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§ 51
This
therapeutic law is rendered obvious to all intelligent minds by
these instances, and they are amply sufficient for this end. But,
on the other hand, see what advantages man has over crude Nature
in her happy-go-lucky operations. How many thousands more of homoeopathic
morbific agents has not man at his disposal for the relief of his
suffering fellow-creatures in the medicinal substances universally
distributed throughout creation! In them he has producers of disease
of all possible varieties of action, for all the innumerable, for
all conceivable and inconceivable natural diseases, to which they
can render homoeopathic aid - morbific agents (medicinal substances),
whose power, when their remedial employment is completed, being
overcome by the vital force, disappears spontaneously without requiring
a second course of treatment for its extirpation, like the itch
- artificial morbific agents, which the physician can attenuate,
subdivide and potentize almost to an infinite extent, and the dose
of which he can diminish to such a degree that they shall remain
only slightly stronger than the similar natural disease they are
employed to cure; so that in this incomparable method of cure, there
is no necessity for any violent attack upon the organism for the
eradication of even an inveterate disease of old standing; the cure
by this method takes place by only a gentle, imperceptible and yet
often rapid transition from the tormenting natural disease to the
desired state of permanent health.
§ 52 Fifth Edition
Surely
no intelligent physician, after these examples as clear as daylight,
can still go on in the old ordinary system of medicine, attacking
the body, as has hitherto been done, in its least diseased parts
with (allopathic) medicines that have no direct pathological (homoeopathic)
relation to the disease to be cured, with purgatives, counter-irritants,
derivatives, etc.1,
and thus at a sacrifice of the patient’s strength, inducing a morbid
state quite heterogeneous and dissimilar to the original one, to
the ruin of his constitution, by large doses of mixtures of medicines
generally of unknown qualities, the employment of which can have
no other result, as is demonstrated by the eternal laws of nature
in the above and all other cases in the world in which a dissimilar
disease is added to the other in the human organism, for a cure
is never thereby effected in disease, but an aggravation is the
invariable consequence, - therefore it can have no other result
than that either (because, according to the process of nature described
in I, the older disease in the body repels the dissimilar one wherewith
the patient is assailed) the natural disease remains as it was,
under mild allopathic treatment, be it ever so long continued, the
patient being thereby weakened; or (because, according to the process
of nature described in II, the new and stronger disease merely obscures
and suspends for a short time the original weaker dissimilar one),
by the violent attack on the body with strong allopathic drugs,
the original disease seems to yield for a time, to return in at
least all its former strength; or (because, according to the process
of nature described in III, two dissimilar diseases, when both are
of a chronic character and of equal strength, take up a position
when beside one another in the organism and complicate each other)
in those cases in which the physician employs for a long time morbific
agents opposite and dissimilar to the natural chronic disease and
allopathic medicines in large doses, such allopathic treatment,
without ever being able to remove and to cure the original (dissimilar)
chronic disease, only develops new artificial diseases beside it;
and, as daily experience shows, only renders the patient much worse
and more incurable than before.
1 Vide supra in
the Introduction: A review of the Therapeutics, etc., and my book,
Die Alloopathie, ein Wort der Warnung fur Kranke jeder Art, Leipzig,
bei Baumgartner (translated in Hahnemann’s Lesser Writings.)
§ 52 Sixth Edition
There
are but two principle methods of cure: the one based only on accurate
observation of nature, on careful experimentation and pure experience,
the homoeopathic (before we never designedly used) and a second
which does not do this, the heteropathic or allopathic. Each opposes
the other, and only he who does not know either can hold the delusion
that they can ever approach each other or even become united, or
to make himself so ridiculous as to practice at one time homoeopathically
at another allopathically, according to the pleasure of the patient;
a practice which may be called criminal treason against divine homoeopathy.
