| Knowledge
of Medicine
Do you remember my lecture on the third aphorism? Let us recollect
a little about it. The third aphorism states:
If the physician clearly perceives
what is to be cured in diseases, that is to say, in every
individual case of disease (knowledge of disease, indication),
if he clearly perceives what is curative in medicines,
that is to say, in each individual medicine (knowledge of medical
powers), and if he knows how to adapt, according to clearly
defined principles, what is curative in medicines to what he
has discovered to be undoubtedly morbid in the patient, so
that the recovery must ensue…
In the first aphorism we discussed the mission of a physician,
in the second we discussed the highest ideal of cure and in the
third, we discussed what knowledge is required by a physician to
effect a cure. From aphorism 4 to 18, we discussed the first requirement
– knowledge of ‘what is to be cured in disease’.
If you remember, in those aphorisms Hahnemann talked about the importance
of symptoms and how they reflect the internal essence of the disease.
The aphorisms 19 to 34 elaborate the second form of knowledge, that
is, ‘what is curative in medicines’ and from 35 to 69,
we will discuss how to adapt our knowledge of medicine to cure sick
patients.
To understand ‘what is curative in medicine’, we will explore aphorisms
19 to 34 and will try to understand what Hahnemann said about finding
the curative powers of medicines. We will do this in 3 parts:
1.
Understand what is the curative power of a medicine
(19-25)
2.
Nature’s Law of Cure (26-27)
3.
Understand why we react more to medicines in the
diseased state. (28-34)
The Curative Power of Medicine
Hahnemann discussed the curative powers or our medicines in aphorisms
19 to 25. In the 19th aphorism he says that disease is
nothing but an altered state of health and to affect a cure, we
need to change the diseased state back to the healthy condition.
So the medicines must have the power to alter our state of health
and indeed their curative power arises solely from their ability
to alter our state of health. Let us read the aphorism now. It says:
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.
The aphorism looks very simplistic but it lays down the first characteristic
for a medicine – it should not be inert. It should have the
potential to alter the health of a living being. Now some of you
might say that many homeopathic medicines are derived from inert
substances like Lycopodium and Silica. The source of these medicines
could be inert but the form (potentized) in which they are used
is not inert. How powerful the effect of these medicines could be,
can only be learned through experience.
I’ll share a small incident here. I developed premature graying
of hair after a bout of Typhoid at age 10. When I was a first year
medical student, I read that Lycopodium is indicated for premature
graying of hairs. Without thinking much I took a dose of Lycopodium
1M. A couple of days later I started getting a sensation as if I
had a swelling in my right inguinal region. I was frightened by
the thought of having inguinal hernia. I would check the area repeatedly,
do the cough-test for hernia repeatedly but the swelling was never
there. But the sensation was always there! I later realized that
I was proving Lycopodium and it took more than one year for the
sensation to go. That was my first lesson in understanding the power
of the potentized medicines, their ability
to alter a man’s state of health!
So coming back to the aphorism, the form in which we intend to
use a medicinal substance should not be inert. It should have the
power to alter a man’s state of health.
Now let us move on to the next aphorism, which states:
20 - 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.
So after saying that a medicine should have the power to alter
our health, Hahnemann tells us how to identify or discover the medicinal
powers of a substance. He says that we can only find out about the
effectiveness of a medicine by understanding its effect on human
body. We need to study how a medicine alters the state of health
to understand its sphere of action. He further says that the power
of medicines to alter man’s state of health is ‘spirit-like’. Here
again the spirit-like just stands for something that is invisible
and has no religious or spiritual connotations. The first line
of this aphorism is actually targeting those conventional medicine
contemporaries of Hahnemann, who used to proclaim the medicinal
effect of various substances, without actually testing them. To
such people Hahnemann says that the medicinal properties of a substance
are hidden in its interior, they cannot be seen by examining the
substance or by making theoretical assumptions. The only way to
find the curative powers of a substance is to find out its effect
on healthy human beings.
