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This article attempts to use a short discussion about miasms and nosodes
as a launching pad into a deeper discussion of homeopathic views
about disease and cure, as basically aspects of essentialism.
Dr Samuel HAHNEMANN (1755-1843) When Hahnemann announced his
miasm theory in 1828 it was greeted with shock, disbelief, uproar
and derision by the entire medical world. Even many homeopaths blushed
with shame and completely ignored the idea as preposterous. It was
hard to see where Hahnemann was coming from. The grand scheme of
the miasms, so familiar today, seemed just like words from an alien
language. If you start from symptom totality, then you can just
about reach the even wider concept of a miasm as a grouped entity
deriving from hundreds of cases. But if you start from the familiar
allopathic terrain of a 'disease' affecting whole populations, then
the idea of miasms as internalised and inherited dyscrasias seems
very hard to grasp. The conceptual challenge is simply one of breadth
of view. Each individual case, upon which homeopathy is based, was
henceforth to be viewed in the light of another totality - the family
legacy of Psora, Syphilis and Sycosis.
The theory of miasms originates in Hahnemann's book The Chronic Diseases,
[1] published around the same time that he also decided to fix 30c
as the standard potency for all homeopaths. He declared that the
theory was the result of 12 years of the most painstaking work on
difficult cases of a chronic character combined with his own research
into the historical diseases of man.
The three miasms given in that work are held to be responsible for
all disease of a chronic nature and to form the foundation for all
disease in general. This latter aspect was then to receive considerable
amplification from Kent. Kent was also able to more clearly identify
those remedies that relate to each miasm. Though now generally accepted
by most homeopaths without question, at the time, the theory was
generally greeted with disbelief and derision from all but the most
devoted followers. This can be explained in part by the primitive
nature of medical science at that time, which was not really very
willing to accommodate any theory for the origin of disease, least
of all such a grand and all-embracing one.
The word miasm means a cloud or fog in the being. Its meaning can
be expanded and seen as a primary defect; a root cause; a shadow,
fragment or internalised relic of an actual disease passed down
the genetic line; a vaccine defect; a pre-disposition [dyscrasia]
towards a predictable pattern of certain diseases and disorders
within a family, race or the human race; and a defect of the vital
force.
The theory suggests that if 100% of all disease is miasmatic, then
85% is due to the primary and atavistic miasm Hahnemann called Psora.
The remaining 15% of all disease he held to be either syphilitic
or sycotic, being derived from suppressed Syphilis or suppressed
Gonorrhoea. Hahnemann, unlike Kent later, attached no moral dimension
whatsoever to the sexual nature of the two latter miasms. Kent,
of course, emphasised this moral aspect a great deal, which might
not be that surprising in the somewhat puritanical atmosphere of
nineteenth century small town America.
Taking them in reverse order, we can depict the main characteristic
features of each miasm.
Sycosis
This miasm is held to be responsible for many sexual and urinary disorders,
and affections of the joints and the mucous membranes. Also those
conditions worsened by damp weather and by contact with the sea.
Thus arthritis and rheumatism, asthma, catarrhs, bronchitis, cystitis
and warts are all regarded as partly or mainly sycotic in character.
The wart came to be seen as the underlying archetype of this miasm
as it is also held to be responsible for all warty excrescences
and growths. Chief remedies are Thuja, Lycopodium, Natrum sulph,
Causticum, Kali sulph, Staphysagria, Calc and Sepia amongst many
others.
Syphilis
This miasm is held to be responsible for many diseases of the nervous
system, the blood and skeleton as well as a range of psychological
disorders, including alcoholism, depression, suicidal impulses,
insanity, loss of smell and taste, blindness, deafness and ulcerations.
It is also associated with many heart conditions, some vesicular
skin eruptions and diseases that have a definite nocturnal periodicity.
Chief remedies are Arsenicum, Aurum, Mercury, Phosphorus, Lycopodium
and Nitric acid, amongst many others.
