| Part 5: Dual
Nature of Disease
Dr. Hahnemann's medical system
is replete with dynamic or functional dualities that derive from
the fundamental duality of our life force, which itself is a reflection
of the duality built into nature herself. One duality that Hahnemann
discovered is the dual nature of disease, namely between those diseases
that have a constant wesen or nature, which he termed the primary
diseases, and those that have a variable nature, which he termed
secondary diseases. The constancy of the primary diseases permits
a specific medicine to be found for them, one that is always the
same for the same disease, regardless of the person or their symptoms.
However, the individual, or variable nature (wesen) diseases have
individual specifics, that is to say that the specific medicine
is to be individually determined in each case depending on the particular
symptoms of the disease as it emerges out of the primary disease
in interaction with the constitution of the patient.
Thus, for example, all patients
with measles should receive the specific medicine for measles, Morbillinum.
However, if this is not done, then the measles disease will give
rise to a secondary, variable nature disease that is not predictable
in a given case, but needs to be determined by waiting for the symptom
picture, the image of the disease, to emerge in each case. In one
chickenpox case the symptom picture might point to Antimonium
crudum, and in another case, to Pulsatilla.
In most primary diseases, the number
of initial secondary diseases that emerge is limited, which allows
for general lists of possible medicines for those diseases as one
finds in most first-aid and home handbooks. While epidemics reduce
the number of diseases likely to emerge given their intensity, even
here there can be a number of remedies possible, as Dr. Hahnemann
discovered in the case of scarlet fever.
This important distinction between
the types of disease is made by Dr. Hahnemann very early on in his
Heilkunst writings, most notably in the 1796 essay, Essay on
New Principle for Ascertaining the Curative Power of Drugs and
The Medicine of Experience of 1805, the precursor to the
aphoristic Organon.
It is only the very great simplicity
and constancy of [constant nature diseases, such as] ague and syphilis
that permitted remedies to be found for them, [that] are, however,
probably specific in both diseases... Our great and intelligent
observers of disease have seen the truth of this too well, to require
that I should dwell longer on this subject.
Now, when I entirely deny that
there are any absolute specifics for individual diseases, in their
full extent, as they are described in ordinary works on pathology,
I am, on the other hand, convinced that there are as many specifics
as there are different states of individual diseases, i.e., that
there are peculiar specifics for the pure disease [tonic], and others
for its varieties [pathic], and for other abnormal states of the
system." (Lesser Writings, p. 260-261, bold and parentheses
added).
We observe a few diseases that
always arise from one and the same cause, e.g., the miasmatic maladies;
hydrophobia, the venereal disease, the plague of the Levant, yellow
fever, smallpox, cow-pox, the measles and some others, which bear
upon them the distinctive mark of always remaining diseases of a
peculiar character; and, because they arise from a contagious principle
that always remains the same, they also always retain the same character
and pursue the same course, excepting as regards some accidental
circumstances, which however do not alter their essential character.
These few diseases, at all events
those first mentioned (the miasmatic), we may therefore term specific,
and when necessary bestow upon them distinctive appellations.
If a remedy has been discovered
for one of these, it will always be able to cure it, for such a
disease always remains essentially identical in its manifestations
(the representatives of its internal nature) and in its cause.
All the other innumerable diseases
exhibit such a difference in their phenomena that we may safely
assert that they arise from a combination of several dissimilar
causes (varying in number and differing in history and intensity).
Hence it happens that with the
exception of those few diseases that are always the same [tonic],
all others are dissimilar [pathic], and innumerable, and so different
that each of them occurs scarcely more than once in the world, and
each case of disease that presents itself must be regarded (and
treated) as an individual malady that never before occurred in the
same manner, and under the same circumstances as in the case before
us, and will never again happen precisely in the same way! (Medicine
of Experience, Lesser Writings, p. 440-442, bold added)
The primary diseases are due to
a particular cause, such as a physical or emotional trauma, an infectious
disease agent (wesen), a drug or even a false belief or "superstition"
(footnote to Aphorism 17), derived from what Dr. Hahnemann termed
the "highest disease" - ignorance, or lack of knowing.
These primary diseases are identified by the cause, where
known, and, as we shall later see, for each of these diseases, there
is a specific medicine. Since the disease wesen remains the same,
such as in the case of the measles or a contusion disease (as Dr.
Hahnemann termed it), the curative similar medicine also remains
the same. This Dr. Hahnemann expressed by the principle he formally
set out in 1817 (Examination of the Sources of the Common Materia
Medica): Only for a want of
a constant character can we suppose a supply of a constant character.
In this important essay, Hahnemann
further sets out the dual nature of disease:
These few diseases, at all events
those first mentioned (the miasmatic), we may therefore term specific,
and when necessary bestow on them distinctive appellations.
If a remedy has been discovered
for one of these, it will always be able to cure it, for such a
disease always remains essentially identical, both in its manifestations
(the representatives of its internal nature) and in its cause. (Lesser
Writings, p. 440)
By an infinite number of trials
of all imaginable simple substances used in domestic practice, in
a well-defined disease, which shall constantly present the same
characters, a true, certainly efficacious, specific remedy for the
greater number of individuals and their friends suffering from the
same disease might certainly be discovered, though only casu fortuito...
...The constant specific remedies in these few diseases were capable
of being discovered by means of trying every imaginable medicinal
substance, only because the thing to be cured, the disease, was
of a constant character; - they are diseases which always remain
the same; some are produced by a miasm which constitutes the same
through all generations, such as the venereal disease; others have
the same exciting causes, as the ague of marshy districts, the goitre
of the inhabitants of deep valleys and their outlets, and the bruises
caused by falls and blows…
Only for a want of a constant character
can we suppose a supply of a constant character.
