bounds of matter. We are gifted
with remedies then which obey laws new to the physician. Their subtle
movements are marvelous to him who has been accustomed to the more superficial
phenomena of philosophy, chemistry, etc. He was wont to investigate drug
action from his standpoint. He saw in a very general way, that certain
medicines influenced certain functions or organs, and so constructed a
chemical-physiological materia medica; one full of fallacies, because even
what of truth it contained was perverted by misapplication.
The danger which threatens our system of medicine lies in the fact that we are
being dragged into materialism. We are so wedded to Allopathy that we cling
with obstinacy to her false and crude notions. We seem to think that
Homoeopathy rests on Allopathy as does a house on its foundation; and when we
feel insecure in the superstructure, we descend to the cellar for aid. There
is not one single truth in Allopathy per se. If there is, then just to that
degree is our school false; for the two are diametrically opposite. But, it
may be asked, is there no truth in pathology and diagnosis, in the
physiological investigation of drug effects, etc.? Emphatically no, as
sciences. To clearly apprehend the truth of this statement, we must acquaint
ourselves with the genuine doctrine of order in nature. Generals are formed of
particulars, the latter being incomparably the most important.
Take, by way of illustration, the human body. In a very general analysis, it
is composed of organs. Each organ is made up of tissues. Each tissue is
divisible into molecules. Beginning with a single organ, as, for instance, a
muscle, we find it composed of fibres, these of fibrillae, and each fibrilla
of smaller parts. As we pursue our analysis, we still find each microscopic
portion a minute effigy of the whole. But just as in the potentized medicine
so here the properties of the muscle are discovered much more clearly, and are
seen to be numerous and quite different from what the undivided muscle would
exhibit. We are accumulating particulars, and find them more and more complex
as we advance. The same applies to the practice of medicine. It is not alone
sufficient to learn the general range of action of a drug or an outline of a
disease, but
also and pre-eminently the peculiarities of each. These when discovered so far
outweigh the rest, that they must be used in every accurate prescription.
Pathology, as dogmatically taught, is not true. Arbitrary boundaries are given
to diseases, and this artificial production is definitely named. Such a
process of thought is too general to be practical and too superficial to
escape the fallacies of appearances. A synthesis is correct only when its
component elements are. Baptisia develops a picture of typhus; Arsenic of
cholera Asiatica, Bryonia produces pseudo-membranes, etc.; but unless analysis
reveals the individual symptoms in these cases respectively, the conclusion is
vague and uncertain. Objection, it will be seen, is not raised against
pathological facts, many of which are true, but to the manner of their
construction into a science. Such facts enable us to interpret symptoms, and
place some estimate on their relative value. They aid in the forming of the
"totality". They assist in forming a prognosis. That they only
assist, however, is because the course of a diseases, subsequent to a
Homoeopathic prescription, is not the unqualified course it would pursue
unmodified. A typhoid patient for example, might exhibit an unmitigated fever,
with evening exacerbation, bloody stools and tympany. But it, after the
Similimum, the mental symptoms lessen, or the latest become less intense, our
prognosis is qualified thereby, despite the gravity of the remaining symptoms.
Schussler's offence does not consist in understanding physiology and
pathology, but in dragging them into therapeutics and in recklessly
misapplying them. Had he, at the suggestion of physiology, proved his twelve
remedies, he would have acted rationally and effectively. All medical
questions find confirmation or refutation before the test of the laws of the
Organon, not before allopathic hypotheses or Homoeopathic adoptions from the
old school. Indeed we may go farther and assert that physiology itself must be
tried before the same tribunal; for is not living power superior to the
lifeless disclosures of the dissecting-knife or the torture-born phenomena of
vivisection?
That pathology as at present taught is arbitrary is quite evident. A child
suffering from membranous croup received, by the advice of the consulting
physician, Belladonna. To the astonishment of the attending doctor the
laryngeal spasms ceased, and he child rapidly recovered. Now, in the language
of pathology, croup is an inflammatory affection attended with the formation
of a pseudo-membrane. Transferring this definition to therapeutics we must
prescribe a drug which causes a false membrane. Teste says give Bryonia; Baehr
and Kafka, Iodine, because of their pathological relation. But such teachers
are just the drags who would tie us to Allopathy. The attending physician in
the case quoted agreed with them, and but for the
genuine prescription of counsel the little sufferer would have fallen a victim
to their eclecticism. It is true that there was a pathological condition in
which the Belladonna state closed, namely, the spasm of the glottis; but this
state was not de
terminable from the arbitrary study of croup but from the analytical study of
the individual case. Thus was formed a correct synthesis. It is not so that
our first duty is to our patient. Our first duty is to the truth, which, when
loyally served, best enables us to do the greatest good to the sick. We must
learn the undiscovered rules that regulate the profound workings of
our potentized drugs. We must extend our knowledge of the relations of
remedies. We must study physiology from our new standpoint. To aid us in our
labors, to at least start us in the right direction, we must .This unwholesome
fidelity to the researches of the old school is the legitimate result of
materialism, which believes only in the tangible. It obscures thought and
throws doubt over all interior mental operations. So long as we keep our minds
bound to the vague generalizations of the allopaths, we will never advance one
step forward, and will sooner or later, utterly discard what has already been
taught in the Organon. The only hope for genuine medicine is in the
unprejudiced investigation of high potencies. It is in their study that we
shall find the complex phenomena of diseased processes-phenomena which will
show pathology as now taught to be
a tissue of fallacies, however true are its disjointed facts. Until our united
efforts tend in this direction, we need not hope for the establishment of
Homoeopathy as a perfect art, much less as an exact science. rationally
comprehend and apply the rules which Hahnemann has left us.
from Farrington's Lesser Writings
Copyright: NIRVANA 2000/July12th. All rights reserved.