Now in the next aphorism, that is aphorism number 21, Hahnemann
goes ahead further and tells us that the effect that the medicinal
substances have on our body, can be perceived through the signs
and symptoms that they produce. Let us read what he said:
21 - Now, as it is undeniable that the curative principle in medicines
is not in itself perceptible, and as in pure experiments with
medicines conducted by the most accurate observers, nothing can
be observed that can constitute them medicines or remedies except
that power of causing distinct alterations in the state of health
of the human body, and particularly in that of the
healthy individual, and of exciting in him various definite morbid
symptoms; so it follows that when medicines act as remedies,
they can only bring their curative property into play by means
of this their power of altering man’s state of health by the production
of peculiar symptoms; and that, therefore, we have only to rely
on the morbid phenomena which the medicines produce in the healthy
body as the sole possible revelation of their in-dwelling curative
power, in order to learn what disease-producing power, and at
the same time what disease-curing power, each individual medicine
possesses.
Here initially he repeats what he said in the last aphorism that
the medicinal power of a substance is its potential to alter the
state of health. Now things become interesting here. He further
clarifies “particularly in that of the healthy individual”. This
clarification is important. Conventional medicines are often tested
on the sick to find out their therapeutic sphere. And in such tests
medicines often do not reveal their full effect on the human body
because the sick body is already working in a compromised state.
So he stresses that the study of alterations that are produced on
a healthy body are most useful to find out the therapeutic sphere
of a medicine. But the point to note here is that he has used the
word ‘particularly’ and not ‘only’ or ‘exclusively’. This implies
that while the proving symptoms are most important, the clinical
symptoms may be of some use as well.
What he has also said here is that the medicines are able to cure
symptoms because of their ability to produce similar symptoms. Now
theoretically speaking this is a corollary, a kind of assumption
similar to:
A=C and B=C therefore A=B
(‘A’ medicine produces ‘C’ symptoms. ‘B’ disease produces ‘C’ symptoms.
Therefore ‘A’ medicines removes ‘C’ symptoms in disease ‘B’.)
Had this been a purely theoretical construct, this would have failed
or received more criticism. But Hahnemann was writing from his experience.
He had tested the medicines (like salts of Mercury and Silver, Borax,
and China etc) with known therapeutic action and had observed that
medicines often produce symptoms in healthy individuals, which they
are known to cure in sick. So the above construct was reverse engineered
from something like this:
‘A’ medicine cures ‘B’ disease. ‘B’ produces ‘C’ symptoms. ‘A’ also produces ‘C’ symptoms. Therefore the ability in ‘A’
to produce the ‘C’ symptoms must be the property which helps it
to cure disease ‘B’.
Now in the next aphorism, he tells us how this ability to produce
symptoms, helps to remove symptoms or to cure disease and which
type of medicine we should choose to treat the sick. Let’s read
it!.
22 - But as nothing is
to be observed in diseases that must be removed in order to change
them into health besides the totality of their signs and symptoms,
and likewise medicines can show nothing curative besides their
tendency to produce morbid symptoms in healthy persons and to
remove them in diseased persons; it follows, on the one hand,
that medicines only become remedies and capable of annihilating
disease, because the medicinal substance, by exciting certain
effects and symptoms, that is to say, by producing a certain artificial
morbid state, removes and abrogates the symptoms already present,
to wit, the natural morbid state we wish to cure. On the other
hand, it follows that, for the totality of the symptoms of the
disease to be cured, a medicine must be sought which (according
as experience shall prove whether the morbid symptoms are most
readily, certainly, and permanently removed and changed into health
by similar or opposite medicinal symptoms1) have the
greatest tendency to produce similar or opposite symptoms.
