§ 41 Fifth Edition
Much
more frequent than the natural diseases associating with and complicating
one another in the same body are the morbid complication resulting
from the art of the ordinary practitioner, which the inappropriate
medical treatment (the allopathic method) is apt to produce by the
long-continued employment of unsuitable drugs. To the natural disease,
which it is proposed to cure, there are then added, by the constant
repetition of the unsuitable medical agent, the new, often very
tedious, morbid conditions which might be anticipated from the peculiar
powers of the drug; these gradually coalesce with and complicate
the chronic malady which is dissimilar to them (which they were
unable to cure by similarity of action, that is, homoeopathically),
adding to the old disease a new, dissimilar, artificial malady of
a chronic nature, and thus give the patient a double in place of
a single disease, that is to say, render him much worse and more
difficult to cure, often quite incurable. Many of the cases for
which advice is asked in medical journals, as also the records of
other cases in medical writings, attest the truth of this. Of a
similar character are the frequent cases in which the venereal chancrous
disease, complicated especially with psora or with the venereal
chancrous disease, complicated especially with psora or with dyscrasia
of condylomatous gonorrhoea, is not cured by long-continued or frequently
repeated treatment with large doses of unsuitable mercurial preparations,
but assumes its place in the organism beside the chronic mercurial
affection1 that has been in the meantime gradually developed, and
thus along with it often forms a hideous monster of complicated
disease (under the general name of masked venereal disease), which
then, when not quite incurable, can only be transformed into health
with the greatest difficulty.
1 For mercury, besides
the morbid symptoms which by virtue of similarity can cure the venereal
disease homoeopathically, has among its effects many others unlike
those of syphilis, for instance, swelling and ulceration of bones,
which, if it be employed in large doses, causes new maladies and
commit great ravages in the body, especially when complicated with
psora, as is so frequently the case.
§ 41 Sixth Edition
Much
more frequent than the natural diseases associating with and complicating
one another in the same body are the morbid complication resulting
from the art of the ordinary practitioner, which the inappropriate
medical treatment (the allopathic method) is apt to produce by the
long-continued employment of unsuitable drugs. To the natural disease,
which it is proposed to cure, there are then added, by the constant
repetition of the unsuitable medical agent, the new, often very
tedious, morbid conditions corresponding to the nature of this agent;
these gradually coalesce with and complicate the chronic malady
which is dissimilar to them (which they were unable to cure by similarity
of action, that is, homoeopathically), adding to the old disease
a new, dissimilar, artificial malady of a chronic nature, and thus
give the patient a double in place of a single disease, that is
to say, render him much worse and more difficult to cure, often
quite incurable. Many of the cases for which advice is asked in
medical journals, as also the records of other cases in medical
writings, attest the truth of this. Of a similar character are the
frequent cases in which the venereal chancrous disease, complicated
especially with psora or with the venereal chancrous disease, complicated
especially with psora or with dyscrasia of condylomatous gonorrhoea,
is not cured by long-continued or frequently repeated treatment
with large doses of unsuitable mercurial preparations, but assumes
its place in the organism beside the chronic mercurial affection1 that has been in the meantime gradually developed, and
thus along with it often forms a hideous monster of complicated
disease (under the general name of masked venereal disease), which
then, when not quite incurable, can only be transformed into health
with the greatest difficulty.
1 For mercury, besides
the morbid symptoms which by virtue of similarity can cure the venereal
disease homoeopathically, has among its effects many others unlike
those of syphilis, for instance, swelling and ulceration of bones,
which, if it be employed in large doses, causes new maladies and
commit great ravages in the body, especially when complicated with
psora, as is so frequently the case.
§ 42
Nature
herself permits, as has been stated, in some cases, the simultaneous
occurrence of two (indeed, of three) natural disease in one and
the same body. This complication, however, it must be remarked,
happens only in the case of two dissimilar disease, which according
to the eternal laws of nature do not remove, do not annihilate and
cannot cure one another, but, as it seems, both (or all three) remain,
as it were, separate in the organism, and each takes possession
of the parts and systems peculiarly appropriate to it, which, on
account of the want of resemblance of these maladies to each other,
can very well happen without disparagement to the unity of life.
§ 43
Totally
different, however, is the result when two similar disease meet
together in the organism, that is to say, when to the disease already
present a stronger similar one is added. In such cases we see how
a cure can be effected by the operations of nature, and we get a
lesson as to how man ought to cure.
§ 44 Fifth Edition
Two diseases
similar to each other can neither (as is asserted of dissimilar
disease in I) repel one another, nor (as has been shown of dissimilar
disease in II) suspend on another, so that the old one shall return
after the new one has run its course; and just as little can two
similar disease (as has been demonstrated in III respecting dissimilar
affections) exist beside each other in the same organism, or together
form a double complex disease.
§ 44 Sixth Edition
Similar
diseases can neither (as is asserted of dissimilar disease in I)
repel one another, nor (as has been shown of dissimilar disease
in II) suspend on another, so that the old one shall return after
the new one has run its course; and just as little can two similar
disease (as has been demonstrated in III respecting dissimilar affections)
exist beside each other in the same organism, or together form a
double complex disease.
