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This article voices concern at the trend among influential numbers
of homeopaths the world over, to jettison Hahnemann’s similimum
principle, and replace it with Kent’s almost exclusive concentration
on mental and psychic symptoms.
Introduction
Was Kent a Hahnemannian? This question has engaged the minds of
many thinking homeopaths since the time of Kent.
Over the years, there have been two distinct trends of thought
on this controversy. One critical school argued that Hahnemann’s
theories were scientific and that Kent’s views were ‘metaphysical’.
The second school of thought accused Hahnemann himself of being
metaphysical but only in his later period. This school held that
Hahnemann increasingly lost his way into metaphysical homeopathy
as he grew older. Anthony Campbell, representing this school, charged
that Kent was a follower of this later Hahnemann but went much further
incorporating into homeopathy many of the mystical concepts of Swedenborg.
In order to discuss these two schools of thought, I propose to
investigate two fundamental aspects of Hahnemann’s theory,
leaving the third one, the theory of Miasm for future discussion.
These two are: Vitalism and Dynamization (also known as Potentization).
Campbell condemned all these three theories of Hahnemann and to
a much greater extent, of Kent, as metaphysical. By ‘metaphysical’
Campbell closely followed Karl Popper’s renowned definition
of the criterion of scientific status. This was that all
theories or concepts that were inherently incapable of falsification
were metaphysical. At the same time, Campbell enlisted a mechanistic
18th century criterion for his metaphysical definition. “By
definition”, he wrote, “the vital force cannot be seen
or weighed; it cannot be detected by the senses or with instruments.
It remains a mere theoretical construct and is no more accessible
to scientific investigation than is the soul or the ether.”
(1) Nietzsche, the great German secular philosopher of the late
19th century was a fierce opponent of such mechanistic
interpretation. He wrote that such a view “that permits counting,
calculating, weighing, seeing and touching and nothing more, is
a crudity and naiveté, assuming that it is not a mental illness
or idiocy.”(2)
Moreover, Hahnemann was following the ideas of Leibniz and Wolffe,
thinkers of impeccable philosophical credentials. According to Leibniz
the world is fully alive with beings animated by live forces
he named as ‘monads’. Hahnemann used this concept of
Leibniz and others to develop his theory of Vitalism in homeopathic
medicine. Like the ‘monads’, vital force was alive but
not amenable to Campbell’s crudely mechanistic interpretation.
Hahnemann’s theory of Vitalism
For the purpose of our present discussion, vitalism and dynamization
are being considered together because it was the process of dynamization,
which, according to Hahnemann, released the spirit-like vital force
of the remedies.
It is important to note that Hahnemann arrived at the theory of
vitalism not as the result of any predilection for such a concept,
but in order to explain the results of his experiments with smaller
and smaller doses of medicines. He originally reduced the dose in
order to reduce the toxic effects or aggravations caused by these
medicines used in more concentrated form. But besides reducing the
toxic side effects, he soon noticed that greater benefits were obtained
when the indicated medicine was used in a diluted form.
It was only after Hahnemann had observed this enhanced
therapeutic effect with increasing dilution and succussion that
the connection between dynamization and vitalism began to take shape
in his mind.
Hahnemann started to use gradually increasing dilutions of up
to 30C. But he was against the use of any higher potency beyond
30C until 1833. However, since there is not a single molecule of
medicine left after 12c, we were already in the realm of Campbell’s
‘metaphysics’ as early as 1814-16 rather than 1821 as
claimed by him. Moreover, it also shows that there was no break
in Hahnemann’s thinking but a gradual evolution of his thinking
based on practice and experience. Even at the time of the publication
of his Chronic Diseases in 1828, and indeed as late as
1833, Hahnemann was not in favour of the use of potencies above
30C.
Hahnemann then went on to suggest that every human organism, whatever
its state of health, was ruled by its vital force. A similar vital
force was lying dormant in each natural substance, which was then
released by the process of dilution and succussion. When the released
vital force of the medicine was applied to the cause of the disease
in the prescribed manner, healing resulted. The concept of vital
force even in an inanimate substance being released by
dynamization - that is, by serial dilution and succussion - was
a far cry from the religious or esoteric concept of spiritualism.
It was the crude empiricism of critics like Campbell, which
rejected everything which could not be seen or weighed or measured
or detected by senses as ‘metaphysical’ which was in
fact out of line with the advancing knowledge.
