
CORRECTION ON MISTAKEN BELIEF OF ALLOPATHs
(With reference to article
"Allopathy" by William T. Jarvis, Ph.D)
[The books referred by the author were
written by allopaths. There has never been a true research based on books
written by homoeopath or any attempt to look into the essence of homoeopathy.
Even quotation from Organon of Medicine was second-handed. The response
provided here is to add comments thru homoeopath’s own writings. Remember: The
enemy to any science is a closed mind. - Mohamed Hatta Abu Bakar, HMD. homeohbi@yahoo.com] Our
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The
term "allopathy" was invented by German physician Samuel Hahnemann
(1755-1843). He conjoined allos
"opposite" and pathos
"suffering" as a referent to harsh medical practices of his era which
included bleeding, purging, vomiting and the administration of highly toxic
drugs.
(Yes)
These
practices were based on the ancient Greek humoral
theory which attributed disease to an imbalance of four humors (i.e.,
blood, phlegm, and black and yellow bile) and four bodily conditions (i.e, hot,
cold, wet and dry) that corresponded to four elements (earth, air, fire, and
water). Physicians following the Hippocratic tradition attempted to balance the
humors by treating symptoms with "opposites." For instance, fever
(hot) was believed due to excess blood because patients were flush; therefore,
balance was sought by blood-letting in order to "cool" the patient.
Hahnemann sought to replace allopathy with his "law of similia" that treated "like with like," a
prescientific idea that he had discovered from reading ancient sources.
( ? )
The history of homeopathy begins with the
discoveries of its founder Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843), a German physician.
Hahnemann first coined the word "homeopathy" ("homoios" in
Greek means similar, "pathos" means suffering) to refer
to the pharmacological principle, the law of similars, that is its basis.
Actually, the law of similars was previously described by Hippocrates and
Paracelsus and was utilized by many cultures, including the Mayans, Chinese,
Greeks, Native American Indians, and Asian Indians (1), but it was Hahnemann
who codified the law of similars into a systematic medical science.
Hahnemann's first comments about the general applicability of the law of
similars were in 1789 when he translated a book by William Cullen, one of the
leading physicians of the era. At one point in the book Cullen ascribed the
usefulness of Peruvian bark (Cinchona) in treating malaria to its
the bitter and astringent properties. Hahnemann wrote a bold footnote in his
translation, disputing Cullen's explanation. Hahnemann asserted that the
efficacy of Peruvian bark must be for other factor, since he noted that
there were other substances and mixtures of substances decidedly more bitter
and more astringent than Peruvian bark that were not effective in treating
malaria. He then described his own taking repeated doses of this herb until his
body responded to its toxic dose with fever, chills, and other symptoms similar
to malaria. Hahnemann concluded that the reason this herb was beneficial was
because it caused symptoms similar to those of the disease it was treating. (2)
This account epitomizes Hahnemann. First, he was translating Cullen's work,
which indicates that he was one of the more respected translators of his day.
By the time he was only 24, Hahnemann he could read and write in at least seven
languages. He ultimately translated over 20 major medical and scientific texts.
This story reveals Hahnemann as both an avid experimenter and a respected
chemist. He had authored a four volume set of books called The Pharmaceutical
Lexicon, which was considered one of the standard reference texts for
apothecaries/pharmacists of his day. (3) And this account also reveals
Hahnemann as an audacious rebel. He was unafraid to speak his mind, even if it
meant correcting the analysis of a very respected physician. He was unafraid to
question commonly accepted truths. And he had enough initiative to seek his own
alternative explanations.
