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§ 11 Fifth Edition
When
a person falls ill, it is only this spiritual, self acting (automatic)
vital force, everywhere present in his organism, that is primarily
deranged by the dynamic1 influence upon it of a morbific agent inimical to life;
it is only the vital force, deranged to such an abnormal state,
that can furnish the organism with its disagreeable sensations,
and incline it to the irregular processes which we call disease;
for, as a power invisible in itself, and only cognizable by its
effects on the organism, its morbid derangement only makes itself
known by the manifestation of disease in the sensations and functions
of those parts of the organism exposed to the senses of the observer
and physician, that is, by morbid symptoms, and in no other way
can it make itself known.
1 Materia peccans!
§ 11 Sixth Edition
When
a person falls ill, it is only this spiritual, self acting (automatic)
vital force, everywhere present in his organism, that is primarily
deranged by the dynamic1 influence upon it of a morbific agent inimical to life;
it is only the vital force, deranged to such an abnormal state,
that can furnish the organism with its disagreeable sensations,
and incline it to the irregular processes which we call disease;
for, as a power invisible in itself, and only cognizable by its
effects on the organism, its morbid derangement only makes itself
known by the manifestation of disease in the sensations and functions
of those parts of the organism exposed to the senses of the observer
and physician, that is, by morbid symptoms, and in no other way
can it make itself known.2
1 Materia peccans!
2 What is dynamic
influence, - dynamic power? Our earth, by virtue of a hidden invisible
energy, carries the moon around her in twenty-eight days and several
hours, and the moon alternately, in definite fixed hours (deducting
certain differences which occur with the full and new moon) raises
our northern seas to flood tide and again correspondingly lowers
them to ebb. Apparently this takes place not through material agencies,
not through mechanical contrivances, as are used for products of
human labor; and so we see numerous other events about us as results
of the action of one substance on another substance without being
able to recognize a sensible connection between cause and effect.
Only the cultured, practised in comparison and deduction, can form
for himself a kind of supra-sensual idea sufficient to keep all
that is material or mechanical in his thoughts from such concepts.
He calls such effects dynamic, virtual, that is, such as result
from absolute, specific, pure energy and action of he one substance
upon the other substance.
For instance,
the dynamic effect of the sick-making influences upon healthy man,
as well as the dynamic energy of the medicines upon the principle
of life in the restoration of health is nothing else than infection
and so not in any way material, not in any way mechanical. Just
as the energy of a magnet attracting a piece of iron or steel is
not material, not mechanical. One sees that the piece of iron is
attracted by one pole of the magnet, but how it is done is not seen.
This invisible energy of the magnet does not require mechanical
(material) auxiliary means, hook or lever, to attract the iron.
The magnet draws to itself and this acts upon the piece of iron
or upon a steel needle by means of a purely immaterial invisible,
conceptual, inherent energy, that is, dynamically, and communicates
to the steel needle the magnetic energy equally invisibly (dynamically).
The steel needle becomes itself magnetic, even at a distance when
the magnet does not touch it, and magnetises other steel needles
with the same magnetic property (dynamically) with which it had
been endowered previously by the magnetic rod, just as a child with
small-pox or measles communicates to a near, untouched healthy child
in an invisible manner (dynamically) the small-pox or measles, that
is, infects it at a distance without anything material from the
infective child going or capable of going to the one to be infected.
A purely specific conceptual influence communicated to the near
child small-pox or measles in the same way as the magnet communicated
to the near needle the magnetic property.
In a
similar way, the effect of medicines upon living man is to be judged.
Substances, which are used as medicines, are medicines only in so
far as they possess each its own specific energy to alter the well-being
of man through dynamic, conceptual influence, by means of the living
sensory fibre, upon the conceptual controlling principle of life.