§ 53 Fifth Edition
True,
mild cures take place, as we see, only in a homoeopathic way - a
way which, as we have also shown above (§§ 7-25) in a different
manner, by experience and deductions, is also the true and only
one whereby diseases may be most surely, rapidly and permanently
extinguished by art; for this mode of cure is founded on an eternal,
infallible law of nature.
§ 53 Sixth Edition
The true
mild cures take place only according to the homoeopathic method,
which, as we have found (§§ 7-25) by experience and deduction, is
unquestionably the proper one by which through art the quickest,
most certain and most permanent cures are obtained since this healing
art rests upon an eternal infallible law of nature.
The pure
homoeopathic healing art is the only correct method, the one possible
to human art, the straightest way to cure, as certain as that there
is but one straight line between two given points.
§ 54 Fifth Edition
This,
the homoeopathic way, must, moreover, as observed above (§§ 43-49)
be the only proper one, because, of the three possible modes of
employing medicines in diseases, it is the only direct way to a
mild, sure, permanent cure without doing injury in another direction,
and without weakening the patient. The pure homoeopathic mode of
cure is the only proper way, the only direct way, the only way possible
to human skill, as certainly as only one straight line can be drawn
betwixt two given points.
§ 54 Sixth Edition
The allopathic
method of treatment utilized many things against disease, but usually
only improper ones (alloea) and ruled for ages in different forms
called systems. Every one of these, following each other from time
to time and differing greatly each from the other, honored itself
with the name of Rational Medicine1.
Every
builder of such a system cherished the haughty estimation of himself
that he was able to penetrate into the inner nature of life of the
healthy as well as of the sick and clearly to recognize it and accordingly
gave the prescription which noxious matter2 should be banished from the sick man, and how to banish
it in order to restore him to health, all this according to empty
assumptions and arbitrary suppositions without honestly questioning
nature and listening without prejudice to the voice of experience.
Diseases were held to be conditions that reappeared pretty much
in the same manner. Most systems gave, therefore, names to their
imagined disease pictures and classified them, every system differently.
To medicines were ascribed actions which were supposed to cure these
abnormal conditions. (Hence the numerous text books on Materia Medica.3)
1 As if the establishment
of a science, based only on observation of nature and pure experiment
and experience idle speculation and scholastic vaporings could have
a place.
2 Up to the most
recent times what is curable in sickness was supposed to be material
that had to be removed since no one could conceive of a dynamic
effect (§ 11 note) of morbific agencies, such as medicines exercise
upon the life of the animal organism.
3 To fill the measure
of self infatuation to overflowing here were mixed (very learnedly)
constantly more, indeed, many different medicines in so-called prescriptions
to be administered in frequent and large doses and thereby the precious,
easily-destroyed human life was endangered in the hands of these
perverted ones. Especially so with seton, venesection, emetics,
purgatives, plasters, fontanelles and cauterization.
§ 55 Fifth Edition
The second
mode of employing medicines in diseases, the allopathic or homoeopathic,
which, without any pathological relation to what is actually diseased
in the body, attacks the parts most exempt from the disease, in
order to draw away the disease through them and thus to expel it,
as is imagined, has hitherto been the most general method. I have
treated of it above in the Introduction1,
and shall not dwell longer on it.
1 Review of the
Therapeutics, etc.
§ 55 Sixth Edition
Soon,
however, the public became convinced that the sufferings of the
sick increased and heightened with the introduction of every one
of these systems and methods of cure if followed exactly. Long ago
these allopathic physicians would have been left had it not been
for the palliative relief obtained at times from empirically discovered
remedies whose almost instantaneous flattering action is apparent
to the patient and this to some extent served to keep up their credit.