After translating Cullen's work, Hahnemann spent the next six years actively
experimenting on himself, his family, and a small but growing group of
followers. In 1796 he wrote about his experiences with the law of similars in Hufeland's
Journal, a respected medical journal in Germany. (4) Coincidentally, in
1798 Edward Jenner discovered the value of giving small doses of cowpox to
people in an effort to immunize them against smallpox. Whereas Jenner's work
was generally accepted into orthodox medicine, Hahnemann's work was not. In
fact, there was so much antagonism to Hahnemann and the new school of medical thought
he called homeopathy that entire medical journals were called Anti-Homoeopathic
Archives or Anti-Organon (the Organon refers to the book that
Hahnemann wrote as the primary text on the homeopathic art and science). (5)
Hahnemann was particularly disliked by the apothecaries because he recommended
the use of only one medicine at a time and prescribing only limited doses of
it. (6) Because he recommended only small doses of each medicine, the
apothecaries could not charge much for them. And because each medicine required
careful preparation, Hahnemann found that the apothecaries were not always
making them correctly or were intentionally giving his patients different
medicines. As he grew to distrust the apothecaries, he chose to dispense his
own medicines, an illegal act at the time in Germany. The apothecaries then
accused Hahnemann of "entrenching upon their privileges by the dispensing
of medicines." (7) Arrested in Leipzig in 1820, he was found guilty and
forced to move.
He moved to Kothen, where he was delegated special permission to practice and
dispense his own medicines by Grand Duke Ferdinand, one of the many European
royalty who supported homeopathy. (8)
Despite the persecution, homeopathy continued to grow. It grew not just because
it offered a systematic approach to treating sick people, but also because
orthodox medicine was ineffective and even dangerous. There is general
agreement among medical historians today that orthodox medicine of the 1700s
and 1800s in particular frequently caused more harm than good. (9)
Bloodletting and application of leeches were common practice even through to
the mid-1800s. One French doctor bloodlet so much that some jokingly estimated
that he spilled more blood in his medical practice than was spilled throughout
the entire Napoleonic Wars. (10). Benjamin Rush, considered the father of
American medicine, asserted that bloodletting was useful in all general and
chronic disease. (11) As many as 41 million leeches were imported into France
in 1833 alone. (12) In the United States, one firm imported 500,000 leeches in
1856; its competitor imported 300,000. (13). Besides bloodletting and leeches,
orthodox physicians used medicines made from mercury, lead, arsenic, and
various strong herbs to help purge the body of foreign disease-causing matter.
The combination of poor medical care and prejudicial reaction against
homeopathy is certainly understandable in light of medical education at the
time. Nathan Smith Davis, who was the driving force in the creation of the
American Medical Association described medical education in 1845:
"All the young man has to do is
gain admittance in the office of some physician, where he can have access to a
series of ordinary medical text-books, and see a patient perhaps once a month,
with perhaps a hasty post-mortem examination once a year; and in the course of
three years thus spent, one or two courses of lectures in the medical colleges,
where the whole science of medicine, including anatomy, physiology, chemistry,
materia medica, pathology, practice of medicine, medical jurisprudence,
surgery, and midwivery are all crowded upon his mind in the short space of sixteen
weeks...and his education, both primary and medical, is deemed complete."
(14)
Despite the fact that historians and scientists today consider medicine of the
18th and 19th century as unscientific and even barbaric, orthodox physicians
had the audacity to call homeopathy "quackery,"
"unscientific," "cultish," and "devilish."
- Ullman,
Dana., 1991, Internet edition: A Condensed History of Homeopathy (Excerpt from Discovering
Homeopathy: Medicine for the 21st Century)
Hahnemann had abandoned medical practice
because of his inability to heal his patients by the methods of his era. He
earned money by translating classical works into German leading him to ancient
medical ideas. (Kaufman M. "Homeopathy in America: The Rise and Fall and
Persistence of a Medical Heresy," in Other
Healers: Unorthodox Medicine in America, Ed. Norman Gevitz, Johns Hopkins,
1988.)
