Today we assemble in this beautiful city of Rochester
and at the same time mark the quarter century of our existence as
a society; the vicissitudes thro' which the Association has passed
in these years have largely been those inherent to young organisations
and now that the storms have been weathered, we count it an uncommon
privilege to be able to do our duty toward you as an united body
giving the fairest promise of future usefulness in keeping and propagating
pure Homeopathy. The spirit bequeathed us by the fathers of our
science and their immediate successors among whom we number many
of the founders of this association is alive and active in our midst
and will remain so as long as we make the cure of the sick our chief
aim; should the day ever dawn when political preferment, honors
or the applause of the multitude appeals to us more than the cry
of the distressed we will go into deserved oblivion.
The year just passed has been marked by gratifying concessions
on the part of some of our
colleges in adding Hahnemannian teachers to their faculties; this
step cannot fail to do great
good and we should avail ourselves of it whenever practicable.
No open overtures for a union with the senior society have been
received; an amicable
rivalry will do both bodies good, especially as we do not feel constrained
to agree that we
may cure homoeopathically. Homeopathy is a science resting upon
the natural law of
similia, the law of action and reaction or it is nothing and one
of the greatest delusions that
has ever taken hold of human mind; if it is a science the word may
has no place in its
nomenclature, if it is only a tentative method the very term Homeopathy
is indefensible.
Unfortunately for all such weak-kneed enunciation’s and their
oracles the rapid advances of
scientific investigation are about to make a laughing stock of them;
to all desirous of
becoming more proficient in the application of the law this society
extends the right hand of
welcome, others will hardly here find a congenial atmosphere. It
is with gratification that we
note a considerable increase in the number of converts from the
old school of practice
especially of late, and also that these men are usually satisfied
with nothing less than pure
Homeopathy. This should be an object lesson to all inclined toward
amalgamation or
liberalism, for it seems that many are not yet able to distinguish
between freedom and
license of practice.
I have elsewhere refuted the implication of the late Dr. Hughes
that part of Hahnemann's
symptoms in the Chronic Diseases were obtained ab usu in morbis
as stated on page eight of
Dr. Hughes' prefatory note to the Chronic Diseases, the Dr. Gross
therein mentioned
distinctly states on page 15 of Vol. 1. of the All. H. Z. that the
pathogeneses of the Carbons,
Lycopodium and some others were obtained by provings of the high
and highest potencies
on healthy persons; elsewhere he states that these potencies elicit
primary symptoms almost
exclusively and are therefore of highest value.
Bönninghausen in his Aphorisms of Hippocrates tells us that
his first curative experiments
with high potencies were made upon animals, and Gross relates the
effect of a high potency
of Veratrum album upon flies at the same time using control experiments
with unmedicated
pellets thus bringing out the characteristic drug effect very fully.
Bönninghausen in the same work page 416 also points out the
fad that the best antidote to a
drug disease is a very high potency of the same remedy given in
repeated doses; but in order
to avoid unpleasant results he found it necessary to change the
potency a little with each
dose. He does not however stop to discuss its homeopathicity. This
may be useful
information to the isopathic antidotalists who have plagued us somewhat
in the past.
It affords more than passing pleasure to note that the spirit
of fairness and absence of bias in
looking at all questions has at last extended to and is gaining
ground with increasing
momentum in the medical profession. Homeopathy has nothing to lose
from such a
movement and will most assuredly gain much; the benefit derived
must however largely
depend upon our ability to seize upon and make the best of the opportunity.
To the end that
we may meet the emergency fully equipped we should leave no stone
unturned to make our
graduates equal to the best that may be turned out by any school,
plus Homeopathicians; for
after all we must bear in mind that breadth of knowledge will in
the end count for much and
will help to attract the thinkers to us, the others will come of
their own volition according to
their light. lt is better that most should come from conviction,
for then they will contain the
seeds of progress and advance our science along lines leading to
final victory. To hasten this
I would earnestly recommend the study of the early fathers in Homeopathy.
Beside the
standard works of Hahnemann those of Bönninghausen, especially
his Aphorisms of
Hippocrates should be carefully read and studied; it will help the
young student over many a
hard place and put weapons of defence in his hands which no antagonist
will long despise.
While on this subject I cannot do better than call attention to
the grave deficiency in powers of observation which many of our
younger men display; this especially unfits them for taking the
case properly, and thus nullifies a very large part of their otherwise
good instruction. You that sit here before me will, I know, appreciate
the gravity of such a position keenly when you reflect upon the
time it has taken you to become proficient in this most essential
part of the physician's education. During our college days little
or no stress was laid upon this subject, in fact I seriously doubt
whether any of us had the matter brought to our attention at all.
With such instruction we must cease to wonder that habits of generalisation
from insufficient premises have fastened themselves upon the profession.
The wonder is rather that true inductive reasoning has survived
at all; in all probability it would not have done so had not scientific
habits of thought percolated into the homeopathic student body from
the educational world in general. To foster and develop such powers
I would particularly call your attention to the great benefit to
be derived from the study of botany which should be encouraged in
every way as it especially develops the power of observation and
has a many sided and definite relation to the systematic study of
Materia Medica.
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