§ 79
With Aphorism 79, Hahnemann introduces his miasmatic observations
on chronic disease known familiarly as the Theory of Miasms from
in The Chronic Diseases. Interesting to note is his flow of thought
and his plan of presentation here, which is different to that
of the Chronic Diseases.
Hitherto syphilis alone has been to some
extent known as such a chronic miasmatic disease, which when
uncured ceases only with the termination of life.
Aware that for most of the medical men in his time, Syphilis
and its various stages of development was an already observed
and accepted phenomenon, Hahnemann begins with what is familiar.
The concept of chronic disease and its uncontrollable progress
was already understood in terms of Syphilis, which meant contracting
a condition of lifelong progressive disease, terminating in death.
This was the background he wanted his Theory of Miasms to be placed
in. The difference was that this now needed to be understood and
perceived in terms of a symptom expression of the vital force
that progressively deteriorates throughout life under the influence
of a fundamental miasm [Aph 5]
terminating in death. This could easily be perceived by traditionalist
classical homeopaths who eventually adopted and clinically applied
the miasm theory very successfully (Miasms-II)
over the last 100 years as EVOLUTION OF DISEASE. This also suggests
that there were those (famous homeopaths) who did not easily understand
it and criticized it finding it difficult to apply it clinically.
It is well known that Syphilis progresses in stages beginning
with the external symptom of the chancre and bubo, followed by
a latent period, on toward secondary manifestations that include
venereal condylomata, copper colored skin eruptions, urethral
symptoms, and finally terminating in disease of the nervous system
with a diagnosis of ‘general paralysis of the insane’.
I wrote a series of articles a couple of years back where this
evolution of miasmatic disease has been explained (Miasms-II).
Based on the pathological evolution of the Syphilitic
infection with Treponema Pallidum, we can grasp the brilliance
of this observation by Hahanemann and the perception of
the vital force being progressively disturbed toward deeper destruction.
I caution here, there are two aspects to the miasm theory to
be aware of, (like two sides of the same coin) that seem to have
confused those who choose to restrict their view to one side or
the other. One is the miasma (Miasm
I), the external agent that is causative in producing a particular
miasmatic expression. In general Hahnemann considered Itch/Psora
to be typical of scabies, but he also considered leprosy, etc
to have a similar expression; Gonorrhea to be typical of Sycosis,
but he also considered, as we understand today, the expression
of Human Pappiloma Virus (HPV) and the secondary infection of
syphilis (venereal condylomata) to be sycotic in expression; and
Syphilis to be typical of Syphilitic miasm. JF Allen supported
the addition of the Tubercular miasm that is understood a combination
of Pora and Syphilis (also perceived by Hahnemann, see Miasm
I) both acting in combination where Tuberculosis is a typical
expression.
Concentrating only on this aspect of a responsible causative
organism (miasma) is only one side of the miasm theory. One would
be misguided to believe that if these infections don’t exist,
then the miasm does not either. At an extreme are those who wish
to produce a miasm for every type of infecting organism without
proper investigation as to what the pathological evolutionary
development of that infection is over a lifetime. This leaves
us with a confusion that requires two pages of explanation to
sort out.
The other side of the coin is the ability to recognize miasmatic
expression in terms of a totality, i.e. a picture of symptoms
representing the miasmatic totality. Every individual expresses
a completely different combination of miasmatic symptoms based
on their past history or family history. Miasmatic treatment is
tackled in an individual manner, as much as any individual chronic
case is. The miasmatic picture is however not divorced from the
fact that at some point in the patient’s history he may
have acquired (by infection) a miasmatic expression or that he
harbours an inherited diathesis towards a particular miasmatic
expression.
Cancer or the Cancer miasm first propounded by Burnett, can be
understood as an expression of combined miasms, depending on the
pathology of the symptom expression. There is no causative miasma
attributable, which does not qualify it to be a primary miasm,
but rather, a secondary miasm like Tubercle observed due to a
typical picture rather than a specific miasma. We will discuss
this more at an appropriate place.