1 The other possible mode of employing medicines for diseases
besides these two is the allopathic method, in which medicines
are given, whose symptoms have no direct pathological relation
to the morbid state, neither similar nor opposite, but quite heterogeneous
to the symptoms of the disease. This procedure plays, as I have
shown elsewhere, an irresponsible murderous game with the life
of the patient by means of dangerous, violent medicines, whose
action is unknown and which are chosen on mere conjectures and
given in large and frequent doses. Again, by means of painful
operations, intended to lead the disease to other regions and
taking the strength and vital juices of the patient, through evacuations
above and below, sweat or salivation, but especially through squandering
the irreplaceable blood, as is done by the reigning routine practice,
used blindly and relentlessly, usually with the pretext that the
physician should imitate and further the sick nature in its efforts
to help itself, without considering how irrational it is, to imitate
and further these very imperfect, mostly inappropriate efforts
of the instinctive unintelligent vital energy which is implanted
in our organism, so long as it is healthy to carry on life in
harmonious development, but not to heal itself in disease. For,
were it possessed of such a model ability,
it would never have allowed the organism to get sick. When made
ill by noxious agents, our life principle cannot do anything else
than express its depression caused by disturbance of the regularity
of its life, by symptoms, by means of which the intelligent physician
is asked for aid. If this is not given, it strives to save by
increasing the ailment, especially through violent evacuations,
no matter what this entails, often with the largest sacrifices
or destruction of life itself.
For the purpose of cure, the morbidly
depressed vital energy possesses so little ability worthy of imitation
since all changes and symptoms produced by it in the organism
are the disease itself. What intelligent physician would want
to imitate it with the intention to heal if he did not thereby
sacrifice his patient?
The 22nd aphorism states two basic things. First, if
a disease becomes evident through signs and symptoms and the only
manifest action of medicines on human beings is their ability to
produce symptoms, it is therefore deduced that the ability of a
medicine to produce symptoms is what cures the sick.
Now the symptoms that a medicine can produce could be similar or
opposite to the symptoms of disease. The second thing that Hahnemann
says is that a remedy must be chosen which has the greatest tendency
to produce similar or opposite symptoms. He further says that experience
will teach us whether the medicines that produce similar symptoms
are able to cure quickly and permanently or the medicines that produce
opposite symptoms are more effective in providing a rapid and permanent
cure.
I think time has certainly shown that conventional medicine is
not able to cure the disease. The antipathic
mode can only palliate or suppress symptoms. That is why we have
so many ‘anti-’ things in the conventional medicine – antibiotics,
anti-inflammatory, anti-depressants, anti-hypertensive, anti-pyretics
etc.
In a long foot-note to aphorism 22, Hahnemann discusses a third
form of treatment, which he called ‘allopathic’. The application
of medicines that have similar effect was called Homeopathy and
the application of medicines that have opposite action was called
Antipathy. The application of medicines or treatment that had neither
similar nor opposite action, was called Allopathy.
The conventional medicine of his time was full of such methods and
medicines, like using diuretics, diaphoretics, medicines used for
purging the alimentary canal and procedures like blood-letting as
treatment for nearly every possible disease. Hahnemann was strongly
against the use of such untested medicines and methods and even
called their application ‘murderous’.
Even today the conventional medicine is known as ‘Allopathy’
in many parts of the world. But today’s conventional medicine is
primarily antipathic. There is no separate antipathic
school today. Antipathy and Allopathy
have merged to form one entity, which is either called allopathy
or conventional medicine today.
If you read the footnote more carefully, you will observe one more
important thing. Hahnemann says “When made ill by noxious agents, our life principle cannot
do anything else than express its depression caused by disturbance
of the regularity of its life...”
This means (and is very obvious too) that when we are sick, our
vital force or life principle or the thermodynamic energy system
is depressed. He further says that the use of allopathic medicines
decreases the vitality further. This is something that you can experience
very easily, even today. It is so common to experience low energy,
bad taste and indigestion after a round of antibiotics used for
any acute illness. The infection goes away but the body does not
feel fit and it often takes many more days and sometimes weeks for
the body to recover its lost vitality. Compare this to the homeopathic
medicines, where we look for and notice a change in vitality as
the first sign of cure!