§ 56 Fifth Edition
The third
and only remaining method1 of employing medicines
in diseases, which, besides the other two just alluded to, is the
only other possible one, is the antipathic (enantiopathic) or palliative
method, wherewith the physician could hitherto appear to be most
useful, and hoped most certainly to gain his patient’s confidence
by deluding him with momentary amelioration. But I shall now proceed
to show how inefficacious and how injurious this third and sole
remaining way was, in diseases of a not very rapid course. It is
certainly the only one of the modes of treatment adopted by the
allopaths that had any manifest relation to a portion of the sufferings
caused by the natural disease; but what kind of relation? Of a truth
the very one (the exact contrary of the right one) that ought most
to be avoided if we would not delude and make a mockery of the patient
affected with a chronic disease.
1 A fourth mode
of employing medicines in diseases has been attempted to be created
by means of Isopathy, as it is called - that is to say, a method
of curing a given disease by the same contagious particle that produces
it. But even granting this could be done, which would certainly
be a valuable discovery, yet, after all, seeing that the virus is
given to the patient highly potentized, and thereby, consequently,
to a certain degree in an altered condition, the cure is effected
only by opposing a simillimum to a simillimum.
§ 56 Sixth Edition
By means
of this palliative (antipathic, enantiopathic) method, introduced
according to Galen’s teaching “Contraria contrariis” for seventeen
centuries, the physicians hitherto could hope to win confidence
while they deluded with almost instantaneous amelioration. But how
fundamentally unhelpful and hurtful this method of treatment is
(in diseases not running a rapid course) we shall see in what follows.
It is certainly the only one of the modes of treatment adopted by
the allopaths that had any manifest relation to a portion of the
sufferings caused by the natural disease; but what kind of relation?
Of a truth the very one (the exact contrary of the right one) that
ought carefully to be avoided if we would not delude and make a
mockery of the patient affected with a chronic disease1.
1 A third mode of
employing medicines in diseases has been attempted to be created
by means of Isopathy, as it is called - that is to say, a method
of curing a given disease by the same contagious principle that
produces it. But even granting this could be done, yet, after all,
seeing that the virus is given to the patient highly potentized,
and consequently, in an altered condition, the cure is effected
only by opposing a simillimum to a simillimum.
To attempt
to cure by means of the very same morbific potency (per Idem) contradicts
all normal human understanding and hence all experience. Those who
first brought Isopathy to notice, probably thought of the benefit
which mankind received from cowpox vaccination by which the vaccinated
individual is protected against future cowpox infection and as it
were cured in advance. But both, cowpox and smallpox are only similar,
in no way the same disease. In many respects they differ, namely
in the more rapid course and mildness of cowpox and especially in
this, that is never contagious to man by more nearness. Universal
vaccination put an end to all epidemics of that deadly fearful smallpox
to such an extent that the present generation does no longer possess
a clear conception of the former frightful smallpox plague.
Moreover,
in this way, undoubtedly, certain diseases peculiar to animals may
give us remedies and thus happily enlarge our stock of homoeopathic
remedies.
But to
use a human morbific matter (a Psorin taken from the itch in man)
as a remedy for the same itch or for evils arisen therefrom is -
?
Nothing
can result from this but trouble and aggravation of the disease.
§ 57
In order
to carry into practice this antipathic method, the ordinary physician
gives, for a single troublesome symptom from among the many other
symptoms of the disease which he passes by unheeded, a medicine
concerning which it is known that it produces the exact opposite
of the morbid symptom sought to be subdued, from which, agreeably
to the fifteen - centuries - old traditional rule of the antiquated
medical school (contraria contrariis) he can expect the speediest
(palliative) relief. He gives large doses of opium for pains of
all sorts, because this drug soon benumbs the sensibility, and administers
the same remedy for diarrhoeas, because it speedily puts a stop
to the peristaltic motion of the intestinal canal and makes it insensible;
and also for sleeplessness, because opium rapidly produces a stupefied,
comatose sleep; he gives purgatives when the patient has suffered
long from constipation and costiveness; he causes the burnt hand
to be plunged into cold water, which, from its low degree of temperature,
seems instantaneously to remove the burning pain, as if by magic;
he puts the patient who complains of chilliness and deficiency of
vital heat into warm baths, which warm him immediately; he makes
him who is suffering from prolonged debility drink wine, whereby
he is instantly enlivened and refreshed; and in like manner he employs
other opposite (antipathic) remedial means, but he has very few
besides those just mentioned, as it is only of very few substances
that some peculiar (primary) action is known to the ordinary medical
school.
