| Nature advances by continuous differentiation, while
impatient man, wishing to progress
more rapidly, tries his own artificial ways. The former moves along
inherent lines and
powers, amenable to modification, but rebellious to man's fiat.
He has indeed preached
theoretical equality but has not been able to actually stand equally
upon such a basis.
There is an increasing pandering to the emotions, the faculty
which links us so effectually to
the animal kingdom, that bodes no good to future society unless
the light of higher reason
shall come to the rescue. What we call civilisation has been so
permeated by this insidious
thing that only a great convulsion can set us right and prevent
social retrogression. We must
remember that nature is inflexible and neither forgives nor forgets.
The man who would burst his bonds and develop his inner self Invariably
runs the risk of
being disciplined and put in great peril by uncomprehending mediocrities.
The idea that such
an one can be only himself and not an imitation of some one else
comes as a painful shock to
such persons. This state of things we call civilisation and culture,
which it must in reality be,
for have we not made it and named it Ourselves?
Hahnemann was one of the illuminati who dared blaze the way to
new fields of human
endeavour, for which act he earned the lasting scorn and hatred
of entrenched privilege, and
we, his lineal successors, are still feeling the blows which were
aimed at him. We are still
made to feel that we are men apart, because we will not bow to authority,
to privilege and to
regularity. The freedom we crave is hedged about by the little minds
of precedent,
scholasticism and materialism. The air we would breathe is saturated
with medical
agnosticism or open therapeutic nihilism as intolerant in its own
conceits as the Pharisees
ever were. The leaders of this age are the slaves of materialism
whose fruitage certainly does
not fall beyond their own shadows. The laws of universal harmony,
of which similia is an
exemplification, are beyond their grasp because, forsooth, they
can not be dissected out, seen
under the microscope or grown in test tubes. They are true doubting
Thomases and the
disproportion which exists between the amount of energy expended
in their investigations
and the beneficial results obtained is out of all reason and will
so remain until medical
schools shall have courage enough to give a very full course in
general philosophy as well as
an ample course in the homeopathic application of the same. Then
the question of the union
of the schools will take care of itself.
Whatever our educational standards may be it can not be denied
that successful practice
depends upon certain more or less fully developed innate faculties,
and that our present
methods of training do but little to upbuild them and thus make
real healers of the sick.
Because of inaptness or faulty instruction these men never get a
true grasp of the meaning of
a cure and what leads up to it.
It can not be said of the student, caught in the modern whirl
of education, that he is taught
how to think and reflect; and if there be no correct thinking there
can be no accurate or
intensive reasoning. As I have said before, the trouble lies largely
in our general educational
system, and it is quite unreasonable to expect immature minds to
reach just and mature
conclusions when older heads have not taken the time and pains to
grasp the real meaning of
our work. If I were to place before you an apple and a diamond,
asking you, a stranger to
both, to choose the one which must ultimately be of the most benefit
to you, it would be just
as reasonable a procedure as what we are now doing. Is it then strange
that in their confusion
most of our young men have, with the very best of intentions, nevertheless
chosen
mistakenly.
What then is to be done? Objective teaching under the guidance
of experienced experts
along with the most thorough instruction in the philosophy of cure
is the only course that
will make the proper appeal and achieve proportionate results. The
neglect of either of these
factors will be fatal, while their balanced co-ordination will meet
every exigency that can
arise. Then will the graduate leave school so well equipped that
only his conscience can
decide whether he will really cure or only palliate the sick.
The student can and must be made to see the difference between
spontaneous recovery, due
to the recuperative powers of unfettered nature, and the cures wrought
when the similimum
releases or converts stored energy within the vital organism. The
former inches back to
recovery, as it were, while the latter comes back with an unmistakable
snap and vigour.
When he once sees this he can also be taught how and along what
lines he may also do it.
The human economy is a vital organism with properties of a dynamic
nature, whose full
control involves an exceptional com-pass of skill. It is not enough
that the operator should
know how to cut here or adjust there, he must also be able to visualise
the wellspring of
morbid action from the multitudinous phenomena which come before
him. Each disease
picture must for him have its own centrum from which spring a multitude
of symptoms,
objective, subjective, diagnostic and characteristic, but all having
but one combination which
inevitably links it to the central nervous system and the mind beyond.
Such a combination
contains particular landmarks which make it peculiar to itself;
nor can we forecast what
these should or should not be, for the all-sufficient reason that
every individuality has its
own way of expressing itself, which way must be learned if we wish
to cure. To enter into a
detailed account of how nature speaks out her distress is beyond
the scope of this paper; let it
suffice to say that he who would guide her must know how to lead
and not attempt to drive,
for her
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