Hahnemann realized over years of practice and experience that
factors initiating disease were dynamic and were not capable of
being recognized or diagnosed by physical, chemical or laboratory
analysis.
Kent’s theory of vitalism
This
leads us directly to Kent and his role. Kent mainly, but also Hering,
brought the seminal formulations of Hahnemann into disrepute by
turning his ‘vital force’ into a god-like spiritual
force. For Hahnemann, the vital force was an unconscious
force without the capacity for reflection, and moreover, it
was present in both animate and inanimate things.
The resemblance between Hahnemann’s ‘vital force’
and the concept of Qi (Chi) in tradition Chinese medical philosophy
is extremely close. The Qi like vital force is believed to be present
both in animate and inanimate substances and was the source of all
change.
Kent moved away from this Hahnemannian concept of the vital force.
In its place, he substituted his own concept of ‘simple substance’.
For him, this ‘simple substance’ was endowed with formative
intelligence. In this he followed the Swedish mystic, Emanuel Swedenborg.
For Swedenborg, the idea that there was a mystical correspondence
between the spirit world and our own, was fundamental. Whatever
happened in the spirit world must have its correspondence here on
earth. It was natural for a Swedenborgian like Kent to regard this
correspondence as a divinely ordained Law of Nature. This, in effect,
meant that for Kent the process of discovery and advance in knowledge
in any field of human endeavor through research and experiment was
irrelevant. What one needed was the knowledge of the Divine Laws
and this was for him the foundation of homeopathy.
Contrast between two views highlighted
There could be no greater contrast between these views of Kent and
those of his supposed mentor. For Hahnemann, the true healing art
is only discovered “by due attention to nature by means of
our senses, by careful honest observations and experiments conducted
with all possible purity and in no other way”.
Kent’s position was diametrically opposite to those who
would discover facts by due attention to nature, by means of the
senses, by careful honest observations and experiments, as well
as interpreting the results of experiments with medicines with rational
insight, as advocated by Christopher Peacocke in the Times
Literary Supplement (3). Spinoza said: “So the way to
understanding nature or anything of whatever kind, must always be
the same, viz through the universal laws and rules of nature”
(4). Hahnemann wrote in another context, “I demand no faith
at all, and do not demand that anybody should comprehend it: it
is enough that it is a fact and nothing else. Experience alone declares
it and I believe more in experience than in my own intelligence”
(5).
Kentian irrationalism
Kent was responsible for importing into Hahnemannian classical homeopathy
his own dogmatic and moralistic prejudices. For him and his followers,
disease was seen as “as the blight of the corrupted spirit”.
It was a moral as well as physical problem and the treatment of
the mind and the soul an integral aspect of the therapeutic endeavors.
“For Hahnemann, the miasms had been acquired ‘infections’,
but for the Swedenborgians (like Kent), they were moral taints passing
from generation to generation, and psora in particular took on some
of the characteristics of ‘Original Sin’ (my
emphasis). (1) Thus according to Kent, all diseases were built on
psora.
It was “the very primitive wrong and the spiritual weakness
of the human race”. (my emphasis) (5) His main ‘philosophical’
project was to try and reconcile homeopathy with his interpretation
of Christian theology, that theology and homeopathy ‘cannot
be divorced’, that ‘divine providence must be recognized’
It was the association of psora to the very primitive wrong and
the spiritual weakness of the human race that was the basis
of the exclusive prominence given to the mental symptoms in Kent’s
repertory. On the other hand, Hahnemann’s homeopathy
was matching a set of symptoms with a drug picture and
especially the matching of uncommon and peculiar symptoms
of the patient with similar symptoms recorded during drug provings.
For classical homeopathy could literally be defined as a therapeutic
method which clinically applied the law of similars.
Hahnemann’s similimum principle jettisoned
This brings me to the main reason for my article. The full version
of it was published in 1999. But the problem still remains. In fact
during the last few years, the esoteric school –
some of its exponents claiming to represent classical homeopathy
of Hahnemann whereas others claiming to go beyond him- had a free
rein in Homeopathic Link incurring the full wrath of Vithoulkas.
This subject – with the consent of the editors – I propose
to discuss in my next article.
It is to voice serious concern and even dismay at the almost unstoppable
trend within a very significant and influential section of homeopaths
– both lay and medically trained – to jettison Hahnemann’s
similimum principle that formed the backbone of classical homeopathy,
and replace it with Kent’s almost exclusive concentration
on the mental symptoms.
