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§ 141
But the
best provings of the pure effects of simple medicines in altering
the human health, and of the artificial diseases and symptoms they
are capable of developing in the healthy individual, are those which
the healthy, unprejudiced and sensitive physician institutes on
himself with all the caution and care here enjoined. He knows with
the greatest certainty the things he has experienced in his own
person.1
1 Those trials made
by the physician on himself have for him other and inestimable advantages.
In the first place, the great truth that the medicinal virtue of
all drugs, whereon depends their curative power, lies in the changes
of health he has himself undergone from the medicines he has proved,
and the morbid states he has himself experienced from them, becomes
for him an incontrovertible fact. Again by such noteworthy observations
on himself he will be brought to understand his own sensations,
his mode of thinking and his disposition (the foundation of all
true wisdom ————), and he will be also trained to be, what every
physician ought to be, a good observer. All our observations on
others are not nearly so interesting as those made on ourselves.
The observer of others must always dread lest the experimenter did
not feel exactly what he said, or lest he did not describe his sensations
with the most appropriate expressions. He must always remain in
doubt whether he has not been deceived, at least to some extent.
These obstacles to the knowledge of the truth, which can never be
thoroughly surmounted in our investigations of the artificial morbid
symptoms that occur in others from the ingestion of medicines, cease
entirely when we make the trials on ourselves. He who makes these
trials on himself knows for certain what he has felt, and each trial
is a new inducement for him to investigate the powers of other medicines.
He thus becomes more and more practised in the art of observing,
of such importance to the physician, by continuing to observe himself,
the one on whom he can most rely and who will never deceive him;
and this he will do all the more zealously as these experiments
on himself promise to give him a reliable knowledge of the true
value and significance of the instruments of cure that are still
to a great degree unknown to our art. Let it not be imagined that
such slight indispositions caused by taking medicines for the purpose
of proving them can be in the main injurious to the health. Experience
shows on the contrary, that the organism of the prover becomes,
by these frequent attacks on his health, all the more expert in
repelling all external influences inimical to his frame and all
artificial and natural morbific noxious agents, and becomes more
hardened to resist everything of an injurious character, by means
of these moderate experiments on his own person with medicines.
His health becomes more unalterable; he becomes more robust, as
all experience shows.
§ 142
But how
some symptoms1 of the simple medicine employed for a curative purpose
can be distinguished amongst the symptoms of the original malady,
even in diseases, especially in those of a chronic character that
usually remain unaltered, is a subject appertaining to the higher
art of judgement, and must be left exclusively to masters in observation.
1 Symptoms which,
during the whole course of the disease, might have been observed
only a long time previously, or never before, consequently new ones,
belonging to the medicine.
§ 143
If we
have thus tested on the healthy individual a considerable number
of simple medicines and carefully and faithfully registered all
the disease elements and symptoms they are capable of developing
as artificial disease-producers, then only have we a true materia
medica - a collection of real, pure, reliable1
modes of action of simple medicinal substances, a volume of the
book of nature, wherein is recorded a considerable array of the
peculiar changes of the health and symptoms ascertained to belong
to each of the powerful medicines, as they were revealed to the
attention of the observer, in which the likeness of the (homoeopathic)
disease elements of many natural diseases to be hereafter cured
by them are present, which, in a word, contain artificial morbid
states, that furnish for the similar natural morbid states the only
true, homoeopathic, that is to say, specific, therapeutic instruments
for effecting their certain and permanent cure.
1 Latterly it has
been the habit to entrust the proving of medicines to unknown persons
at a distance, who were paid for their work, and the formation so
obtained was printed. But by so doing, the work which is of all
others the most important, which is to form the basis of the only
true healing art, and which demands the greatest moral certainty
and trustworthiness seems to me, I regret to say, to become doubtful
and uncertain in its results and to lose all value.
§ 144
From
such a materia medica everything that is conjectural, all that is
mere assertion or imaginary should be strictly excluded; everything
should be the pure language of nature carefully and honestly interrogated.
§ 145 Fifth Edition
Of a
truth, it is only by a very considerable store of medicines accurately
known in respect of these their pure modes of action in altering
the health of man, that we can be placed in a position to discover
a homoeopathic remedy, a suitable artificial (curative) morbific
analogue for each of the infinitely numerous morbid states in nature,
for every malady in the world.1 In the meantime, even now - thanks to the truthful character
of the symptoms, and to the abundance of disease elements which
every one of the powerful medicinal substances has already shown
in its action on the healthy body - but few disease remain, for
which a tolerably suitable homoeopathic remedy may not be met with
among those now proved as to their pure action,2 which, without much disturbance, restores health in
a gentle, sure and permanent manner - infinitely more surely and
safely than can be effected by all the general and special therapeutics
of the old allopathic medical art with its unknown composite remedies,
which do but alter and aggravate but cannot cure chronic diseases,
and rather retard than promote recovery from acute diseases.