§ 58
If, in
estimating the value of this mode of employing medicines, we should
even pass over the circumstance that it is an extremely faulty symptomatic
treatment (v. note to § 7), wherein the practitioner devotes his
attention in a merely one-sided manner to a single symptom , consequently
to only a small part of the whole, whereby relief for the totality
of the disease, which is what the patient desires, cannot evidently
be expected, - we must, on the other hand, demand of experience
if, in one single case where such antipathic employment of medicine
was made use of in a chronic or persisting affection, after the
transient amelioration there did not ensue an increased aggravation
of the symptom which was subdued at first in a palliative manner,
an aggravation, indeed, of the whole disease? And every attentive
observer will agree that, after such short antipathic amelioration,
aggravation follows in every case without exception, although the
ordinary physician is in the habit of giving his patient another
explanation of this subsequent aggravation, and ascribes it to malignancy
of the original disease, now for the first time showing itself,
or to the occurrence of quite a new disease1.
1 Little as physicians
have hitherto been in the habit of observing accurately, the aggravation
that so certainly follows such palliative treatment could not altogether
escape their notice. A striking example of this is to be found in
J. H. Schulze’s Diss. qua corporis humani momentanearum alterationum
specimina quoedam expenduntur, Hale, 1741, § 28. Willis bears testimony
to something similar (Pharm. rat., § 7, cap. I, p.298): “Opiata
dolores atroscissimos plerumque sedant atque indolentiam - procurant,
camque - aliquamdiu et pro stato quodam tempore continuant, quo
spatio elapso dolores mox recrusescunt et brevi ad sol itam ferociam
augentur.” And also at page 295: “Exactis opii viribus illico redeunt
tormina, nec atrocitatem suam remittunt, nisi dum ab eodem pharmaco
rursus incantuntur.” In like manner J. Hunter (On the Venereal Disease,
p.13) says that wine and cordials given to the weak increase the
action without giving real strength, and the powers of the body
are afterwards sunk proportionally as they have been raised, by
which nothing can be gained, but a great deal may be lost.
§ 59
Important
symptoms of persistent diseases have never yet been treated with
such palliative, antagonistic remedies, without the opposite state,
a relapse - indeed, a palpable aggravation of the malady - occurring
a few hours afterwards. For a persistent tendency to sleepiness
during the day the physician prescribed coffee, whose primary action
is to enliven; and when it had exhausted its action the day - somnolence
increased; - for frequent waking at night he gave in the evening,
without heeding the other symptoms of the disease, opium, which
by virtue of its primary action produced the same night (stupefied,
dull) sleep, but the subsequent nights were still more sleepless
than before; - to chronic diarrhoeas he opposed, without regarding
the other morbid signs, the same opium, whose primary action is
to constipate the bowels, and after a transient stoppage of the
diarrhoea it subsequently became all the worse; - violent and frequently
recurring pains of all kinds he could suppress with opium for but
a short time; they then always returned in greater, often intolerable
severity, or some much worse affection came in their stead. For
nocturnal cough of long standing the ordinary physician knew no
better than to administer opium, whose primary action is to suppress
every irritation; the cough would then perhaps cease the first night,
but during the subsequent nights it would be still more severe,
and if it were again and again suppressed by this palliative in
increased doses, fever and nocturnal perspiration were added to
the disease; - weakness of the bladder, with consequent retention
of urine, was sought to be conquered by the antipathic work of cantharides
to stimulate the urinary passages whereby evacuation of the urine
was certainly at first effected but thereafter the bladder becomes
less capable of stimulation and less able to contract, and paralysis
of the bladder is imminent; - with large doses of purgative drugs
and laxative salts, which excite the bowels to frequent evacuation,
it was sought to remove a chronic tendency to constipation, but
in the secondary action the bowels became still more confined; -
the ordinary physician seeks to remove chronic debility by the administration