Psora
The word Psora is probably derived from the Hebrew 'Tsorat' and Greek
'Psora' meaning a fault, groove or stigma. Hahnemann held that all
non-venereal chronic diseases are Psoric. That includes most diseases
of a chronic nature, all skin diseases, most mental illness, other
than syphilitic ones, allergies, varicose veins, haemorrhoids, most
dysfunctional diseases of organs and systems, etc. He lists among
others, catarrhs, asthma, pleurisy, haemoptysis, hydrocephalus,
stomach ulcers, scrotal swelling, jaundice, swollen glands, cataract,
diabetes, tuberculosis, epilepsy, fevers and suppressed urine as
all being typically Psoric manifestations, including, of course,
the whole gamut of skin problems. Chief Psoric remedies he suggests
include Sulphur, Natrum mur, Calc carb, Arsen alb, Lycopodium, Phosphorus,
Mezereum, Graphite, Causticum, Hepar sulph, Petroleum, Silica, Zinc
and Psorinum amongst many others.
Hahnemann also claimed that Psora was the most ancient and insidious
miasm, deriving primarily from skin eruptions of various types in
the past, such as scabies (Itch), leprosy and psoriasis. These had
been supposedly contracted by ancestors or in one's own early childhood.
Their subsequent suppression, especially through the use of ointments,
he held to be the primary cause of forcing skin conditions inwards
to cause the internalised Psora miasm. Psora, he says, "is
that most ancient, most universal, most destructive, and yet most
misapprehended chronic miasmatic disease which for many thousands
of years has disfigured and tortured mankind...and become the mother
of all the thousands of incredibly various chronic diseases."
[1; 9]
Kent, in his Lectures, then greatly enlarged upon the theory, mostly
in a moral sense, proposing that Psora was the foundation of all
other sickness, without which mankind would be pure and healthy
both in mind and body, as in the Garden of Eden. He thus regarded
the acquisition of Psora as being equated with the 'Fall of Man'
and with original sinfulness. He portrayed Psora in this highly
moralistic light as also being the foundation of the sexual miasms
that came later.
We can see that Hahnemann must have obtained his original idea of
miasms through an extension of the very fruitful threads in his
thinking about similars and poisonings, with which he was deeply
immersed in the original construction of homeopathy. His mind simply
must have been drawn towards seeing the wider patterns in cases.
For example, Hahnemann "suggested, in 1789, that Mercury...displaced
the syphilitic disease by imposing a similar illness," [2;
3]. He "had taken his time to formulate his first intuitive
deduction [similia] in fact seven years...[he] clung obstinately
to the everyday world of common sense...and had no use for the theories
of pathology then current...[being, in fact] dissociated from theories
of physiology and pathology." [2; 4].
The notion of Psora has many facets; for example, "seven-eighths
of all the chronic maladies prevalent are ascribed by Hahnemann
to Psora..." [3; 1, 142] He did not confine its meaning solely
to Scabies; "Psora...was widely known in Hahnemann's time,
as the general term for a whole series of skin troubles of the most
varied kinds..." [3; 1, 143] Its underlying significance was
even broader: "to Hahnemann Psora is a disease or disposition
to disease, hereditary from generation to generation for thousands
of years and it is the fostering soil for every possible diseased
condition." [3; 1, 144] However, the miasm theory should not
be viewed too literally as meaning that everyone needs to be dosed
up with Psorinum, Syphilinum or Medorrhinum; rather it means that
the broad outline of the miasms need to be kept in mind when observing
the symptoms of a specific case or family.
For example, in a family with some evidence of alcoholism, deafness,
blindness, bone disorders and insanity, one is entitled to believe
a syphilitic streak is present. It should not dominate one's view
of each case, but it is useful background information. It guides
one towards certain remedies, and away from others, but should never
wholly dictate practice. Such would be to fall prey to medical speculation,
which Hahnemann certainly regarded as "arid and obfuscating
scholasticism." [4; 62] and "the elaborate manipulation
of hollow symbols." [4; 62]. The dim view he took of medical
speculation presumed that too often it is disengaged from practice,
lacking efficacy and encourages harmful practices.
Homeopaths should resist the temptation to allow miasms, like some
cuckoo in the nest, to exclusively dominate its conceptual base
in the way 'evolution' has come to dogmatically dominate biology,
or the way genetics and bacteria have come to totally dominate allopathy.
Allowing such 'soiling of its own nest' might be to indulge a delusion,
a monistic theory, and to allow the subject to be well and truly
hijacked by one idea, or even to comprise a lamentable waste of
otherwise objective talent. Kent beseeches us to resist the temptation
of allowing excessive dominance to be granted to one idea or theory.
Such advice applies equally to the miasm theory, which should be
balanced against other homeopathic views.