1 At first, I was
the only person who made the provings of the pure powders of medicines
the most important of his occupations. Since then I have been assisted
in this by some young men, who instituted experiments on themselves,
and whose observations I have critically revised. Following these
some genuine work of this kind was done by a few others. But what
shall we not be able to effect in the way of curing in the whole
extent of the infinitely large domain of disease, when numbers of
accurate and trustworthy observers shall have rendered their services
in enriching this, the only true materia medica, by careful experiments
on themselves! The healing art will then come near the mathematical
sciences in certainty.
2 See the second
note to §109.
§ 145 Sixth Edition
Of a
truth, it is only by a very considerable store of medicines accurately
known in respect of these their pure modes of action in altering
the health of man, that we can be placed in a position to discover
a homoeopathic remedy, a suitable artificial (curative) morbific
analogue for each of the infinitely numerous morbid states in nature,
for every malady in the world.1
In the meantime, even now - thanks to the truthful character of
the symptoms, and to the abundance of disease elements which every
one of the powerful medicinal substances has already shown in its
action on the healthy body - but few disease remain, for which a
tolerably suitable homoeopathic remedy may not be met with among
those now proved as to their pure action,2
which, without much disturbance, restores health in a gentle, sure
and permanent manner - infinitely more surely and safely than
can be effected by all the general and special therapeutics of the
old allopathic medical art with its unknown composite remedies,
which do but alter and aggravate but cannot cure chronic diseases,
and rather retard than promote recovery from acute diseases and
frequently endanger life.
1 At first, about
forty years ago, I was the only person who made the provings of
the pure powders of medicines the most important of his occupations.
Since then I have been assisted in this by some young men, who instituted
experiments on themselves, and whose observations I have critically
revised. Following these some genuine work of this kind was done
by a few others. But what shall we not be able to effect in the
way of curing in the whole extent of the infinitely large domain
of disease, when numbers of accurate and trustworthy observers shall
have rendered their services in enriching this, the only true materia
medica, by careful experiments on themselves! The healing art will
then come near the mathematical sciences in certainty.
2 See the second
note to §109.
§ 146
The third
point of the business of a true physician relates to the judicious
employment of the artificial morbific agents (medicines) that have
been proved on healthy individuals to ascertain their pure action
in order to effect the homoeopathic cure of natural diseases.
§ 147
Whichever
of these medicines that have been investigated as to their power
of altering man’s health we find to contain in the symptoms observed
from its use the greatest similarity to the totality of the symptoms
of a given natural disease, this medicine will and must be the most
suitable, the most certain homoeopathic remedy for the disease;
in it is found the specific remedy of this case of disease.
§ 148 Fifth Edition
A medicine
selected in this manner, which has the power and the tendency to
produce symptoms the most similar possible to the disease to be
cured, consequently a similar artificial disease, given in a suitable
dose, affects, in its dynamic action on the morbidly deranged vital
force of the individual, those very parts and points in the organism
now suffering from the natural disease, and produces in them its
own artificial disease, which, on account of its great similarity
and prepondering strength, occupies precisely the seat hitherto
occupied by the natural morbid derangement, so that the instinctive,
automatic vital force is from that time forward no longer affected
by the natural disease but solely by the stronger, similar medicinal
disease; which in its turn, on account of the small dose of the
remedy, being, like every moderate medicinal disease, overcome by
the increased energy of the vital force, soon spontaneously disappears,
leaving the body free from all disease, that is to say, healthy
and permanently cured.
§ 148 Sixth Edition
The natural
disease is never to be considered as a noxious material situated
somewhere within the interior or exterior of man (§ 11-13) but as
one produced by an inimical spirit-like (conceptual) agency which,
like a kind of infection (note to § 11) disturbs in its instinctive
existence of the spirit-like (conceptual) principle of life within
the organism torturing it as an evil spirit and compelling it to
produce certain ailments and disorders in the regular course of
its life. These are known as symptoms (disease). If, now, the influence
of this inimical agency that not only caused but strives to continue
this disorder, be taken away as is done when the physician administers
an artificial potency, capable of altering the life principle in
the most similar manner (a homoeopathic medicine) which exceeds
in energy even in the smallest dose the similar natural disease
(§§ 33, 279), then the influence of the original noxious morbid
agent on the life principle is lost during the action of this stronger
similar artificial disease. Thence the evil no longer exists for
the life principle - it is destroyed. If, as has been said, the
selected homoeopathic remedy is administered properly, then the
acute natural disease which is to be overruled if recently developed,
will disappear imperceptibly in a few hours.