That it was requisite, in order
to find out empirically the proper remedy, that all diseases, for
which the specific was sought should be identical and preserve an
invariable fixed character, appears not to only have been surmised,
but to have been deeply felt by the medical community of the old
school. They imagined that they must represent to themselves the
various diseases of humanity in certain fixed forms, before they
could hope to discover for each a suitable, trustworthy remedy,
and this (as they knew no other better — scientific —
way of finding the fitting medicine in diseases) by means of experimenting
on them with all possible drugs, - a method which had succeeded
so well in the few fixed diseases above alluded to." (Lesser
Writings, pp. 687-689)
It is important to note that each
of the primary diseases could give rise to secondary diseases as
a result of the interaction of the initial disease wesen with the
human wesen. Which secondary diseases emerge in a given person out
of a primary disease depends on the nature of that person, and thus,
such diseases are of a variable nature, as they are relative to
the circumstances of each person. For such diseases, the medicine
is not specific, but individual, and must be determined through
the symptom picture alone, which is the basis for homeopathy.
This engenderment of secondary diseases out of the primary disease
is most clearly seen and described by Dr. Hahnemann in his work
on chronic diseases. Here Dr. Hahnemann distinguishes clearly between
the constant nature of the chronic miasms, as noted earlier, and
the variable nature of the secondary chronic diseases.
13.2 ... The Chronic Diseases,
which spring from miasms...
14.1... the chronic diseases arising
from miasms directly...
57.1 All chronic diseases of mankind...
must therefore all have for their origin and foundation static chronic
miasms...
183.1 ...then the slumbering psora
awakes and... one or another of the nameless (psoric) chronic diseases
breaks out...
243.1 ...psora... become internal
and... changed into chronic diseases of various kinds...*
243.1* Applied in
small dosage, sulphur, as one of the antipsoric medicines, will
not fail to make a brief beginning of a cure of the chronic (non-venereal
and therefore psoric) diseases...
The determination of the specific
remedy for the constant nature (wesen) diseases is not homeopathy,
but another form of the application of the law of similars. Since
the specific remedy is more similar than the individual remedy,
we know that there are degrees of similitude. We could say that
this initial similitude is "homo" as opposed to "homeo."
The term "homo" comes from Hahnemann's use in the Introduction
to the Organon of the term "homogenic" to refer
to constant nature diseases that relate to a particular disease
irritation, such as Arnica for contusion disease (bruises).
And given that the primary disease is the initial and fundamental
impingement, as Dr. Hahnemann terms it, of the generative power
of the Dynamis, we can say that it affects the soundness (gezondheit)
of the patient. This deranged soundness shows up in disturbed tone:
muscle tone, skin tone, lung tone, etc. Thus, we can say that the
primary, constant nature diseases are tonic diseases, and
that the approach to treatment of the primary diseases is homotonic,
whereas the approach to the treatment of the secondary diseases
is homeopathic.
A short note is in order here concerning
the terms medicine and remedy. Medicines are curative agents in
the case of disease (involving the law of similars), whereas remedies
are broader in nature and use. Thus, for example, the use of a vitamin
or mineral to remove a deficiency (imbalance) remedies the imbalance,
but involves the use of the law of opposites. We can thus say that
there are two forms of similar medicines, or simillimums.
Glossary Contribution 5
Tonic diseases:
Those diseases that have a constant,
fixed nature (wesen or essence) and are idiopathic (not caused by
another disease, but from a known disease cause); because of this
constancy of the wesen (or dynamic element) of such diseases, there
is a single medicine that will cure the disease once and always,
known as the specific remedy or specific. Tonic diseases are identified
normally by identification of the proximate cause, such as a blow
from a blunt instrument or object in contusion disease, the specific
of which is Arnica montana. Such diseases are limited in number and are to be
treated first. Tonic diseases can be given a distinctive name, because
of the constancy of their wesen, such as measles, cholera, tuberculosis,
syphilis.
Pathic diseases:
Those diseases that have a variable
wesen, and are created by the interaction of the initial tonic disease
wesen with the human wesen (generative power aspect), producing
secondary diseases. The curative medicine is determined by means
of the symptoms of the disease and the name of the disease is derived
from the curative medicine, such as a "Belladonna-like"
disease for a pathic disease cured by Belladonna.
Specifics or specific medicines:
Those medicines that are curative
in the case of tonic diseases, and generally chosen based on the
direct cause (genesis) of the disease.
Individual medicines:
Those medicines that are curative
of pathic diseases, and are generally chosen on the basis of the
symptoms produced in the patient by a given disease.
Simillimum:
The curative medicine based on
the law of similars, either of a specific nature for tonic diseases
or individual nature for pathic diseases.
Medicines:
The curative agent for disease,
whether tonic or pathic.
Remedies:
The medicine or other substance
or therapeutic approach that resolves the disease or imbalance.
# # #
Rudi Verspoor is Dean and Chair Department of Philosophy
Hahnemann College for Heilkunst, Ottawa. He served as the Director
of the British Institute of Homeopathy Canada from 1993 to early
2001 and helped to found and is still active in the National United
Professional Association of Trained Homeopaths (NUPATH) and the
Canadian/International Heilkunst Association (C/IHA).
Part of his time is spent advising the Canadian government on health-care
policy and in working for greater acceptance of and access to homeopathy.
His publications include:
Homeopathy Renewed, A Sequential Approach to the Treatment of
Chronic Illness (with Patty Smith);
A Time for Healing; Homeopathy Re-examined: Beyond the Classical
Paradigm (with Steven Decker);
The Dynamic Legacy: Hahnemann from Homeopathy to Heilkunst
(with Steven Decker).
Visit his website at http://www.heilkunst.com/ |