Nosodes
On the point about the use of miasms in treatment, some people routinely
give the corresponding nosode. For example, to a child born with
fine syphilitic skin vesicles, they might wish to give Syphilinum
rather than the simillimum, say Mercury. This would tend to be seen
as an inappropriate use of the miasm concept, as the simillimum
is what the patient needs, not the nosode. Such routine use of Psorinum,
Medorrhinum and Syphilinum is therefore frowned upon. Certainly,
the nosode can do good work, but it should be used more as an occasional
inter-current remedy, or when it becomes the simillimum - not just
routinely.
Nosodes in general have a chequered history in homeopathy. Some of
the more pathological prescribers [e.g. Hughes & Dudgeon] denounced
them from the start. Yet, other homeopaths have taken a far more
generous view: "the indispensable curative service of the products
of disease...safely administered in sickness;" [6] "for
the past five years I have regularly used the bacillus virus as
part of my daily practice...with great satisfaction;" [7] "I
think very highly of Koch's remedy...I use it in high potency..."
[8] In particular, nosodes can be used to neutralise old internalised
illness states [dyscrasias] or remove invisible 'taints' [blockages]
that prevent ordinary remedies from working: "the nosode has
removed the miasmatic block." [9] Then "the remedy will
work again after the block is removed with a nosode." [9] This
much at least is the empirical observation of many who use them
in regular clinical practice: nosodes were not so well proven as
"well-known polychrests...but have been so successful;"
[9; 317] their use "depends more on clinical experience...[which
has] accumulated for many years and has been checked by the experience
of so many practitioners that it is considered trustworthy."
[9; 317]
Miasm, Holism and Essence
While the miasms require a certain conceptual 'leap in the dark' for
the average homeopath, they are even stranger to the allopath who
takes a generally less holistic view of the organism in health and
disease. Comparisons of this type are very stimulating and rewarding.
The upshot of the miasms theory is very interesting as it illuminates
so much about homeopathy and what distinguishes it as a unique medical
system in its own right, and also so much about the subtlety of
Hahnemann's observational powers and thinking processes. As soon
as you have a mode of medical thinking that regards disease cause
in gross, tangible and molecular terms [germs, bacteria, molecules,
dud organs, genes] then it is natural not to look much beyond such
matters, but to regard "the cure" of disease, i.e. the
removal of symptoms, solely in tangible and molecular terms. Such
is allopathy.
There seems on this basis to be no need to look beyond the tangible
and the molecular. But when you have, by contrast, a more subtle
medical mentality that regards the tangible and the molecular as
valid so far as they go, but that this view of disease is not a
primary or fundamental one, but a secondary manifestation of a deeper
and intangible, non-molecular realm of causes, then you are more
likely to have modes of cure that employ similarly subtle, intangible
and non-molecular concepts and techniques. This really demarcates
the major dividing line between allopathy and homeopathy.
While we might term the former as an entirely ‘phenotypic’ medical
attitude and therapeutic system, rooted solely in the tangible and
the molecular, so the latter reaches behind and beyond the gross
phenotype [secondary expression] of disease to consider the deeper,
hidden ‘genotypic’ realm of primary or true causes. It is precisely
in this latter sense that the great medical philosophers of homeopathy
- Hahnemann, Kent, Boger and Close - have come to regard disease.
Whether this appraisal flows entirely from empirical studies, from
clinical experience and experiments, or whether it flows from a
subtle inclination of mentality, is immaterial, and is probably
a mixture of both, but the essentialist nature of this position
is ultimately clear for all to see.
Like the dwellers in Plato's caves [see Plato, The Republic], trying
to make sense of shadows moving on a wall, homeopaths have been
consistently reluctant to accept the molecular and tangible as the
sole cause of itself, but always look deeper for non-molecular and
intangible root causes of the events observed at the surface, in
the tissues and cells, and in the physiology of organ systems, never
accepting solely tissue events as causes of themselves, which is
precisely where allopathy draws a halt in its search for causes
of disease phenomena, satisfied that there is nothing beyond that.
Clearly, the miasm theory follows the same line of thinking.
Further positions flow naturally from these two divergent medical
philosophies. For example, the phenotypic view does not need to
see or fix the whole person because a tangible and discreet portion
of the whole can be hived off as "the disease" and fixed
in isolation from the whole, and this has come to be regarded far
too unquestioningly as a perfectly valid therapeutic approach. But
to the genotypic attitude, events in the body are always seen as
inextricably interconnected and as expressions of deeper events
in the network of vital processes that lies behind the tangible
and molecular expression of symptoms, and as a whole, and therefore
it is not legitimate in such a mode of medical thinking to merely
'fix things' at the molecular level or to do so in a localised manner
for specific groups of symptoms isolated from the whole and conveniently
labelled as "the disease".