§ 45 Fifth Edition
No! Two
diseases, differing, it is true, in kind1 but very
similar in their phenomena and effects and in the sufferings and
symptoms they severally produce, invariably annihilate one another
whenever they meet together in the organism; the stronger disease
namely, annihilates the weaker, and that for this simple reason,
because the stronger morbific power when it invades the system,
by reason of its similarity of action involves precisely the same
part of the organism that were previously affected by the weaker
morbid irritation, which, consequently, can no longer act on these
parts, but is extinguished2, or (in other words) because, whenever the vital force,
deranged by the primary disease, is more strongly attacked by the
new, very similar, but stronger dynamic morbific power, it therefore
now remains affected by the latter alone, whereby the original,
similar but weaker disease must, as a mere dynamic power without
material substratum, cease to exercise any further morbid influence
on the vital force, consequently it must cease to exist.
1 Vide, supra, §
26, note.
2 Just as the image
of a lamp’s flame is rapidly overpowered and effaced from our retina
by the stronger sunbeam impinging on the eye.
§ 45 Sixth Edition
No! Two
diseases, differing, it is true, in kind1 but very
similar in their phenomena and effects and in the sufferings and
symptoms they severally produce, invariably annihilate one another
whenever they meet together in the organism; the stronger disease
namely, annihilates the weaker, and that for this simple reason,
because the stronger morbific power when it invades the system,
by reason of its similarity of action involves precisely the same
part of the organism that were previously affected by the weaker
morbid irritation, which, consequently, can no longer act on these
parts, but is extinguished2, or (in other words), the new similar but stronger morbific
potency controls the feelings of the patient and hence the life
principle on account of its peculiarity, can no longer feel the
weaker similar which becomes extinguished - exists no longer - for
it was never anything material, but a dynamic - spirit-like - (conceptual)
affection. The life principle henceforth is affected only and this
but temporarily by the new, similar but stronger morbific potency.
1 Vide, supra, §
26, note.
2 Just as the image
of a lamp’s flame is rapidly overpowered and effaced from our retina
by the stronger sunbeam impinging on the eye.
§ 46
Many
examples might be adduced of disease which, in the course of nature,
have been homoeopathically cured by other diseases presenting similar
symptoms, were it not necessary, as our object is to speak about
something determinate and indubitable, to confine our attention
solely to those (few) disease which are invariably the same, arise
from a fixed miasm, and hence merit a distinct name.
Among
these the smallpox, so dreaded on account of the great number of
its serious symptoms, occupies a prominent position, and it has
removed and cured a number of maladies with similar symptoms.
How frequently
does smallpox produce violent ophthalmia, sometimes even causing
blindness! And see! By its inoculation Dezoteux1
cured a chronic ophthalmia permanently, and Leroy2
another.
An amaurosis
of two years’ duration, consequent on suppressed scald head, was
perfectly cured by it, according to Klein.3
How often
does smallpox cause deafness and dyspnoea! And both these chronic
diseases it removed on reaching its acme, as J. Fr. Closs4
observed.
Swelling
of the testicle, even of a very severe character, is a frequent
symptom of small-pox, and on this account it was enabled, as Klein5
observed, to cure, by virtue of similarity, a large hard swelling
of the left testicle, consequently on a bruise. And another observer6
saw a similar swelling of the testicle cured by it.
Among
the troublesome symptoms of small-pox is a dysenteric state of the
bowels; and it subdued, as Fr. Wendt7 observed, a case of dysentery, as a similar morbific
agent.
Smallpox
coming on after vaccination, as well on account of its greater strength
as its great similarity, at once removes entirely the cow-pox homoeopathically,
and does not permit it to come to maturity; but, on the other hand,
the cow-pox when near maturity does, on account of its great similarity,
homoeopathically diminish very much the supervening smallpox and
make it much milder8,
as Muhry9 and many others testify.
The inoculated
cow-pox, whose lymph, besides the protective matter, contains the
contagion of a general cutaneous eruption of another nature, consisting
of usually small, dry (rarely large, pustular) pimples, resting
on a small red areola, frequently conjoined with round red cutaneous
spots and often accompanied by the most violent itching, which rash
appears in not a few children several days before, more frequently,
however, after the red areola of the cow-pock, and goes off in a
few days, leaving behind small, red, hard spots on the skin; - the
inoculated cow-pox, I say, after it has taken, cures perfectly and
permanently, in a homoeopathic manner, by the similarity of this
accessory miasm, analogous cutaneous eruptions of children, often
of very long standing and of a very troublesome character, as a
number of observers assert.10
The cow-pox,
a peculiar symptom of which is to cause tumefaction of the arm11, cured, after it broke out, a swollen half-paralyzed arm.12
The fever
accompanying cow-pox, which occurs at the time of the production
of the red areola, cured homoeopathically intermittent fever in
two individuals, as the younger Hardege13 reports, confirming what J. Hunter14 had already observed, that two fevers (similar diseases) cannot co-exist
in the same body.