of wine, which, however, stimulates only in its primary action,
and hence the forces sink all the lower in the secondary its primary
action, and hence the forces sink all the lower in the secondary
action; - by bitter substances and heating condiments he tries to
strengthen and warm the chronically weak and cold stomach, but in
the secondary action of these palliatives, which are stimulating
in their primary action only, the stomach becomes yet more inactive;
- long standing deficiency of vital heat and chilly disposition
ought surely to yield to prescriptions of warm baths, but still
more weak, cold, and chilly do the patients subsequently become;
- severely burnt parts feel instantaneous alleviation from the application
of cold water, but the burning pain afterwards increases to an incredible
degree, and the inflammation spreads and rises to a still greater
height;1
- by means of the sternutatory remedies that provoke a secretion
of mucus, coryza with stoppage of the nose of long standing is sought
to be removed, but it escapes observation that the disease is aggravated
all the more by these antagonistic remedies (in their secondary
action), and the nose becomes still more stopped; - by electricity
and galvanism, with in their primary action greatly stimulate muscular
action, chronically weak and almost paralytic limbs were soon excited
to more active movements, but the consequence (the secondary action)
was complete deadening of all muscular irritability and complete
paralysis; - by venesections it was attempted to remove chronic
determination of blood to the head, but they were always followed
by greater congestion; - ordinary medical practitioners know nothing
better with which to treat the paralytic torpor of the corporeal
and mental organs, conjoined with unconsciousness, which prevails
in many kinds of typhus, than with large doses of valerian, because
this is one of the most powerful medicinal agents for causing animation
and increasing the motor faculty; in their ignorance, however, they
knew not that this action is only a primary action, and that the
organism, after that is passed, most certainly falls back, in the
secondary (antagonistic) action, into still greater stupor and immobility,
that is to say, into paralysis of the mental and corporeal organs
(and death); they did not see, that the very diseases they supplied
most plentifully with valerian, which is in such cases an oppositely
acting, antipathic remedy, most infallibly terminated fatally. The
old school physician rejoices2
that he is able to reduce for several hours the velocity of the
small rapid pulse in cachectic patients with the very first dose
of uncombined purple foxglove (which in its primary action makes
the pulse slower); its rapidity, however, soon returns; repeated,
and now increased doses effect an ever smaller diminution of its
rapidity, and at length none at all - indeed - in the secondary
action the pulse becomes uncountable; sleep, appetite and strength
depart, and a speedy death is invariably the result, or else insanity
ensues. How often, in one word, the disease is aggravated, or something
even worse is effected by the secondary action of such antagonistic
(antipathic) remedies, the old school with its false theories does
not perceive, but experience teaches it in a terrible manner.
1 Vide Introduction.
2 Vide Hufeland,
in his pamphlet, Die Homoopathie, p.20.
§ 60 Fifth Edition
If these
ill-effects are produced, as may very naturally be expected from
the antipathic employment of medicines, the ordinary physician imagines
he can get over the difficulty by giving, at each renewed aggravation,
a stronger dose of the remedy, whereby an equally transient suppression
is effected; and as there then is a still greater necessity for
giving ever-increasing quantities of the palliative there ensues
either another more serious disease or frequently even danger to
life and death itself, but never a cure of a disease of considerable
or of long standing.
§ 60 Sixth Edition
If these
ill-effects are produced, as may very naturally be expected from
the antipathic employment of medicines, the ordinary physician imagines
he can get over the difficulty by giving, at each renewed aggravation,
a stronger dose of the remedy, whereby an equally transient suppression1
is effected; and as there then is a still greater necessity for
giving ever - increasing quantities of the palliative there ensues
either another more serious disease or frequently even danger to
life and death itself, but never a cure of a disease of considerable
or of long standing.