Now in the next aphorism, Hahnemann says experience has shown that
medicines that produce opposite symptoms usually do not cure permanently.
In fact after the symptoms are palliated with some antipathic
medicines, they often rebound with greater intensity. Try withdrawing
the pain-killer of an arthritis patient or the anti-hypertensive
of a hypertensive patient and see how the pain and B.P. shoot up.
Let us read the 23rd aphorism. It says:
23 - All pure experience,
however, and all accurate research convince us that persistent
symptoms of disease are far from being removed and annihilated
by opposite symptoms of medicines (as in the antipathic,
enantiopathic or palliative method), that, on the contrary,
after transient, apparent alleviation, they break forth again,
only with increased intensity, and become manifestly aggravated
(see � 58 - 62 and 69).
We have already discussed the essence of this aphorism but I would
like to point your attention towards the use of the phrase ‘persistent
symptoms of disease’. This is significant because Hahnemann
is clearly stating that the antipathic
method will always fail in curing the persistent symptoms, that
is, the chronic diseases. In treatment of chronic diseases the symptoms
often persist or rebound after an initial amelioration, when the
allopathic medicines are used, but the same is not true for acute
diseases. In acute diseases, the cause of the symptoms, which is
commonly some form of infection, is often removed by the antipathic
measures and you usually do not see a relapse unless the patient
has very low vitality or the acute is actually an acute exacerbation
of an underlying chronic complaint. That is why we often do not
see a rebound of diarrhea or fever after a course of antibiotic.
But do not assume that the antipathic mode is good for treating acute conditions. We
might not see a rebound phenomenon in acute diseases but we often
see lowered vitality as mentioned in the last aphorism. We also
see increased susceptibility, more suppressions and increased tendency
for chronic diseases. When modern medicine was not ‘modern’ enough,
the epidemics were usually of acute diseases but with the advent
of all the anti-medicines, the acute diseases and epidemics might
have gone down but the chronic diseases have blown out to pandemic
proportions. So the antipathc mode may
be useful at times but it should not be the preferred first line
of treatment in most conditions.
In the next aphorism, Hahnemann derives the conclusion that only
a similar remedy is able to affect a cure. Let us read what he says:
24 - There remains, therefore, no other
mode of employing medicines in diseases that promises to be of
service besides the homoeopathic, by means of which we seek, for
the totality of the symptoms of the case of disease, a medicine
which among all medicines (whose pathogenetic
effects are known from having been tested in healthy individuals)
has the power and the tendency to produce an artificial morbid
state most similar to that of the case of disease in question.
In aphorism 22nd, Hahnemann stated that only those
medicines should be used which have a known similar or opposite
action on the disease condition. In the 23rd aphorism,
he then exposes the failure of antipathic mode in treating chronic diseases. So in this aphorism
he lays down his conclusion that the only acceptable mode of employing
medicines on sick is the homeopathic method. And only those medicines
should be applied whose action has been documented by testing on
healthy individuals.
Apart from this, I would like to draw your attention to a phrase
that Hahnemann has used in this aphorism. He used the words ‘the
case of disease’ twice in this aphorism. This is significant
because many modern teachers teach to ignore the nosological
disease while focusing entirely on the mental and emotional symptoms
or the PQRS symptoms. Hahnemann has nowhere said so. He did ask
us to individualize each case of a disease and he did say that the
mental and emotional symptoms and PQRS symptoms are often more important.
But nowhere has he said not to use the information and knowledge
about the disease. People think that thinking about the ‘disease’
in classical homeopathy is a crime. They only have to think about
‘the case’. They forget that had there been no 'dis-ease'
and no 'disease', there would be no case!
