| This work discusses Masi Elizade’s philosophy
(Aristotelic-Thomist), its relation to Aristotle's concepts of virtue,
vice and mean (moderation) and the practical application of all
this.
There is a view of man, disease and cure present in Hahnemann’s
work, which is similar to the Aristotelic concept of man as described
by Tomás de Aquino some centuries later. Our source materials
to explain this were : the Actas del Instituto Internacional de
Altos Estúdios Homeopáticos James Tyler Kent[3], Organon[4]
by Hahnemann and Nicomachean Ethics by Aristotle. Those works allowed
a deeper comprehension of the role of the Aristotelic philosophy
in the homeopathic Aristotelic-Tomist conception in Hahnemann.
Masi Elizalde introduces the concept of Miasmatic Dynamics, which
involves the suffering of patients and their respective reactions.
With this view we can prescribe the remedy and follow the evolution
of the patient. This allows an evaluation of primary psora and whether
it is active or latent.
With his method, Masi Elizalde assumes that the Hahnemannian definition
of vital energy superimposes itself almost exactly on the Tomist
conception of "vegetative soul", the notion mentioned
at the 15th paragraph. Hahnemann says that the affection of the
morbidly deranged, spirit-like dynamis (vital force)[5] 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.[6]
The relationship between vegetative soul and vital energy is the
ignition point of Masi Elizalde´s method. Most important to
him is not the fact that man is a unity, but that the functions
of the organism are disturbed in the diseased condition and the
vital energy functions to regularize[7] the organism. In this way
the organism expresses signs and symptoms of one disease by the
disarrangement of the vital energy. The symptoms disappear with
its rearrangement. It is important to point out that the vegetative
soul has three different parts, which are responsible for nourishment,
growth, development and reproduction. This “vegetative soul”
presents the symptoms that express one disease.
Masi shows how disease can arise, affirming that changes in feelings
and behavior (Hahnemann’s idea of how disease was reflected),
occur exclusively at the passion level.”[8] At this point
we can find the connection with Aristotelian thought and this point
is most important for the Aristotelic-Tomist conception of Masi
Elizalde.
With this connection, Masi Elizalde gives a strong argument for
the role of the Aristotelian method in the Hahnemannian concept
of man, disease and health. Human passions are directly connected
to human action – which involves a transcendence that Hahnemann
indicates when he emphasizes "the actions which exalt the
dignity".[9]
We could show many other influences of Greek philosophy in Hahnemann´s
concepts, but in this paper we intend to discuss the Aristotelian
concepts of virtue, vice and mean, and their practical applications.
We can see in the 9th paragraph of the Organon, an understanding
that passions can allow action to express either disease or health.
In this text Hahnemann says:
In the healthy condition of a man, the spiritual vital force
(autocracy), the dynamis that animates the material body (organism),
rules with unbounded sway, and retains all the parts of the organism
in admirable harmonious, vital operation, as regards both sensations
and functions, so that our indwelling, reason-gifted mind can
freely employ this living, healthy instrument for the higher purposes
of our existence.[10]
Hahnemann demonstrates how health appears, and in order to discuss
it we have to consider two important points: (i) In a healthy state
both sensation and function have to be in admirable harmony, which
is proportionate to the vital energy and (ii) This state allows
man to use his reason-gifted mind – this alive instrument
- freely to reach the higher purpose of his existence. It is possible
to demonstrate how the Aristotelian philosophy is present in Hahnemannian
philosophy, but what matters here, is that paragraph nine sends
us directly to Aristotelian philosophy, in particular to Aristotle´s
explanation of human actions. While Aristotle says that actions
can be good or not, Hahnemann, as shown by Masi Elizalde, points
out that an action which conducts man to dignity can also conduct
him to its opposite.
From paragraph 9 we can also understand that feeling and acting
are present in an inseparable way. There is no acting without feeling.