1 All usual palliatives
given for the suffering of the sick have (as is seen here) as after-effects
an increase of the same suffering and the older physicians had to
repeat them in ever stronger doses in order to achieve a similar
modification, which however, was never permanent and never sufficient
to prevent an increased recurrence of the ailment. But Brousseau,
who twenty-five years before contended against the senseless mixing
of different drugs in prescription and thereby ending its reign
in France, (for which mankind is grateful to him) introduced his
so-called physiological system (without taking note of the homoeopathic
method then already established), a method of treatment, while effectively
lessening and permanently preventing the return of all the sufferings,
was applicable to all diseases of mankind; a thing that the palliatives
then in use were not capable of affecting.
Being
able to heal disease with mild innocent remedies and thus establish
health, Brousseau found the easier way to quiet the sufferings of
patients more and more at the cost of their life and at last to
extinguish life wholly - a method of treatment that, alas, seemed
sufficient to his contemporaries. In the degree that the patient
retains his strength will his ailments be apparent and the more
intensely will he feel his pains. He moans and groans and cries
out and calls for help more and more vociferously so that the physician
cannot come any too soon to give relief. Brousseau needed only to
depress the vital force, to lessen it more and more and behold,
the more frequently the patient was bled, the more leeches and cupping
glasses sucked out the vital fluid (for the innocent irreplaceable
blood was according to him responsible for almost all ailments).
In the same proportion the patient lost strength to feel pain or
to express his aggravated condition by violent complaint and gestures.
The patient appears more quiet in proportion as he grows weaker,
the bystanders rejoice in his apparent improvement, ready to return
to the same measures on the renewal of his sufferings - be they
spasms, suffocation, fears or pain, for they had so beautifully
quieted him before and gave promise of further ease. In disease
of long duration and when the patient retained some strength, he
was deprived of food, put on a “hunger diet,” in order to depress
life so much more successfully and inhibit the restless states.
The debilitated patient feels unable to protest against further
similar measures of blood-letting leeches, vesication, warm baths
and so forth to refuse their employment. That death must follow
such frequently repeated reduction and exhaustion of the vital energy
is not noticed by the patient, already robbed of all consciousness,
and the relatives, blinded by the improvements even of the last
sufferings of the patient by means of blood letting and warm baths,
cannot understand and are surprised when the patient quietly slips
away.
“But
God knows the patient on his bed of sickness was not treated with
violence, for the prick of a small lancet is not really painful
and the gum Arabic solution (Eau de Gourme, almost the only medicine
that Brousseau used) was mild in taste and without apparent action
- the bite of the leeches insignificant and the blood letting by
the physician done quietly while the luke warm baths could only
soothe, hence the disease from the very start must have been fatal,
so that the patient, notwithstanding all efforts of the physician,
had to leave the earth.” In this way the relatives, and especially
the heirs of the dear departed, consoled themselves.
The physicians
in Europe and elsewhere accepted this convenient treatment of all
disease according to a single rule, since it saved them from all
further thinking (the most laborious of all work under the sun).
They only had to take care “to assuage the pangs of conscience and
console themselves that they were not the originators of this system
and this method of treatment, that all the other thousands of Brousseauists
did the same and that possibly everything would cease with death
anyway as was taught by their master.” In this way many thousand
physicians were miserably misled to shed (with cold heart) the warm
blood of their patients that were capable of cure and thereby rob
millions of men gradually of their life, according to Brousseau’s
method, more than fell on Napoleon’s battlefields. Was it perhaps
necessary by the disposition of God for that system of Brousseau
which destroyed medically the life of curable patients to precede
homoeopathy in order to open the eyes of the world to the only true
science and art of medicine, homoeopathy, in which curable patients
find health and new life when this most difficult of all arts is
practised by an indefatigable discriminating physician in a pure
and conscientious manner?
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