Indeed, such an approach may conjure up an apparition of cure in the
short term, but the deeper pattern of causes has not been touched
or removed and must still be present and active. Therefore, one
feels justified in saying that one single 'disease event' might
be seen as the cause [or the effect] of any another 'disease event'
all linked together in a chain, while the deeper cause has been
left un-tackled. The tonsils may have been removed, but the deeper
cause of the tonsillitis has not. The deodorant may have masked
the smell, but the essence [cause] of the smell is still there -
its deeper cause is still present and active. It is precisely in
this manner that Hahnemann describes the development of diseases
in the ongoing life of the person [or family, or race, or humanity]
mutating through time ["the hydra-headed miasm"] and able
periodically to throw to the surface very different 'disease events'
springing forth from the same hidden root cause in the invisible
and intangible realm of the non-molecular. This describes very clearly
his depiction of the true nature of the miasms: a hidden realm of
disease cause, and a genotype from which the expressed and visible
symptoms, the phenotype of disease, periodically erupt at the surface
and which we see before us as separate ‘diseases’.
With so much of their work being grounded solely in the subtle, the
holistic and the non-molecular, it is only natural for homeopaths
to be suspicious of and unsatisfied with the solely molecular, mechanistic
and tangible explanation or technique of crude drugging for specifics
[allopathy]. Being daily used to seeing into the realm of the subtle
and intangible, with their more subtle form of vision, it is only
natural for them to seek out deeper root causes in such a realm
that lies behind and beyond the solely molecular realm, which seems
so satisfying to allopaths and scientists. By employing intangible
and non-molecular remedies and seeing their often spectacular effects
in the clinical sphere, it is not so surprising that they have come
to develop such deep respect for non-molecular theories of life,
disease causation and cure.
Essentialism
Essentialism is "the belief in essences independent of the phenomena
of appearance," [11; 304-5] and which are conceived as "non-dimensional
phenomena," [11; 407]. The idea is common to Pythagoras, Plato
and Aristotle and dominated philosophy for centuries, almost into
the modern era. Goethe, for example, seems to have achieved a "fusion
of Plato's essentialism with aesthetic principles." [11; 457]
An appreciation of essentialism involves the belief that objects
and living things each contain an underlying and immaterial essence
that can only be known through a form of reflection upon the nature
of the substance or organism. Natural selection, for example, seems
"meaningless to an essentialist, for it can never touch the
underlying essence; it can only eliminate deviations from the type,"
[11; 517] that operate at the physical level of the organism.
The essentialist position of homeopathy runs through all these ideas
like miasms, nosodes and vital force. It runs through the ‘potency
energy’ of the drug; it runs through the idea of the nosode as containing
some subtle essence of the disease it is made from; the idea runs
through the whole concept of miasm as a defect resident in the life
force; and it runs through the whole concept of the vital force
as a coordinator of whole organism events. In all these senses it
can be seen that homeopathy is riddled with essentialism, a belief
in subtle essences that lie behind and beyond the visible, physical,
tangible or molecular realm of ordinary life. This belief comes
very close to the Platonic idea that behind each phenomenon we see
lies a discreet and corresponding essence or 'noumenon' that exists
in the 'realm of ideas' and from which the physical object flows
and with which it corresponds or resonates. The realm of ideas is
therefore also, as Kent would say, the realm of causes. It is as
if each substance, species, individual, rock, mineral, insect, plant
- carries within it an invisible imprint, hidden from view. This
idea can also be seen to permeate the 'doctrine of signatures'.
Dr James Tyler KENT (1849-1916) Miasms and nosodes are suggestive
of the idea of disease being caused not by the "morbific particles"
[12] on the material level, as allopaths contend, but by some internalised
'subtle essence' carried by the germ and transferred through potentisation
to the nosode. Kent makes it very clear that homeopathy has a vitalistic
rather than a materialistic view of disease: "the microbe is
not the cause of disease. We should not be carried away by these
idle allopathic dreams and vain imaginations but should correct
the Vital Force." [10; 679] And that "the Bacterium is
an innocent feller, and if he carries disease he carries the Simple
Substance which causes disease, just as an elephant would."