( ? )
Hahnemann did not start out as a theoretician,
pontificating from high ground about the best and ideal form of medicine or its
philosophical basis. He did do that, but it came second. It is hard to say with
absolute certainty, but his clinical experiments probably came first and these
were then followed at a later stage by his theoretical rantings. Important and
much overlooked point: those rantings were always derived from practice and
confirmed by it. Thus he was never speaking from a purely theoretical level,
but always based upon the sound bedrock of practice, of clinical experience.
Ideas were amended through practice, revised, extended, embellished, corrected
and altered only through practice. Practice, practice, practice. Thus he
provided, created and perfected chiefly a clinical method, but greatly
enriched, underpinned and supplemented by theoretical writings. This is a very
important point: theory always follows method and is it's subordinate. It also
reflects an aspect of the man: he was both an excellent experimental scientist
and a powerful thinker and writer.
In another sense you could argue that the ideas preceded the
methods. And there is some truth in this. It is true of many areas of research
and is often difficult to establish with any certainty whether the ideas or the
experiments came first. The probem is in trying to trace the origin of a
system, part of which comes out of someone's head and their reading and
thinking and part of which comes out of the experiments and observations they
undertake on the practical level in the real world. Inevitably, it is usually a
mixture of both. Then in addition, there is also the wider cultural element and
how a person has drawn upon concepts and belief-patterns within the society and
times they lived in. No doubt these were all influences impinging upon
Hahnemann as a person.
For example, in Hahnemann's case it is very difficult to know with
certainty to what degree he leaned upon Paracelsus. That is a separate though
interesting strand. He left behind little evidence of any substantial interest
in occultism or mediaeval medicine, so it is more likely that he devised
homeopathy partly through practice and partly through his own mind just
thinking things through. And for that there is abundant evidence right through
his life - he had a brilliant, searching and restless inventiveness to his
mentality. He was very perceptive and very original in almost everything he
did. It therefore remains unlikely that he copied Paracelsus. And it is often
imposssible to trace back to its source an idea that has taken root in
someone's mind and then borne fruit many years later.
Some people are good at making things but they can't teach it.
Emulators must simply observe them very closely in order to become good or to
work out why they are so good. Others are good at describing and teaching but
cannot do it very well. Some rare beings are good at doing and at describing
and teaching. Hahnemann was in this latter category. He combined a genius for
doing new things and for teaching them, describing them, and for analysing the
meaning and significance of what he was doing. He was well rooted in bothworlds
- theory and method, both as a keen obseerver and experimenter but also as an
articulate and competent theoretician. He explored and stressed both aspects -
we should try and follow his lead and strive to be strong in both areas.
The reasoning behind theory and method is very interesting and
focuses upon how Hahnemann discovered homeopathy in the first place. It rests
chiefly upon his brilliant critique of allopathy. What are the origins of that
critique?
Hahnemann first discovered for himself the appalling
ineffectiveness of allopathic practice. As a physician, as a compassionate man
and as a parent, that fact depressed him very greatly. But working on a
theoretical level this inspired him to search out and identify the underlying
reasons for its ineffectiveness. That could only be revealed through clearly
identifying and enunciating its underlying creed or philosophy. He must have
spent a great deal of time just thinking and reflecting about allopathic
medicine - its methods and its whys and wherefors. He must have done that to
have arrived at the conclusions he came to.
One thing that is wonderful about Hahnemann is that he resolutely
believed that a rational form of medicine could be developed and he
meticulously searched it out. Many would have just given up and done something
else, but he soldiered on, translating medical texts from many languages,
unearthing data from the past and experimenting on a practical level. Though it
is true that he gave up medical practice for a time, he never gave up the hope
of finding a medical path superior to allopathic drugging.
His critique asserts that allopathy is based chiefly upon three
ideas: polypharmacy, strong doses and the law of contraries. He identifies all
three as the root causes of its ineffectiveness. Then he chooses the opposite
medical creed - single drugs, small doses, and similars, which he provisionally
identifies as the most likely features of an effective and superior medical
path. What is so interesting is that he uses the very creed of his enemy -
allopathy - as the basis for first setting his feet down onto clean Paracelsan
sand! I shall return to this point.