It is important to understand the process which makes the reason-gifted
mind be deprived of the necessary freedom. This obstructs man’s
attempt to reach the higher purposes of his existence. Hahnemann
does not explain exactly how it happens, but clearly says that the
reason-gifted mind cannot work without freedom. We have to see how
it happens and, more specifically, we have to look at the way man
acts in disease and expresses, by these actions, his illness. Some
light is shed on this by James Tyler Kent, when he says that thinking,
willing and acting are the three things that make up the science
of the life of the human race.[11] Kent says that if man
did what he did not will, he would be only an automaton.[12]
It is clear that paragraph 9 makes a strong connection with human
action. Reaching the higher purposes of our existence is something
that has to be desired. The desire will be the basis of this movement.
Sensations and functions should be in harmony, so that this transcendent
end can be desired and reached. In disease however, sensations and
functions are not in harmony, so the reason-gifted mind is unable
to make man act in a correct way which expresses health. In this
case, man´s actions conduct him to a different path from the
one proscribed by Hahnemann as healthy. Here, desire impels man’s
actions in a direction that characterizes disease. Therefore desire
is present in both cases: health and disease. The end to be reached
is what will determine the state of health or disease.
Feeling and desire in human action gain distinction according
to the Aristotelic Tomist conception, and it is necessary to find
an answerto the question: "What deprives man of the free use
of reason?" The comprehension of Aristotle´s views of
human action and its relation with feeling and desire are vital.
We first have to know about the concept of soul in Aristotle´s
philosophy, so we can achieve our aim. According to Aristotle, the
human soul can be divided into two parts: one irrational and the
other rational[13]. Aristotle discusses the way both parts of the
soul can work to reach the end he considered as happiness[14] .
We notice a strong identification between Aristotle´s and
Hahnemann´s ideas, as Masi Elizalde indicates, for Hahnemann´s
paragraph 9 shows that a human soul has two parts: one which possesses
reason and another which does not and is expressed only by sensations
and functions.
Aristotle tells us that the irrational soul has two parts: the
first one, vegetative, is present in all living beings (reproduction,
maintenance and growth). The other one, the sensitive, is present
in all animals. The rational part is present just in human beings.
Animals which do not possess the rational part, act just by instinct,
by the sensitive soul. Their actions are commanded only by this
part of the soul, and because of this fact, we say they act by instinct
only. They are motivated exclusively by desire. There is no rational
choice. There is no end to be reached by choice. The movement they
make has as its bases just desire and passion.
The rational soul is the one which allows us to achieve a chosen
end, an end proscribed by Aristotle as the supreme one, or the one
proscribed by Hahnemann at paragraph 9 as the higher purposes of
our existence. This part of the human soul allows men to choose
what they consider to be the better choice. Motivated by desire
but also driven by what is said to be reason, men can make their
choices and act according to them. Man can make a project of life,
can define what is better to him and act according these considerations.
Human action depends upon the interaction between these two parts
of the human soul.
Aristotle begins a discussion of human action which leads us to
Hahnemann´s 9th paragraph, because the Greek philosopher clearly
says that man can act according to reason, or without it. Without
any reference to concepts of disease or health, Aristotle discusses
the way that actions can be understood and how they are expressed
by the human soul. He divides human action into two categories:
virtue and vice.
According to Aristotle, human action is conduct to some end. Aristotelic
finalism, like the idea recognized by Hahnemann, should occur with
the use of reason. In Hahnemann´s view, it occurs with free
reason, and by Aristotle´s, the irrational part of the human
soul has to be informed by the rational part., (i. e., the rational
part has to inform the passions because it is at the irrational
part they are localized.) At the rational part we have the desires
which put man in motion to a desired end. Acting in a manner such
that the irrational soul is influenced by the rational one, is to
act in a virtuous way. So, virtue is every action that is accomplished
in conformity to both irrational and rational parts of the soul.
Aristotle insists that virtue is not repression of the passions,
but he affirms that the passions have to be educated. Without education,
virtue will not occur. It is a very important point of Aristotle´s
philosophy: the transcendence is a man´s disposition, but
it will not happen without the education of passions. Aristotle
recognizes that it is difficult task.