Now in the next aphorism, Hahnemann reiterates the importance of
symptom-similarity and also lays down the fact that the potency
and dilution are also very important. Let us read what he says:
25 - Now, however, in all
careful trials, pure experience,1 the sole and infallible
oracle of the healing art, teaches us that actually that medicine
which, in its action on the healthy human body, has demonstrated
its power of producing the greatest number of symptoms similar
to those observable in the case of disease under treatment, does
also, in doses of suitable potency and attenuation, rapidly, radically
and permanently remove the totality of the symptoms of this morbid
state, that is to say (� 6 - 16), the whole disease present,
and change it into health; and that all medicines cure, without
exception, those diseases whose symptoms most nearly resemble
their own, and leave none of them uncured.
1 I do not mean that sort of experience of which the ordinary
practitioners of the old school boast, after they have for years
worked away with a lot of complex prescriptions on a number of
diseases which they never carefully investigate, but which, faithful
to their school, they consider as already described in works of
systematic pathology, and dreamed that they could detect in them
some imaginary morbific matter, or ascribe
to them some other hypothetical internal abnormality. They always
saw something in them, but knew not what it was they saw, and
they got results, from the complex forces acting on an unknown
object, that no human being but only a God could have unraveled
- results from which nothing can be learned, no experience gained.
Fifty years of experience of this sort is like fifty years of
looking into a kaleidoscope filled with unknown colored objects,
and perpetually turning round; thousands of ever changing figures
and no accounting for them!
Hahnemann makes a couple of very important statements in this aphorism.
1. Pure
experience using proved medicines is the high and only source of
knowledge for the healing art.
2. A
medicine that has produced the maximum number of similar symptoms
during a drug proving on a healthy human being removes the totality
of symptoms of a diseased state.
3. The
medicine has to be given in suitable potency and dilution to be
most effective, that is, to be able to cure rapidly, totally and
permanently. This is again of great significance as many modern
day teachers claim that potency and dose is of little significance,
it is the similarity alone that counts. There are people who treat
every case with a 30C or a 1M. These people should read the Organon
again.
4. Now
to make it clearer – Hahnemann has said that a diseased state will
be removed quickly, totally and permanently – IF the medicine selected
is known to produce very similar symptoms during drug proving AND
is given in suitable potentised and diluted doses. This implies that the more
similar the medicine, the more rapid the cure. But ‘similarity’
is a relative word. There could be many remedies with different
degrees of similarity to a given case. So this also implies that
the less the similarity, the less rapid is the result – but the
result could still be there! Of course
the remedy should not be totally off-the-hook. Otherwise there won’t
be any results. This explains why we are able to get decent results
even with partially similar remedies. Another implication is that
if the remedy is less similar, the result may not be ‘radical’ and
‘permanent’. Such a remedy may only be able to palliate or remove
some set of symptoms but will not be able to cure the patient in
totality. So the result that we get will depend upon the degree
of similarity. If the remedy is ‘the simillimum’, we will see radical
and rapid cure. If it is a very close simillimum, we will still
manage to cure, though not as rapidly as is the ideal. And if it
is still less similar, we will be only able to palliate or remove
partial set of symptoms.
5. In
this aphorism he also says that when the symptoms are removed in
totality, no part of the disease remains and the health is restored.
This line has been written to counter the claims of some people,
who used to say that by using homeopathic remedies, the symptoms
may disappear but the disease remains within. Hahnemann has made
it clear at many points that the symptoms are the language of the
disease. The symptoms are indicators of the disharmony within. If
there are no symptoms, it only means that the disease has been cured
in totality and the health of the individual has been restored.
So we see that Hahnemann has explained in great detail about the
knowledge of medicine in these aphorisms. We will continue this
discussion next month when we will explore Nature’s Law
of Cure and will try to find out why we are more susceptible
to our remedies in the diseased state. Till then try to absorb this
lecture.
I wish you all a very Happy and Homeopathic New Year!
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Dr. Manish Bhatia |