His clinical practice therefore both suggested and confirmed his
theoretical ideas. He felt fully justified in vilifying allopathy because at
both levels he could see that it was fundamentally incorrect. Incorrect as a
method because it didn't work, and therefore incorrect as a creed. What is so
striking and modern about his apporach is that he attacked a method that didn't
work and then decided that it must contain suspect principles that underpin the
technique and form the cause of why it didn't work. That whole approach is so
modern and so scientific that it has gone unnoticed. Thus through his powerful
analysis of allopathy he came to conceive an outline sketch of the most
probable qualities of a superior method - similars, small doses and single
drug. He then tested this method and found it very useful.
Through continued experiment he became more and more convinced that
it was the best of the two - what he termed a 'rational healing art'. This
increased his confidence and widened the gulf with allopathy. This is why
Hahnemann criticised so forcefully both the methods and the ideology or creed
of allopathy. He had successfully unearthed its essence and shown it to be
incorrect through testing its opposite creed and showing that the latter was both
more effective and more predictable. No-one before Hahnemann had done this.
No-one before had so clearly identified and laid bare the underlying creed of
allopathy and chosen from its basis an opposite creed and then systematically
investigated it and pushed it through into a new system. That was a remarkable
achievement.
- Morrell, Peter., Internet edition: HOMEOPATHY -
THEORY AND METHOD
Although
many modern therapies can be construed to conform to an allopathic rationale
(eg, using a laxative to relieve constipation), standard medicine has never
paid allegiance to an allopathic principle.
( ? )
The
label "allopath" was considered highly derisive by regular medicine.
A 1902 book intended for new medical graduates reveals just how vehemently
Medical Doctors once opposed and resented the label:
Remember
that the term "Allopath" is a false nickname not chosen by regular
physicians at all, but cunningly coined, and put in wicked use against us, in
his venomous crusade against Regular Medicine by its enemy, Hahnemann, and ever
since applied to us by our enemies with all the insinuations and derisive use
the term afford. "Allopathy" applied to regular medicine is both
untrue and offensive and is no more accepted by us that the term "Heretics"
is accepted by the Protestants, or "Niggers" by the Blacks [1].
( ? )
Homeopathy posed a serious threat to entrenched medicine. Orthodox
physicians criticized herbalists, midwives, and various other
"non-regular" practitioners because they were not medically trained. Homeopaths,
however, could not be discredited as being unlearned, since they had been were
graduates from many of the same medical schools as "regular"
physicians. In fact, many of the initial practitioners of homeopathy graduated
from some of the most prestigious medical schools of the day. (15)
Orthodox medicine was also threatened because homeopathy offered an integrated,
coherent, systematic basis for its therapeutic practice. In his Pulitzer
Prize-winning book The Social Transformation of American Medicine Paul
Starr noted, "Because homeopathy was simultaneously philosophical and
experimental, it seemed to many people to be more rather than less scientific
than orthodox medicine." (16)
One of the most important reasons that orthodox physicians and drug companies
disliked homeopathy was that inherent in the homeopathic approach was a sharp
critique of the use of conventional drugs. Homeopaths were primarily critical
of the suppressive nature of these drugs. They felt that they simply masked the
person's symptoms, creating deeper, more serious diseases. Homeopaths also
noted that this masking of symptoms made it more difficult for them ultimately
to find the correct medicine, since the person's idiosyncratic symptoms are the
primary guide to the individual selection of the medicine.
Perhaps the most important reason that conventional physicians disliked
homeopathy and homeopaths was well expressed at an A.M.A. meeting by one of the
more respected orthodox physicians who said, "We must admit that we never
fought the homeopath on matters of principles; we fought him because he came
into the community and got the business." (17) Although most physicians,
past or present, won't as easily admit it, economic issues play a major role in
what is practiced and what is allowed to be practiced.