The measles
bear a strong resemblance in the character of its fever and cough
to the whooping-cough, and hence it was that Bosquillon15 noticed, in an epidemic where both these affections prevailed, that
many children who then took measles remained free from whooping-cough
during that epidemic. They would all have been protected from, and
rendered incapable of being infected by, the whooping-cough in that
and all subsequent epidemics, by the measles, if the whooping-cough
were not a disease that has only a partial similarity to the measles,
that is to say, if it had also a cutaneous eruption similar to what
the latter possesses. As it is, however, the measles can but preserve
a large number from whooping-cough homoeopathically, and that only
in the epidemic prevailing at the time.
If, however,
the measles come in contact with a disease resembling it in its
chief symptom, the eruption, it can indisputably remove, and effect
a homoeopathic cure of the latter. Thus a chronic herpetic eruption
was entirely and permanently (homoeopathically) cured16 by the breaking
out of the measles, as Kortum17 observed. An
excessively burning miliary rash on the face, neck, and arms, that
had lasted six years, and was aggravated by every change of weather,
on the invasion of measles assumed the form of a swelling of the
surface of the skin; after the measles had run its course the exanthema
was cured, and returned no more.18
1 Traite de l’inoculation,
p.189.
2 Heilkunde fur
Mutter, p.384.
3 Interpres clinicus,
p.293.
4 Neue Heilart der
Kinderpocken. Ulm, 1769, p.68; and Specim., obs. No. 18.
5 Op. cit.
6 Nov. Act. Nat.
cur., vol, I, obs. 22.
7 Nachricht Von
dem Krankeninstitut zu Erlangen, 1783.
8 A new footnote
is added here in the Sixth Edition, as follows:
This
seems to be the reason for this beneficial remarkable fact namely
that since the general distribution of Janner’s Cow-pox vaccination,
human small-pox never again appeared as epidemically or virulently
as 40-45 years before when one city visited lost at least one-half
and often three-quarters of its children by death of this miserable
pestilence.
9 Willian, Ueber
die Kuhpockenimpfung, aus dem Engl., mit Zusatzen G.P. Muhry, Gottingen,
1808.
10 Especially Clavier,
Hurel and Desmormeaux, in the Bulletin des sciencs medicales, publie
par les membres de l’ Eure, 1808, also in the Journal de medicine
continue, vol. xv, p.206.
11 Balhorn, in Hufeland’s
Journal, 10, ii.
12 Stevenson, in
Duncan’s Annals of Medicine, lustr. 2, vol. I, pt. 2, No. 9.
13 In Hufeland’s
Journal, xxiii.
14 On the Veneral
Disease, p.4.
15 Cullen’s Elements
of Practical Medicine, pt. 2, I, 3, ch. vii.
16 Or at least that
symptom was removed.
17 In Hufeland’s
Journal, xx, 3, p.50.
18 Rau, Ueber d.
Werth des hom. Heidelb., 1824, p.85.
§ 47
Nothing
could teach the physician in a plainer and more convincing manner
than the above what kind of artificial morbific agent (medicine)
he ought to choose in order to cure in a sure, rapid and permanent
manner, conformably with the process that takes place in nature.
§ 48
Neither
in the course of nature, as we see from all the above examples,
nor by the physician’s art, can an existing affection or malady
in any one instance be removed by a dissimilar morbific agent, be
it ever so strong, but solely by one that is similar in symptoms
and is somewhat stronger, according to eternal, irrevocable laws
of nature, which have not hitherto been recognized.
§ 49
We should
have been able to meet with many more real, natural homoeopathic
cures of this kind if, on the one hand, the attention of observers
had been more directed to them, and, on the other hand, if nature
had not been so deficient in helpful homoeopathic diseases.
§ 50
Mighty
Nature herself has, as we see, at her command, as instruments for
effecting homoeopathic cures, little besides the miasmatic diseases
of constant character, (the itch) measles and smallpox1, morbific
agents which2, as remedies, are either more dangerous to life and
more to be dreaded than the disease they are to cure, they themselves
require curing, in order to be eradicated in their turn - both circumstances
that make their employment, as homoeopathic remedies, difficult,
uncertain and dangerous. And how few diseases are there to which
man is subject that find their similar remedy in smallpox, measles
or itch! Hence, in the course of nature, very few maladies can be
cured by these uncertain and hazardous homoeopathic remedies, and
the cure by their instrumentality is also attended with danger and
much difficulty, for this reason that the doses of these morbific
powers cannot be diminished according to circumstances, as doses
of medicine can; but the patient afflicted with an analogous malady
of long standing must be subjected to the entire dangerous and tedious
disease, to the entire disease of smallpox, measles (or itch), which
in its turn has to be cured. And yet, as is seen, we can point to
some striking homoeopathic cures effected by this lucky concurrence,
all so many incontrovertible proofs of the great, the sole therapeutic
law of nature that obtains in them: Cure by symptoms similarity!
1 And the exanthematous
contagious principle present in the cow-pox lymph.
2 Namely, small-pox
and measles.
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