[10; 660] Such an idea clearly resonates with the medieval view
of substance as equally ‘alive.’ An idea not as distant as we might
think from the effect of potentisation on substance.
In Kent's dictum of 'the higher the deeper' and the concept that 'disease
essence' [= miasm] can only truly be neutralised by the highly potentised
drug - what van Helmont called the 'drug archeus' [10] - then we
can see a broad and very strong parallel between the metaphysical
views of van Helmont and ‘transcendental homeopathy’ concerning
a triad of ‘spirits’ - vital force, drug essence and disease archeus.[10]
To which we might add that therapeutic resonance [sympathy] between
these three spheres operates as 'similia similibus curentur' as
well as 'similia similibus causam' - diseases being both cured and
caused by similars. "There is not one law for contagion and
another one for proving. They are both one;" [5] "the
quality of contagion is similar in nature to the cure." [5;
660] Such a notion then places Hahnemann's system absolutely in
a line with the previous vitalist systems of Paracelsus [1493-1541],
van Helmont [1577-1644] and Stahl [1660-1734].
Dr Jean-Baptiste VAN HELMONT (1577-1644 ) Undoubtedly, many modern
homeopaths point to nosodes and high potencies as providing ample
confirmation of the metaphysical remarks made by figures like Hahnemann,
Kent and van Helmont, regarding the inherent ‘genotype’ of matter
[potency energy], of disease [disease archeus or miasm] and of living
things [vital force]. They seem justified, therefore, in claiming
that the corpus of homeopathic expertise of the last century and
a half fully validates such concepts as potency energy, vital force
and disease cause as a spiritual essence [miasm] that temporarily
invades and 'poisons' the spirit of the person, inducing symptoms.
While transcendentalists [and homeopaths] interpret the germ idea
as spiritual contagion by essence, the allopaths interpret it as
physical contagion by microbes. That is what divides us.
It is also clear that vital force and miasms are 'inferred entities'
just as the electron is an inferred entity. That does not mean it
exists or does not exist; it just means it sits in that borderland
between what is observably true and what is inferred or suggested
by the facts that are known with greater certainty: "unless
our theories and observations confirm one another, they will be
still little more than the most probable conjectures...while the
mechanical theories give rise to certain inferences regarding the
minute structures of the body, we lack any concrete verification
of these inferences," [13; 527] For it remains clear that "theory
without verification is mere speculation rather than science. Theory
alone cannot guarantee truth...conjecture and extrapolation, however
probable, [are] not the same as concrete demonstration." [13;
528] In that important sense it becomes possible that "crude
empirical observations [might] masquerade under the cloak of theory,"
[13; 538]. This genuine tendency is just as likely in "real
science" as it is in homeopathy, where ‘facts’ are fitted together
into a ‘bigger picture’ using the ‘glue’ of assumptions and inferred
entities.
The evidence supporting such inferred entities varies in quality,
but the inference in itself in each case is still strong and valid
as it flows naturally from a field of data unique to the particular
field of study, whether it is astronomy [e.g. black holes], physics
[e.g. quarks and muons] or homeopathy. Even those inferred entities,
which are mathematically provable, are not intrinsically any more
real than the inferred entities of vital force, potency energy or
miasms in homeopathy. In both cases, valid ideas and methods flow
from belief in the inferred entities - it is as if they are real
and that is usually sufficient to settle the matter in every case
as a working construct or model of the way things are.
Discussion
A miasm is clearly an internalised change in the essence of the person,
their vital force. Such a change is acquired as an internal relic
or shadow only from certain virulent diseases that have especially
strong essence or power to cause disease. Classically, these include
Syphilis, Gonorrhoea and Psora [suppressed skin eruptions]. Some
homeopaths would go even further than this and add Cancer, TB and
Influenza to the list as sub-miasms or even recent miasms in their
own right. Others would also add Diphtheria, Polio, Tetanus, Typhoid
and Smallpox as minor miasms and also Birth Pill and vaccine damage
as taints and blockages, which again are internalised imprints of
disease that comprise changes in the vital force capable of preventing
remedies working right [blockages] or acting as sources of symptoms
in the person's ill-health. Such taints and blockages can be removed
with the appropriate nosode and each miasm represents a symptom-causing
element acquired into the fabric of the vital force. A miasm can
be seen as a hardened portion of the psychophysical network, rather
like a fixated proving, a rigidified section of the life force,
and an aspect of contagion that has become too solidly internalised.