Hahnemann's principles therefore posed a philosophical, clinical, and economic
threat to orthodox medicine.
Homeopathy began growing in the New World shortly after Hans Gram, a Dutch
homeopath, emigrated to the United States in 1825. It expanded so rapidly that
the homeopaths decided to create a national medical society. In 1844 they
organized the American Institute of Homeopathy, which became America's first
national medical society. (18) Partially in response to the growth of the
homeopaths, in 1846 a rival medical group formed which then vowed to slow the
development of homeopathy. (19) This organization called itself the American
Medical Association.
Members of the A.M.A. had a long-standing animosity towards homeopathy and
homeopaths. This feeling ran so strong that shortly after the formation of the
A.M.A., it was decided to purge all the local medical societies of physicians
who were homeopaths. (20). This purge was successful in every state except
Massachusetts. Because homeopathy was so strong among the elite of Boston, the
A.M.A. allowed this exception, as long as the Society agreed not to allow any
new homeopathic members. Then, in 1871, the eight remaining physicians were
expelled from the Society for the heinous crime of being homeopaths.
In 1882 the AMA declined to acknowledge the delegates from the New York State
Medical Society because this society had recently passed a resolution that
recognized all properly graduated doctors (which thereby included
homeopathic physicians).
Besides keeping homeopaths out of their societies, the A.M.A. wanted to
discourage any type of association with homeopaths. In 1855 the AMA
established a code of ethics which asserted that orthodox physicians would lose
their membership in the A.M.A. if they even consulted with a homeopath or any
other "non-regular" practitioner. (21) At the time, if a physician
lost his membership in the local medical society, it meant that in some states
he no longer had a license to practice medicine. Often, orthodox physicians,
who controlled the medical societies, wouldn't admit homeopathic physicians and
then would arrange for their arrest for practicing medicine without a license.
(22) Ultimately, homeopaths set up their own local societies and established
their own medical boards.
At a time in American medicine when physicians would very rarely, if ever, be
reprimanded by fellow physicians, the ethical code on consorting with
homeopaths was regularly enforced. (23) One Connecticut physician was expelled
from his local medical society for consulting with a homeopath--his wife. (24)
A New York doctor was expelled for purchasing milk sugar from a homeopathic
pharmacy. (25) Joseph K. Barnes, the Surgeon General of the United States, was
denounced for aiding in the treatment of Secretary of State William Seward on
the night he was stabbed and Lincoln was shot, simply because Seward's personal
physician was a homeopath. (26)
In a bizarre event Dr. Christopher C. Cox was refused admittance into the
Medical Society of the District of Columbia because he had served on the D.C.
board of health which had a member who was a homeopath. Dr. D.W. Bliss, a
conventional physician and colleague of Dr. Cox, also was expelled, not because
he consulted a homeopath, but because he consulted with Dr. Cox who was
previously expelled. Ironically, the Medical Society judged that Bliss and Cox
had committed a heinous crime, even though it was in the treatment of Schulyer
Colfax, the Vice President of the United States under Andrew Johnson. (27)
The A.M.A. and its members did anything possible to thwart the education of
homeopaths. In the early 1840's and again in 1855 advocates of homeopathy
convinced the Michigan legislature to establish a professorship of homeopathy
in the department of medicine at the University of Michigan. The AMA resolved
to deny recognition to the university's "regular" medical graduates
if a homeopath, as one of their professors, signed their diploma (at the time
all professors signed graduates' diplomas). The homeopaths brought their case
to the Michigan Supreme Court three times, but each time the court expressed
uncertainty as to its power to compel the Regents of the University to take
action. (28)
Finally, a compromise was reached. In 1875 the Michigan legislature voted to
give money to a new hospital dependent upon the appointment of two professors
of homeopathy, but it was also decided that only the president and the
secretary of the university would sign the diplomas, thereby allowing their graduates
to be recognized by the A.M.A.