We found a strong relation between Aristotelic ethics (virtue)
and paragraph 9. We can also find a relation to actions in which
the two parts of the soul are not in conformity (vice). If actions
are not realized according to conformity with reason, their only
ends are the satisfaction of passions. The action is turned to the
pleasure of the one who acts. This action, for Aristotle, is vice,
and it puts man far from virtue - the action that allows man to
reach the higher purposes of our existence (the transcendence).
In vice, man has no choice, he is arrested by passions.
Aristotle defends the idea that children and irrational animals
cannot use reason, as they do not use that part of soul which is
responsible for deliberation, and do not act in a virtuous way.
Looking through the eyes of the Aristotelic Tomist conception, we
now ask: What choice does man have when he is affected with psora,
the psoric stain blurring his imagination and blocking him from
understanding correctly what is around him? Both virtue and vice
let us establish a clear relation with what Hahnemann says in paragraph
9 concerning to the use of reason. We can understand that human
action which conducts to the higher purpose of existence is the
one where both parts of the human soul are involved, and in this
case we have sensation and functions in harmony. It is also necessary
to undserstand how reason can be free (as discussed in paragraph
9). According to Aristotle, a daily exercise is needed, because
in order to be virtuous, it is necessary to be virtuous throughout
life. Virtuous actions once in a while are not enough.
Aristotle explains that the rational part of the soul is divided
into two parts. One of them he calls phronesis – the one which
makes possible the concordance between the irrational soul and the
rational one. It is responsible for the deliberation of the correct
ways of reaching the desired end. It is related with what is variable,
with what justifies a choice.
The disposition to choice belongs to men´s nature. Men are
motivated by the desiderant part of the soul, so there is also a
disposition to choice based upon virtue. Phronesis is responsible
for the selection of the correct and virtuous action, the action
accomplished by the mean (moderation). This is a point between two
extremes – vices. Virtue is the mean of those extremes. The
mean is relative to the one who acts and is not the same for everyone.
If, on the contrary, we act toward the extremes, we will act by
excess or by absence and that is vice. Aristotle says that many
times we have to act by excess or absence in order that we can reach
the mean to our actions.
These Aristotelic categories present a close relation with Masi
Elizalde´s Miasmatic Dynamic. When Aristotle refers to excess
and to absence, we can think of egotrophy and egolysis. It looks
like Masi Elizalde finds in Aristotle the basis of Miasmatic Dynamic.
Masi Elizalde explainins the primary psora as something that individualizes
man, giving him a particular way to understand his world. He says:
What occurs, then? Everything I acquire from the exterior world
has to pass through a filter, the filter of my imagination. Then,
we have psora, i. e. the taint. If the exterior world is not affected
by my particular taint, it is considered in a objective way by
my intellect, it awakes my will and is kept in my rational memory.
But if the exterior element (the world), from the symbolic point
of view has to pass by the zone of imagination which contains
the taint of my primary psora, I offer to intellect an image which
deforms reality. Then, it is not the rational part that is sick,
but rather that it receives mistaken data.[15]
Individuality makes each person live in his own singular world.
This idea exists in Aristotle, and although he does not state it
clearly, he shows the idea of individuality when he says that it
is possible to fear such terror too much, and too little; and also
to fear things that are not fearful as if they were fearful.[16]
We can desire what is not to be desired. This human condition
has to be overcome, and it is not easy, because when one desires
something which is not desirable or has fear of something which
is not fearful, one feels as if the feelings were true.
The Aristotelic philosophy resounds in Masi Elizalde´s saying:
Desire what is good or run away from what is bad; it is the sensitive
soul´s duty. We re- examine the question about desire as something
inherent in this process. The valuation of what is good or not,
makes man desire or not desire something. Human action is related
to this valuation. Again, we re-examine what Aristotle tells us:
It is in pleasure and in suffering that we can perceive our inclination
to error. This affirmation lets us understand what Masi Elizalde
says about the choices we consider good or not. It gives us the
awareness that the Miasmatic Dynamic is present in Aristotelic philosophy
and it corroborates Elizalde´s concepts.