The miasm is the internalised shadow of a big disease; with its own
strong essence such a disease has imprinted itself upon the vital
force. The shadow it leaves behind is therefore a shadow in the
vital force. This concept of the miasm as merely a damaged or deranged
vital force [= essence] is very clearly the view of Hahnemann, Close,
Kent and Boger, who repeatedly state that contagion and cure are
the same – i.e., reversible changes in the vital force - and nothing
more or less than that. Therefore cure is but the reversal of the
process of contagion - the reversal of a change in the vital force
- by which symptoms once caused are then brought to a halt [subdued]
by the neutralisation of the change in essence that first elicited
the original disease. Neutralisation proceeds by similars - what
causes can cure.
Much understanding can be gained about miasms from considering the
nature of the vital force, disease and cure. For example, "the
dynamic potentised drug is the chief factor in both proving and
healing," [14] which implies that there is a reciprocal action
between disease and simillimum. As Close says, disease cause therefore
also exists solely in "the realm of pure dynamics;" [15;
39] what he calls the "sphere of homeopathy is limited primarily
to the functional changes from which the phenomena of disease arise,"
[15; 40-41] Therefore, the removal [correction might be a better
word] of the internal damage [miasm] is the removal of the cause;
which is not the same as removing the symptoms: "In faithful
treatment, it is sought to accomplish an end far more subtle than
the mechanical removal of bacilli." [16] Symptoms are not seen
by homeopaths as the disease, but as the results, the end-products,
of deeper dynamic disease processes: "tissue changes...are
but the results of disease;" [10; 672] "a cure is not
a cure unless it destroys the internal or dynamic cause of disease."
[10; 673]
Dr Stuart M. CLOSE (1860-1929) When Close states that the "real
cure...takes place solely in the functional and dynamical sphere,"
[15; 42] he means it is not the physical symptoms but views disease
primarily as a "dynamic derangement of the life force,"
[18] a derangement of process, which precedes any derangement of
structure. Disease "is the suffering of the dynamis."
[15; 70-72] Close devotes considerable intellectual energy to clearly
defining disease; an effort that repays close study. For example,
he says that "homeopathy does not treat disease; it treats
patients." [15; 51] Disease, he claims, is "an abnormal
vital process;" [15; 60] "a dynamic aberration of our
spirit-like life;" [15; 67] "a perverted vital action;"
[15; 72] it is "not a thing, but only the condition of a thing;"
[15; 72] that in the last analysis disease is "primarily only
an altered state of life and mind." [15; 72]
Close lays bare its deeper nature when he says disease is "primarily
a morbid disturbance or disorderly action of the vital powers and
functions," [15; 73-4] or "purely a dynamical disturbance
of the vital principle." [15; 73-4] Furthermore, he logically
pronounces that because "disease is always primarily a morbid
dynamical or functional disturbance of the vital principle,"
[15; 88] so in turn it is clear that "functional or dynamic
change always precedes tissue changes," [15; 72] and that cure
has been established only "when every perceptible sign of suffering
of the dynamis has been removed." [15; 73-4] For Close, it
is precisely upon such reasons and definitions that "the entire
edifice of therapeutic medication governed by the law of Similia,"[15;
71] has been conceived and constructed. All these insightful statements
elaborated by Close might be said to derive from Kent, but, as he
insists, they also flow naturally from Hahnemann's own sentiments
in the Organon: [17] "let it be granted now...that no disease...is
caused by any material substance, but that every one is only and
always a peculiar, virtual, dynamic derangement of the health."
[19]
The remedy for these sickness processes is equally dynamic and nebulous
- the potentised drug - which gives rise to the comment by Kent:
"lower potency...less fine and less interior than the higher,"[10;
674] meaning the higher the potency, the deeper it penetrates into
the hidden realm of disease causes.
Such a mode of medical conception is most interesting when you consider
that conventional medicine never even enters the realm of essence
[true causes] at all and so all its so-called cures are false; they
are mere rearrangements of the deck-chairs on the Titanic - superficial
window-dressing that does not reach into the deeper realm of disease
cause and that does not bring about [indeed, is fundamentally incapable
of] the radical type of true cure that can only ensue from direct
healing within the realm of essence, that is "the subtle realm
of disease cause or simple substance," [5]. Being rooted mostly
in contraries and the molecular realm of symptom suppression, rather
than cure, so allopathy again looks like mere window-dressing, not
true cure. It is a mere tinkering with symptoms.