Despite this compromise, almost every medical journal in the country urged the
Michigan medical faculty to resign rather than participate in the training of
homeopaths. (29)
The antagonism to homeopathy was not confined only to the United States; it was
also widespread in Europe. A French medical student was expelled from his
college for expressing interest in homeopathy. A "consultation
clause" similar to the one in the United States was established in France.
When J.P. Tessier, a conventional French physician, evaluated the results of
homeopathy at Hospital Ste. Marguerite and announced to the Paris Academy that
they were favorable, he aroused a storm of protest. (30) No orthodox medical
journal would publish these results, and when he had it published in a
homeopathic journal, he was summarily expelled by the medical society. (31)
In the 1830s the practice of homeopathy became illegal in Austria. Despite its
illegality, many people used microdoses during the cholera epidemic of 1831.
Statistics show that those with cholera who tried homeopathy had a mortality
rate between 2.4 to 21.1%; whereas over 50% of those with cholera under
conventional medical care died. (32)
In addition to the attacks by conventional physicians on the homeopaths' right
to practice, the right to join medical organizations, and the right to a
medical education, conventional physicians sought to besmirch the reputation of
homeopaths. Homeopaths were considered "immoral," "illegitimate,"
and "unmanly." The opposition to homeopathy was not based on an
scientific evaluation of this healing art, but arose primarily because
homeopathy and homeopaths were a significant competitor to conventional physicians.
- Ullman,
Dana., 1991, Internet edition: A Condensed History of Homeopathy (Excerpt from Discovering
Homeopathy: Medicine for the 21st Century)
The
terms "allopath" and "allopathy" are often used in
reference to Medical Doctors and standard medicine by medical writers. Such use
generally reflects an alternate definition of allopathy: "a system of medical practice making use of all
measures proved of value (emphasis
added) in treatment of disease." [2]
( ? )
This
definition accurately describes modern, science-based medicine, but is
inconsistent with its root words "allos" and "pathos." The
duplicity of the term aids those who wish to misrepresent medicine as
ideologically allopathic (i.e., symptom suppression).
( ? )
NCAHF
recommends that these terms not be used in reference to standard medicine or
MDs.
Significance
of a Misnomer.
Although
medicine never accepted the label of allopathy, nonmedical practitioners such
as chiropractors, homeopaths, and naturopaths regularly misrepresent physicians
as "allopaths." This is usually done in order to make differences
between their practice guilds appear based upon conflicting philosophies rather
than ideology versus science. Opponents of medicine claim that they treat the
underlying causes of disease, while MDs treat only the symptoms. Further, they
claim that medicine suppresses the symptoms, thus interfering with the body's
inherent healing processes. A close examination reveals that this line of
reasoning is only clever rhetoric.
( ? )
It is stated in the second paragraph of the Organon that :
"The highest ideal of a cure is rapid,
gentle and permanent restoration of the, health, or removal and annihilation of
the disease in its whole extent, in the shortest, most reliable and most
harmless way, on easily comprehensible principles."
If you were to ask a physician, who had not been
trained in Homoeopathy, of what a cure consists, his mind would only revolve
around the idea of the disappearance of the pathological state ; if an eruption
on the skin were the given instance, the disappearance of the eruption from the
skin under his treatment would be called a cure ; if hemorrhoids, the removal
of these would be called a cure ; if constipation, the opening of the bowels would
be called a cure ; if some affection of the knee joint, an amputation above the
knee would be considered a cure ; or if it were an acute disease and the
patient did not die, it would be considered a cure of the disease.
And that is really the idea of the patient as
it is derived from the physician.
The patient will often wonder at the great skill
of the physician in removing an eruption from the skin, and will go back again
when the graver manifestations, the tissue changes threatening death, have come
on as a consequence, and will say to the doctor :
" You so wonderfully cured me of my skin
disease, why cannot you cure of my liver trouble ?"