Studying Hahnemann's homeopathy we can see the presence of Greek
philosophy. The conception of humans as a unitary whole, leads us
to study the human soul and human action. We can find here signs
and symptoms which establish a comprehension of Miasmatic Dynamic,
a hypothesis of primary psora which allows evaluation of and prescription
for the patient. As stated above, it shares central ideas with Aristotelic
philosophy.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
HAHENEMANN
HAHNEMANN, Organon. Translated from de fifith german edition by
R. E. Dudgeon, M. D. Calcutá: M.Bhattacharyya, 1980.
______. S. Organon da Arte de Curar, Trad. GEHSP “Benoit
Mure”, 3.ed,São Paulo: Servideias, 2002.
______. S. Escritos Médicos Menores, Trad. Fernando Dario
François Flores, 1ed., New Delhi. B. J. Publishers, 1996.
MASI ELIZALDE
ELISALDE, M. Concepto de Enfermedad y Cura. Buenos Aires: Actas
del Instituto de Altos Estudios Homeopáticos James Tyler
Kent, nº I a VIII 1984 – 1988.
IHJTK. Masi Elizalde – Homeopatia Teoria e Prática.
Rio de Janeiro: Luz e Menescal, 2004.
ARISTOTLE
ARISTOTLE. Nicomachean Ethics. Translated by H. Rackham. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1999.
______. The Complete Works of Aristotle. Edited by Jonathan Barnes.
New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1995. 2 v.
ARISTÓTELES. Ética a Nicômaco. Trad. Edson
Bini, 3.ed. São Paulo: Edipro, 2002
COMPLEMENTARY BIBLIOGRAPHY
AUBENQUE, P. La Prudence chez Aristote, 3. ed., Paris: Presses
Universitaires de France, 2002.
AQUINAS , St. T. Commentary on Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics,
Trad. C. I. Litzinger, O.P., Indiana: Dumb Ox Books, 1993.
CANTO – SPERBER, M. Mouvement des animaux et motivation humaine.
In: , Étiques Grecques, dans le livre III du De Anima D’Aristote,
1. e, Paris: Ed. Quadrifage, 2001
KENT, J.T. Lectures on Homoeopathic Philosophy. NEW DELHI: B. Jain
Publishers. 1989.
LABARRIÈRE, J.L. De La Phronesis Animale In: , Biologia,
Logique et
Metaphysique chez Aristote, Séminaire CNRS-N.S.F., 1987.
Paris: Éditions du CNRS,1990. p. 405 –428.
References
[1] ARISTOTLE. Nicomachean Ethics. Translated by H. Rackham. Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1999. The greek terms arête, kakía
and mesotés have their translations into English kept as
they were translate by H. Rackman, which is a classical translation
and universally known. In this work we will use this edition of
Nicomachean Ethics.
[2] This work has been presented at the Encontro Internacional
de Homeopatia Numênica, which took place at Paraty City, RJ,
from 28 to 30 July, 2006. Translated by the author for this publication.
[3] ELISALDE, M. Concepto de Enfermedad y Cura. Buenos Aires: Actas
del Instituto de Altos Estudios HomeopáticosJames Tyler Kent,
nº I a VIII 1984 -1988.
[4] HAHNEMANN, Organon. Translated from de fifth German edition
by R. E. Dudgeon, M. D. Calcutá: M.Bhattacharyya, 1980.
[5] We keep the translation made by Dudgeon who uses vital force
instead of vital energy, although force vital were not a used term
at Hahnemann time.
[6]HAHNEMANN, 1980, p.121.
[7] Idem.
[8] ELIZALDE, 1984, I-3 (tradução nossa).
[9] Idem.
[10] HAHNEMANN, 1980, p. 119.
[11] KENT, J. T. 1989, p. 157.
[12] Idem.
[13] Aritotle show the human soul in two parts: one of them that
one to which logos – reason – belongs to and another
one that does not have it.
[14] Aristotle defends that the end is eudaimonía –
happiness – and it is desired by itself and not for the other
thing.
[15] IHJTK, 2OO4, p. 149-150
[16] EN, 1115 b 13-15.
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Dr. Conrado Mariano Tarcitano Filho
Instituto de homeopatia James Tyler Kent
Escola Kentiana do Rio de Janeiro
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