The remedy must be similar in essence to the patient totality and
in degree of attenuation to the miasm, both to induce any change
in the case at all, and to reach deep into the essence realm itself.
Only intangible remedies can reach the equally rarefied, nebulous
and intangible realm of essences [miasms, vital force]. Similarity
between remedy and disease [= patient totality] establishes the
primary resonance between the two, such that any healing action
is possible at all, and potentisation establishes the secondary
link between similar drug and the depth of disorder within the essence
state. While similars might be seen as concerning quality and properties,
potency seems more concerned with matching the energy or intensity
of the drug with that of the derangement in the life force [miasm].
Such a view also echoes Kent when, regarding potency, he says that
"the higher the deeper," [5] meaning that only the higher
[more intangible] potencies of the right remedy [simillimum] can
reach deep enough into the intangible depths of the vital force
where the true miasmic derangements lie hidden, i.e. the realm of
essence. Therefore, acting only at the surface, superficially, the
low potencies can only act upon acute superficial miasms.
All this flow of reasoning is concerned mostly with medical inference
based around the concepts of homeopathy, which in turn flow naturally
from its engagement with clinical practice and the cure of cases.
It is therefore a mix of pure empiricism [raw observation] combined
with inferential rationalism [inference or reasoning], for "what
we cannot see directly with the corporeal eye, we may yet be able
to perceive indirectly, by the eye of reason," [20; 23] It
is similarly true in homeopathy that "the distinction between
observation and inference, between empiricism and rationalism, is
basically artificial, since neither can exist without a substantial
share of the other...in almost every statement, some observation
and some inference are involved...the further we get from direct
observation, the more we depend on inference and reasoning,"
[20; 22-23] And to be sure the realm of essences and miasms, and
vital force is a realm of inference, illuminated and visible almost
solely by the "eye of reason." Inference and reasoning
act like map and compass or a lamp that lights an unseen path and
by which we can probe the world and navigate through uncharted waters.
Only in this way can we gain our bearings and obtain the deeper
understanding we crave from the patterns in events. Only in this
way can we gain understanding of raw empirical data flowing from
observation and experiments.
In all subjects of study we employ a mix of both observation and inference
[theoretical models] in order to make sense of our world. And as
Berlin states, "the concept of fact is itself problematic…all
facts embody theories...or socially conditioned, ideological attitudes;"
[21] there is no fact without its adherent body of theory, or as
Darwin once stated - "without speculation there can be no good
and original observation." [22] And as Galileo and Luther relied
upon very different ‘rows of books’ from the Church [23], to substantiate
their views - in all such notions there is a confluence of ideas
about the nature of knowledge [epistemology], and they therefore
make important statements about how we come to know and how we don't.
Theory and method move crab-like, shackled in harness, in a perpetual
form of unison, in everything we do and study or try to understand.
Vital force, essence, miasm and potentised drug - in the last analysis,
these are all inferred entities visible only with the inner "eye
of reason."
Philippus Theophrastus Bombastus Von HOHENHEIM PARACELSUS (1493-1541)
Hahnemann basically agrees with van Helmont and Paracelsus that
the root causes of sickness are not to be found in the outer, tangible
and visible aspects of disease manifestations, the phenotype, but
rather in the deeper essence or genotype. Therefore, they all concur
that no radical or genuine change in the tangible and visible [disease
symptoms] can of itself constitute a cure, or truly remove the causes
within the deeper realm of essences, which are the root causes of
disease and therefore the arisal of disease is not terminated by
such chemical tinkering. This can only truly be achieved by employing
techniques that do delve deeper into the realm of essences, the
realm of root causes where disease can be cut off at its true root.
Thus, Paracelsus and van Helmont state just as clearly as Hahnemann
himself that drugs must be selected that match the disease [patient
totality] upon the basis of their essences and not according to
outward physical and chemical properties, which of themselves are
only, and at best, indicative of their deeper, essential qualities.
It also follows that this means holism because it means the whole
person and not just for localised symptoms or using disease labels
or named conditions.