The medicinal property of those material substances which we call
medicines proper, relates only to their energy to call out alterations
in the well-being of animal life. Only upon this conceptual principle
of life, depends their medicinal health-altering, conceptual (dynamic)
influence. Just as the nearness of a magnetic pole can communicate
only magnetic energy to the steel (namely, by a kind of infection)
but cannot communicate other properties (for instance, more hardness
or ductility, etc.). And thus every special medicinal substance
alters through a kind of infection, that well-being of man in a
peculiar manner exclusively its own and not in a manner peculiar
to another medicine, as certainly as the nearness of the child ill
with small-pox will communicate to a healthy child only small-pox
and not measles. These medicines act upon our well-being wholly
without communication of material parts of the medicinal substances,
thus dynamically, as if through infection. Far more healing energy
is expressed in a case in point by the smallest dose of the best
dynamized medicines, in which there can be, according to calculation,
only so little of material substance that its minuteness cannot
be thought and conceived by the best arithmetical mind, than by
large doses of the same medicine in substance. That smallest dose
can therefore contain almost entirely only the pure, freely-developed,
conceptual medicinal energy, and bring about only dynamically such
great effects as can never be reached by the crude medicinal substances
itself taken in large doses.
It is
not in the corporal atoms of these highly dynamized medicines, nor
their physical or mathematical surfaces (with which the higher energies
of the dynamized medicines are being interpreted but vainly as still
sufficiently material) that the medicinal energy is found. More
likely, there lies invisible in the moistened globule or in its
solution, an unveiled, liberated, specific, medicinal force contained
in the medicinal substance which acts dynamically by contact with
the living animal fibre upon the whole organism (without communicating
to it anything material however highly attenuated) and acts more
strongly the more free and more immaterial the energy has become
through the dynamization.
Is it
then so utterly impossible for our age celebrated for its wealth
in clear thinkers to think of dynamic energy as something non-corporeal,
since we see daily phenomena which cannot be explained in any other
manner? If one looks upon something nauseous and becomes inclined
to vomit, did a material emetic come into his stomach which compels
him to this anti-peristaltic movement? Was it not solely the dynamic
effect of the nauseating aspect upon his imagination? And if one
raises his arm, does it occur through a material visible instrument?
a lever? Is it not solely the conceptual dynamic energy of his will
which raises it?
§ 12 Fifth Edition
It is
the morbidly affected vital force alone that produces disease1,
so that the morbid phenomena perceptible to our senses express at
the same time all the internal change, that is to say, the whole
morbid derangement of the internal dynamis; in a word, they reveal
the whole disease; consequently, also, the disappearance under treatment
of all the morbid phenomena and of all the morbid alterations that
differ from the healthy vital operations, certainly affects and
necessarily implies the restoration of the integrity of the vital
force and, therefore, the recovered health of the whole organism.
1 How the vital
force causes the organism to display morbid phenomena, that is,
how it produces disease, it would be of no practical utility to
the physician to know, and will forever remain concealed from him;
only what it is necessary for him to know of the disease and what
is fully sufficient for enabling him to cure it, has the Lord of
life revealed to his senses
§ 12 Sixth Edition
It is
the morbidly affected vital energy alone that produces disease1,
so that the morbid phenomena perceptible to our senses express at
the same time all the internal change, that is to say, the whole
morbid derangement of the internal dynamis; in a word, they reveal
the whole disease; consequently, also, the disappearance under treatment
of all the morbid phenomena and of all the morbid alterations that
differ from the healthy vital operations, certainly affects and
necessarily implies the restoration of the integrity of the vital
force and, therefore, the recovered health of the whole organism.
1 How the vital
force causes the organism to display morbid phenomena, that is,
how it produces disease, it would be of no practical utility to
the physician to know, and will forever remain concealed from him;
only what it is necessary for him to know of the disease and what
is fully sufficient for enabling him to cure it, has the Lord of
life revealed to his senses
§ 13
Therefore
disease (that does not come within the province of manual surgery)
considered, as it is by the allopathists, as a thing separate from
the living whole, from the organism and its animating vital force,
and hidden in the interior, be it ever so subtle a character, is
an absurdity, that could only be imagined by minds of a materialistic
stamp, and has for thousands of years given to the prevailing system
of medicine all those pernicious impulses that have made it a truly
mischievous (non-healing) art.
§ 14
There
is, in the interior of man, nothing morbid that is curable and no
invisible morbid alteration that is curable which does not make
itself known to the accurately observing physicians by means of
morbid signs and symptoms - an arrangement in perfect conformity
with the infinite goodness of the all-wise Preserver of human life.