An older,
more chronic disease will yield somewhat later together with all
traces of discomfort, by the use of several doses of the same more
highly potentized remedy or after careful selection1 of one or another
more similar homoeopathic medicine. Health, recovery, follow in
imperceptible, often rapid transitions. The life principle is freed
again and capable of resuming the life of the organism in health
as before and strength returns.
1 But this laborious,
sometimes very laborious, search for and selection of the homoeopathic
remedy most suitable in every respect to each morbid state, is an
operation which, notwithstanding all the admirable books for facilitating
it, still demands the study of the original sources themselves,
and at the same time a great amount of circumspection and serious
deliberation, which have their best rewards in the consciousness
of having faithfully discharged our duty. How could his laborious,
care-demanding task, by which alone the best way of curing diseases
is rendered possible, please the gentlemen of the new mongrel sect,
who assume the honorable name of homoeopathists, and even seem to
employ medicines in form and appearance homoeopathic, but determined
upon by them anyhow (quidquid in buccam venit), and who, when the
unsuitable remedy does not immediately give relief, in place of
laying the blame on their unpardonable ignorance and laxity in performing
the most and important and serious of all human affairs, ascribe
it to homoeopathy, which they accuse of great imperfection (if the
truth be told, its imperfection consists in this, that the most
suitable homoeopathic remedy for each morbid condition does not
spontaneously fly into their mouths like roasted pigeons, without
any trouble on their own part). They know, however, from frequent
practice, how to make up for the inefficiency of the scarcely half
homoeopathic remedy by the employment of allopathic means, that
come much more handy to them, among which one or more dozens of
leeches applied to the affected part, or little harmless venesections
to the extent of eight ounces, and so forth, play an important part;
and should the patient, in spite of all this, recover, they extol
their venesections, leeches, etc., alleging that, had it not been
for these, the patient would not have been pulled through, and they
give us to understand, in no doubtful language, that these operations,
derived without much exercise of genius from the pernicious routine
of the old school, in reality contributed the best share towards
the cure. But if the patient die under the treatment, as not unfrequently
happens, they seek to console the friends by saying that “they themselves
were witnesses that everything conceivable had been done for the
lamented deceased”. Who would do this frivolous and pernicious tribe
the honour to call them, after the name of the very laborious but
salutary art, homoeopathic physicians? May the just recompense await
them, that, when taken ill, they may be treated in the same manner!
§ 149 Fifth Edition
When
the suitable homoeopathic remedy has been thus selected and rightly
employed, the acute disease we wish to cure, even though it be of
a grave character and attended by many sufferings subsides insensibly,
in a few hours if it be of recent date, in a few days if it be of
a somewhat longer standing, along with all traces of indisposition,
and nothing or almost nothing more of the artificial medicinal disease
is perceived; there occurs, by rapid, imperceptible transitions,
noting but restored health, recovery. Disease of long standing (and
especially such as are of a complicated character) require for their
cure a proportionately longer time. More especially do the chronic
medicinal dyscrasia so often produced by allopathic bungling, along
with the natural disease left uncured by it, require a much longer
time for their recovery; often, indeed, are they incurable, in consequence
of the shameful robbery of the patient’s strength and juices, the
principal feat performed by allopathy in its so-called methods of
treatment.
§ 149 Sixth Edition
Diseases
of long standing (and especially such as are of a complicated character)
require for their cure a proportionately longer time. More especially
do the chronic medicinal dyscrasia so often produced by allopathic
bungling along with the natural disease left uncured by it, require
a much longer time for their recovery; often, indeed, are they incurable,
in consequence of the shameful robbery of the patient’s strength
and juices (venesections, purgatives, etc.), on account of long
continued use of large doses of violently acting remedies given
on the basis of empty, false theories for alleged usefulness in
cases of disease appearing similar, also in prescribing unsuitable
mineral baths, etc., the principal feat performed by allopathy in
its so-called methods of treatment.
§ 150
If a
patient complain of one or more trivial symptoms, that have been
only observed a short time previously, the physician should not
regard this as a fully developed disease but requires serious medical
aid. A slight alteration in the diet and regimen will usually suffice
to dispel such an indisposition.
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