Clearly therefore, all these vitalist physicians concur that mere
tinkering at the level of symptoms [being results not causes] is
a futile undertaking rather like rearranging the deck-chairs on
the Titanic, as it does not penetrate deep enough into the essential
realm of causes where true changes can be induced. Through superficial
methods, only superficial changes can be brought about. As long
as the deeper cause remains present, so disease can always at any
time spring forth and flow from it. Such a notion is confirmed by
Kent, Close and others who chorus that remedies cure the patient
in the deeper essence state of vital force and miasm only when potentised
to a higher degree of similarity in essence state as that of the
vital force and the miasms themselves.
Dr Cyrus Maxwell BOGER Only by such matching of drug picture and
patient totality, in their deeper essence state, can the deeper
realm of causes be roused into useful activity, so as to throw disease
off by the organism's own efforts. This also echoes the sentiment
that cure, like contagion itself, has to be an active process on
the part of the organism, engaged in by the vital force, by the
whole organism, and not by any external agent, through molecular
intervention or by treating localised parts. Cure is brought about
by the vital force, and not by the remedy. The remedy acts merely
to stimulate the vital force into renewed therapeutic activity.
Any alleged therapeutic effort that fails to engage the effort of
the vital force must therefore be doomed to fail and to be suppressive.
Such is the whole of allopathy. It is mere tinkering with symptoms,
with effects not causes, as Kent, Close and Boger all concur. And
one important and deeper aspect of ‘patient totality’ has to be
the added dimension provided by the theory of miasms.
Sources
[1] Samuel Hahnemann, The Chronic Diseases, 1828
[2] Frank Bodman, Lecture to Osler Society, Oxford, Brit. Homeo. Jnl
44.2, 1955, 2-8
[3] Richard Haehl, Samuel Hahnemann His Life and Works, 2 vols
[4] Isaiah Berlin The Sense of Reality - Studies in Ideas and Their
History, London: Pimlico, 1996, 49
[5] J T Kent, Lesser Writings, New Remedies, Aphorisms & Precepts,
Philadelphia: Erhart & Karl, 1926, 679
[6] P A Nicholls, Homeopathy & the Medical Profession, London:
Croom Helm, 1988, 233
[7] James Compton Burnett, New Cure of Consumption by its Own Virus,
London: Homeopathic Publishing Co, 1890, iv
[8] Burnett, vi
[9] Luc De Schepper, Hahnemann Revisited: A Textbook of Classical
Homeopathy for the Professional, Santa Fe: Full of Life Publications,
1999, 321
[10] Walter Pagel, Van Helmont's Concept of Disease, Bull Hist Med
46.5, Sept 1972, 419-454; see also Walter Pagel, The Religious and
Philosophical Aspects of Van Helmont's Science and Medicine, Bull
Hist Med Supplement No 2, 1944, 44 pages
[11] Ernst Mayr, The Growth of Biological Thought, Harvard: Belknap
Press, 1982
[12] K D Keele, The Sydenham-Boyle Theory of Morbific Particles, Medical
History, 18, 1974, 240-248; see also Pagel, 1972, & Pagel, 1944
[13] Lester S King, George Cheyne - Mirror of 18th Century Medicine,
Bull. Hist. Med. 48, 1974, 517-39
[14] Henry C Allen, Materia Medica of the Nosodes, 1909, Calcutta:
Sett Day, 1942, 528
[15] Stuart Close, The Genius of Homeopathy, Lectures and Essays on
Homeopathic Philosophy, New York, 1924
[16] C F Nichols, Homeopathy in Relation to the Koch Controversy,
Science, 17: 429, April 24, 1891, 233-234
[17] Hahnemann, Organon, Aphorisms 11 [9, 10], 15 and 16
[18] see Close, 37-8, 74
[19] Organon, Introduction, 10
[20] Lester S King, The Growth of Medical Thought, Chicago: Univ.
Chicago Press, 1963
[21] Sir Isaiah Berlin, Alleged Relativism in Eighteenth Century Thought,
in The Crooked Timber of Humanity, Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press,
1999, 89
[22] anecdotal aside; no source found
[23] see Patrick A. Heelan, William Gaston Professor of Philosophy,
Georgetown University, Galileo, Luther, and the Hermeneutics of
Natural Science, pp.363-375 in The Question of Hermeneutics, ed.
by T.J. Stapleton (Boston, Dordrecht: Kluwer 1994)
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Peter Morrell
Honorary Research Associate in the History of Medicine, Staffordshire
University, UK
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