§ 15 Fifth Edition
The affection
of the morbidly deranged, spirit-like dynamis (vital force) that
animates our body in the invisible interior, and the totality of
the outwardly cognizable symptoms produced by it in the organism
and representing the existing malady, constitute a whole; they are
one and the same. The organism is indeed the material instrument
of the life, but it is not conceivable without the animation imparted
to it by the instinctively perceiving and regulating vital force
(just as the vital force is not conceivable without the organism),
consequently the two together constitute a unity, although in thought
our mind separates this unity into two distinct conceptions for
the sake of facilitating the comprehension of it.
§ 15 Sixth Edition
The affection
of the morbidly deranged, spirit-like dynamis (vital force) that
animates our body in the invisible interior, and the totality of
the outwardly cognizable symptoms produced by it in the organism
and representing the existing malady, constitute a whole; they are
one and the same. The organism is indeed the material instrument
of the life, but it is not conceivable without the animation imparted
to it by the instinctively perceiving and regulating dynamis, just
as the vital force is not conceivable without the organism, consequently
the two together constitute a unity, although in thought our mind
separates this unity into two distinct conceptions for the sake
of easy comprehension.
§ 16 Fifth Edition
Our vital
force, as a spirit-like dynamis, cannot be attacked and affected
by injurious influences on the healthy organism caused by the external
inimical forces that disturb the harmonious play of life, otherwise
than in a spirit-like (dynamic) way, and in like manner, all such
morbid derangements (diseases) cannot be removed from it by the
physician in any other way than by the spirit-like (dynamic1, virtual) alterative powers of the serviceable medicines
acting upon our spirit-like vital force, which perceives them through
the medium of the sentient faculty of the nerves everywhere present
in the organism, so that it is only by their dynamic action on the
vital force that remedies are able to re-establish and do actually
re-establish health and vital harmony, after the changes in the
health of the patient cognizable by our senses (the totality of
the symptoms) have revealed the disease to the carefully observing
and investigating physician as fully as was requisite in order to
enable him to cure it.
1 Most severe disease
may be produced by sufficient disturbance of the vital force through
the imagination and also cured by the same means.
§ 16 Sixth Edition
Our vital
force, as a spirit-like dynamis, cannot be attacked and affected
by injurious influences on the healthy organism caused by the external
inimical forces that disturb the harmonious play of life, otherwise
than in a spirit-like (dynamic) way, and in like manner, all such
morbid derangements (diseases) cannot be removed from it by the
physician in any other way than by the spirit-like (dynamic1, virtual) alterative powers of the serviceable medicines
acting upon our spirit-like vital force, which perceives them through
the medium of the sentient faculty of the nerves everywhere present
in the organism, so that it is only by their dynamic action on the
vital force that remedies are able to re-establish and do actually
re-establish health and vital harmony, after the changes in the
health of the patient cognizable by our senses (the totality of
the symptoms) have revealed the disease to the carefully observing
and investigating physician as fully as was requisite in order to
enable him to cure it.
1 Most severe disease
may be produced by sufficient disturbance of the vital force through
the imagination and also cured by the same means.
§ 17 Fifth Edition
Now,
as in the cure effected by the removal of the whole of the perceptible
signs and symptoms of the disease the internal alteration of the
vital force to which the disease is due - consequently the whole
of the disease - is at the same time removed,1 it follows that the physician has only to remove the
whole of the symptoms in order, at the same time, to abrogate and
annihilate the internal change, that is to say, the morbid derangement
of the vital force - consequently the totality of the disease, the
disease itself.2
But when the disease is annihilated the health is restored, and
this is the highest, the sole aim of the physician who knows the
true object of his mission, which consists not in learned - sounding
prating, but in giving aid to the sick.
1 A warning dream,
a superstitious fancy, or a solemn prediction that death would occur
at a certain day or at a certain hour, has not unfrequently produced
all the signs of commencing and increasing disease, of approaching
death and death itself at the hour announced, which could not happen
without the simultaneous production of the inward change (corresponding
to the state observed internally); and hence in such cases all the
morbid signs indicative of approaching death have frequently been
dissipated by an identical cause, by some cunning deception or persuasion
to a belief in the contrary, and health suddenly restored, which
could not have happened without the removal, by means of this mortal
remedy, of the internal and external morbid change that threatened
death.