I will illustrate with just one case I described in my original
article in 1999, presented by one Dr. R. Latha Iyer in the Asian
edition of Homeopathic Links. (6)
In case 2, Dr. Latha Iyer described a case in which all the
ten rubrics taken were mentals. What was even worse, those
taken were based on the homeopath’s own personal interpretation
of patient’s history which seemed highly suspect to say the
least.
The patient had no one to look after her and she therefore felt
lonely. “So she also thought of committing suicide.”
The rubric taken for this mild expression was ‘Loathing
for life’. This sounded to me as simply incredible. ‘I
was religious right from childhood’ the patient had reported.
How many Indian women – and coming to that, also
Indian men – were not religious from childhood? Notwithstanding,
the rubric taken was ‘religious’! Another rubric was
‘Caring’ without the least evidence produced for it.
Most Indian women as indeed all mothers are indeed caring for their
children, especially – in the case of Indian mothers
– when they also happen to be boys. ‘Caring’
might have meant something if it were shown that she was generally
caring towards outsiders as well. There was nothing in
her story or hobbies (watching cricket; playing carom) to indicate
her ‘caring’ nature. On the contrary. Her two sons were
married in her absence, presumably due to her objection to ‘intercaste’
marriages: ‘My two daughters-in law were already known to
me but I still have hatred towards them’ (my emphasis)
Why? Was it because her two sons’ wives came from different
castes? That seems to be the most plausible explanation. Whatever
the reason, one surely needed an opposite rubric to ‘caring’
if one was to be used at all. The same applied to the rubric
‘sympathetic’, which was also used.
The only mental ‘change’ (see Dr Jacques Jouanny below)
reported by the patient was that she had become irritable during
her illness. But that was ignored, in line with, one supposes, the
attitude of Kent and his spiritualists school which went so far
to say that ‘pathognomonic’ signs of the disease have
no importance in the selection of the homeopathic drug. (5)
Conclusion
In his book entitled Essentials of Homeopathy (7) the
eminent French homeopath Jacques Jouanny categorically states the
opposite: “Only changes in general behaviour during the
course of illness should be taken into account….”
“It should never be forgotten that for Hahnemann the only
reactional symptom to be considered was change in the way of
feeling or acting” (my emphasis). “The character
of the patient is only important if the change in the nervous
behaviour occurred at the same time as the chronic disease…”
As for psychic symptoms, “they are, however, too
unsure for homeopathic physicians to base reactional therapy on
them.”
Similar advice in a different context was given by Edward Whitmont
(I hope to discuss my disagreement with other aspects of his philosophy
in another article) in his seminar Opening Doors. “As
soon as we enter into psychological or psychoanalytical field, we
are no longer observing, we are interpreting.” Information
in this field is less reliable because psychological characteristics
have necessarily been based on the interpretive subjectivity
of both the therapist and the patient.
Yet despite using only the mental rubrics (and even those used
by Dr. Latha Iyer were, as explained in detail above, the results
of a dubious interpretive subjectivity of the therapist), the remedy
selected by her - namely Aurum muriaticum 200C – according
to her case report, apparently worked! All one can say is that it
was still not homeopathy. It might be that this and the “Essence’
school have discovered an irrational and unproven therapy
based on mystical and subjective predilections of the therapist
in collusion with the gullibility of the patient.
Unproven because apart from such therapists’ inevitably
subjective assessments of the positive outcomes (at least, in all
reported cases) from their prescriptions, there were no objective
criteria available to the readers for independently evaluating
the results.
References
1. Campbell A. Two Faces of Homeopathy Robert Hale, London,
1984
2. Nietzsche The Gay Science, p.373 – quoted by Brian
Leiter in the Times Literary Supplement, p.31 October 1998
3. Peacocke C. Insights, truth and hope Times Literary Supplement
p.34 – 11 September 1998
4. Leiter B. One health, one earth, one sun Times Literary Supplement
p.30-31 October 2, 1998
5. Hehr G.S. Was Kent a Hahnemannian? Br Hom J 1984 - p.
71-74
6. Iyer R.L. The same but different – Homeopathic Links
1997 - p.38-39
7. Jouanny J. The Essentials of Homeopathic Materia Medica1984
- France: Boiron, p.78
Mr. Cassam was qualified as a dental surgeon at the Royal Dental
Hospital in London and studied acupuncture and homeopathy in the
UK. He is currently retired.
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