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Homeopathy Principles
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| Every science has certain fundamental principles
which guide the whole system. Homeopathy
as a science of medical treatment has a philosophy of its
own and its therapeutics is based on certain fundamental principles.
These are:
- Law of Similia
- Law of Simplex
- Law of Minimum
- Doctrine of Drug Proving
- Theory of Chronic Disease
- Theory of Vital Force
- Doctrine of Drug-Dynamisation
These fundamental principles are elaborated in the following
sections. |
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Law of Similia
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| Homeopathy
is a system of medicine founded on a definite law 'Similia
Similibus Curantur' which means 'like cures like'. The word
Homeopathy is a Greek derivation where 'homeos' means 'similar
and pathos means 'suffering'. So Homeopathy may be defined
as the therapeutic method of symptom-similarity. The recognition
of this law was there even before Hahnemann. Paracelus, Hippocrates,
and ancient ayurvedic texts have on occasions mentioned this
law. But it was Hahnemann who recognized the universality
of this law and lifted it from oblivion to make it the basis
of a complete system of medicine.
According to this system, the choice of the medicine is fundamentally
based on the principle that the medicine must have the capability
of producing most similar symptoms of the disease to be cured
in healthy persons. In aphorism 26 of 'Organon of Medicine',
Hahnemann states this law: "A weaker dynamic affection
is permanently extinguished in the living organism by a stronger
one, if the latter (whilst differing in kind) is very similar
to the former in its manifestations." |
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Law of Simplex - The Single Remedy
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| Hahnemann in aphorisms 272-274 of ' Organon
of Medicine' states that only one single, simple medicinal
substance is to be administered in a given case of time. This
is due to the following reasons:
- The homeopathic remedies
were proved singly, and the Materia
Medica was built up on the observed effects of drugs
given singly, either in planned provings or in accidental
provings.
- Only one remedy can be the most similar at any given time
to the condition of any given patient.
- Moreover, if more than one remedy is used the doctor will
never know which element was curative and our source of
future guidance is obscured.
- If more than one drug is given in one prescription the
possibility of synergistic action cannot be ruled out, but
it cannot be argued that the effect will be the sum total
of the effects of the separate drugs. The ingredient drugs
may even result in interactions that may have adverse effects
in the body. A mixture of more than one remedy in a single
dose would constitute a new remedy which would require to
be proved as such for a proper estimate of its probable
effects.
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Law of Minimum
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| The suitableness of a medicine for any given
case does not depend on its accurate homeopathic selection
alone, but likewise on the proper size of dose too. Under
this principle we give medicine to the patients in very minute
doses. The minute dose means that quantity of a medicine which
is though smallest in quantity produces the least possible
excitation of the vital force and yet sufficient to effect
the necessary change in it(§ 246). The quantity is minimum,
yet appropriate, for a gentle remedial effect. This concept
of minimum dose lead to the discovery of a practical process
called potentisation. Administration of the minimum dose has
the following advantages:
- To avoid unwanted aggravation
- The specific dynamic action which produces the uncommon,
characteristic, distinguished symptoms of the drug, is produced
by the minimum quantity of drug.
- The smallness of the dose does not allow the drug to do
any organic damage nor there is any risk of drug addiction
and drug effects.
- The concept of minimum dose can be verified by Arndt-Schultz
law that small doses stimulate, medium doses paralyze and
large doses kill. I other words, the action of small and
very large doses of the same substance on living matter
is opposite.
- The Law of Least Action, formulated by Maupertius, the
French mathematician, states : "The quantity of action
necessary to affect any change in nature is the least possible,
the decisive amount is always a minimum, an infinitesimal."
Health is a matter of perfect equilibrium, perfect balance,
trifling circumstances may sway it, and so may it be balanced
by the least possible in medication. |
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