2 It is only thus
that God the preserver of mankind, could reveal His wisdom and goodness
in reference to the cure of the disease to which man is liable here
below, by showing to the physician what he had to remove in disease
in order to annihilate them and thus re-establish health. But what
would we think of His wisdom and goodness if He has shrouded in
mysterious obscurity that which was to be cured in diseases (as
is asserted by the dominant school of medicine, which affects to
possess a supernatural insight into the nature of things), and shut
it up in the hidden interior, and thus rendered it impossible for
man to know the malady accurately, consequently impossible for him
to cure it?
§ 17 Sixth Edition
Now,
as in the cure effected by the removal of the whole of the perceptible
signs and symptoms of the disease the internal alteration of the
vital principle to which the disease is due - consequently the whole
of the disease - is at the same time removed,1 it follows that the physician has only to remove the
whole of the symptoms in order, at the same time, to abrogate and
annihilate the internal change, that is to say, the morbid derangement
of the vital force - consequently the totality of the disease, the
disease itself.2
But when the disease is annihilated the health is restored, and
this is the highest, the sole aim of the physician who knows the
true object of his mission, which consists not in learned - sounding
prating, but in giving aid to the sick.
1 A warning dream,
a superstitious fancy, or a solemn prediction that death would occur
at a certain day or at a certain hour, has not unfrequently produced
all the signs of commencing and increasing disease, of approaching
death and death itself at the hour announced, which could not happen
without the simultaneous production of the inward change (corresponding
to the state observed internally); and hence in such cases all the
morbid signs indicative of approaching death have frequently been
dissipated by an identical cause, by some cunning deception or persuasion
to a belief in the contrary, and health suddenly restored, which
could not have happened without the removal, by means of this mortal
remedy, of the internal and external morbid change that threatened
death.
2 It is only thus
that God the preserver of mankind, could reveal His wisdom and goodness
in reference to the cure of the disease to which man is liable here
below, by showing to the physician what he had to remove in disease
in order to annihilate them and thus re-establish health. But what
would we think of His wisdom and goodness if He has shrouded in
mysterious obscurity that which was to be cured in diseases (as
is asserted by the dominant school of medicine, which affects to
possess a supernatural insight into the nature of things), and shut
it up in the hidden interior, and thus rendered it impossible for
man to know the malady accurately, consequently impossible for him
to cure it?
§ 18 Fifth Edition
From
this indubitable truth, that besides the totality of the symptoms
nothing can by any means be discovered in disease wherewith they
could express their need of aid, it follows undeniably that the
sum of all the symptoms in each individual case of disease must
be the sole indication, the sole guide to direct us in the choice
of a remedy.
§ 18 Sixth Edition
From
this indubitable truth, that besides the totality of the symptoms
with consideration of the accompanying modalities (§ 5) nothing
can by any means be discovered in disease wherewith they could express
their need of aid, it follows undeniably that the sum of all the
symptoms and conditions in each individual case of disease must
be the sole indication, the sole guide to direct us in the choice
of a remedy.
§ 19
Now,
as diseases are nothing more than alterations in the state of health
of the healthy individual which express themselves by morbid signs,
and the cure is also only possible by a change to the healthy condition
of the state of health of the diseased individual, it is very evident
that medicines could never cure disease if they did not possess
the power of altering man’s state of health which depends on sensations
and functions; indeed, that their curative power must be owing solely
to this power they possess of altering man’s state of health.
§ 20 Fifth edition
This
spirit-like power to alter man’s state of health (and hence to cure
diseases) which lies hidden in the inner nature of medicines can
never be discovered by us by a mere effort of reason; it is only
by experience of the phenomena it displays when acting on the state
of health of man that we can become clearly cognizant of it.
§ 20 Sixth edition
This
spirit-like power to alter man’s state of health (and hence to cure
diseases) which lies hidden in the inner nature of medicines can
in itself never be discovered by us by a mere effort of reason;
it is only by experience of the phenomena it displays when acting
on the state of health of man that we can become clearly cognizant
of it.
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