Sycosis (the condylomatous disease),…
The quality of Sycosis is the condylomata, the excessive growth
of unwanted/non-malignant tissue. Hahnemann made a mistake of
pathological observation when he suggested that this was due to
gonorrhea. In actuality, this is either due to HPV, or is an expression
of Syphilis in the secondary stage. The point to be borne in mind
though, is that the expression of Sycosis is an overgrowth of
cells and tissues, increased discharges especially abnormal ones
with typical staining and color, a slowing of metabolism, and
various other manifestations as we understand it today. Hahnemann’s
mistake has inadvertently confirmed that miasmatic expression
is not solely the domain of an infecting miasma, but requires
the other side of the coin, the symptomatic expression.
equally ineradicable by the vital force
without proper medicinal treatment,
The treatment that Hahnemann refers to here, is the DYNAMIC chronic
remedy supported by the appropriate miasmatic remedy. Antibiotics,
so effective nowadays that seem almost magical cure to these dreaded
diseases, do only half the work. They deal with the PHYSICAL expression
of disease, but they have NO effect on the DYNAMIC effect of disease
which continues to persist, progress and is passed down through
the generations in genetic mutations, weaknesses and diathesis.
was not recognized as a chronic miasmatic
disease of a peculiar character, which it nevertheless undoubtedly
is,
Here Hahnemann refers to condylomata being part of a chronic
disease, and not a local expression of disease. He explains this
short-sightedness of mistaking constitutional (progressive) disease
as a local disease more in detail in aphorism 185-190.
He uses the terms more precisely in these aphorisms based on his
homeopathic philosophy and classification of disease expression.
and physicians imagined they had cured
it when they had destroyed the growths upon the skin, but the
persisting dyscrasia occasioned by it escaped their observation.
Physicians in his time failed to observe the difference between
local disease and chronic disease, because the philosophical understanding
of disease did not exist. The reason why these external growths
(like warts and condylomata, etc) are not local diseases is because
the entire organism (through the vital force) is involved in its
expression [Aph 189].
The reason for this involvement is a peculiar ‘dyscrasia’
that the vital force either acquires or inherits that needs the
appropriately timed anti-miasamtic DYNAMIC remedy for cure.
This can begin right from childhood when cells are still developing,
and genetic problems can be corrected more easily. If uncured
they will present themselves again at an older age with much less
chance of cure. Early treatment would result in a longer lifespan,
less troubled by advancing disease expression fueled by miasmatic
daithesis; and a corrected genetic weakness that would hence NOT
be passed to the next generation.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Hahnemann, Samuel C, MD: (1896) The Chronic Diseases,
Volume 1; Translation by Tafel, LH; BJain Publishers.
2. Hahnemann, Samuel C, MD: (1921) Organon of Medicine, 6th
Edition; Translated by William Boericke, MD, BJain Publishers
Ltd, Reprint edition 1986.
3. Allen, JH, MD; (1908) The Chronic Miasms - Volume I and
II; B. Jain Publishers, India.
4. Boenninghausen, C von ;(1846) Boenninghausen's Therapeutic
Pocket Book, Part 1: Preface; 5th American Edition by Dr.
T. F Allen
5. Boger, Dr. CM, MD; (1915) A Synoptic Key of the Materia
Medica; Foreword, 5th Edition: B. Jain Publishers, India.
6. Boger, Dr. CM, MD; (1964) Studies in the Philosophy of
Healing: 2nd Edition; B. Jain Publishers, India.
7. Das, Ashok Kumar: Treatise on the Organon of Medicine,
B.Jain Publishers
8. Dhawle, ML (2003); ICR Symposium Volumes I,II,III;
2003 Edition
9. D’Souza, L (2006): Miasms in Case Management, Part
2: Disease Evolution and its Miasmatic Management, 3rd edition,
2006; URL: http://www.hpathy.com/philosophy/dsouza-miasm2.asp
Last accessed Sept 2007
10. Kent, James T, MD ; (1926) Lesser Writings – Part
II; Editor W.W. Sherwood, p. 292-310; B. Jain Publishers,
India, Reprint edition 1997
11. Kent, James T, MD; (1900) Lectures on Homeopathic Philosophy,
B. Jain Publishers, India
12. Dudgeon RE, Boericke William; Organon of Medicine by
Samuel Hahnemann, Fifth and Sixth Edition Combined.
13. Vijayakar, Dr. Prafull, LCEH; (2003), The End of Myasumption
of Miasms
14. Banerjea, SK: Miasmatic Diagnosis (Notes from seminars).
15. Little, David: Case Management available on www.simillimum.com
at http://www.simillimum.com/education/little-library/case-mana
gement/aicr/article.php
Last accessed June 2007
|