But this very scientific ignorant doctor has made
a failure ; he has driven what was upon the surface and harmless into the
innermost precincts of the economy and the patient is going to die as a result
of scientific ignorance.
There are three distinct points involved in
this paragraph and these must be brought out.
Restoring health, and not the removing
of symptoms, is the first point.
Restoring health has in view the establishment of
order in a sick human being ; removing symptoms has not in view a human being ;
removing the constipation, the hemorrhoids, the white swelling of the knee, the
skin disease or any local manifestation or particular sign of disease, or even
the removal of a group of symptoms does not have in view the restoration to
health of the whole economy of man.
If the removal of symptoms is not followed by a
restoration to health, it cannot be called a cure.
We learned in our last study that " the sole
duty of the physician is to heal the sick," and therefore it is not his
duty merely to remove the symptoms, to change the aspect of the symptoms the
appearance of the disease image, imagining that lie has thereby established
order.
What a simple-minded creature he must be !
What a groveller in muck and mire he must be,
when he can meditate upon doing such things, even a moment !
How different his actions would be if he but
considered that every violent change which be produces in the aspect of the
disease aggravates the interior nature of the disease, aggravates the sickness
of the man and brings about an increase of suffering within him.
The patient should
be able to realize by his feelings and continue to say, that he is being restored to health, whenever a symptom
is removed.
There should be a corresponding inward
improvement whenever an outward symptom has been caused to disappear, and this
will be true whenever disease has been displaced by order.
The perfection of a cure consists, then : first
in restoring health, and this is to be done promptly, mildly and permanently, which is the second
point.
The cure must be quick or speedy, it must be
gentle, and it must be continuous or permanent.
Whenever an outward symptom has been caused to
disappear by violence, as by cathartics to remove constipation, it cannot be
called mild or permanent, even if it is prompt.
Whenever violent drugs are resorted to there is
nothing mild in the action or the reaction that must follow.
At the time this second paragraph of the Organon was written physicking was not so mild as at
the present day ; bloodletting, sweating, etc., were in vogue at the time Hahnemann
wrote these lines.
Medicine has changed somewhat in its appearance
; physicians are now using sugar-coated pills and contriving to make medicines
appear tasteless or tasteful ; they are using concentrated alkaloids.
But none of these things have been done because
of the discovery of any principle ; blood-letting and sweating were not
abandoned on account of principle, for the old men deprecate their disuse, and
often say they hope the time will come when they can again go back to the
lancet.
But the drugs of today are ten times more
powerful than those formerly used, because more concentrated.
The cocaine, sulphonal and numerous other
modern concentrated products of the manufacturing chemists are extremely
dangerous and their real action and reaction unknown.
The chemical discoveries of petroleum have opened
a field of destruction to human intelligence, to the understanding and to the
will, because these products are slowly and insidiously violent.
When drugs were used that were instantly
dangerous and violent the action was manifest, it showed upon the surface, and
the common people saw it.
But the patient of the present day goes through
more dangerous drugging, because it destroys the mind.
The apparent benefits produced by these drugs
are never permanent.
They may in some cases seem to be permanent,
but then it is because upon the economy has been engrafted a new and most
insidious disease, more subtle and more tenacious than the manifestation that
was upon the externals and it is because of this tenacity that the original
symptoms remain away.
The disease in its nature, its esse, has not been changed ; it is still there,
causing the internal destruction of the man, but its manifestation has been
changed, and there has been added to this natural disease a drug disease, more
serious than the former.
The manner of cure can only be mild if it flows
in the stream of natural direction, establishing order and thereby removing
disease.
The direction of old-fashioned medicine is like
pulling a cat up a hill by the tail ; whereas, the treatment that is mild,
gentle and permanent, flows with the stream, scarcely producing a ripple ; it
adjusts the internal disorder and the outermost of man returns to order.
Everything becomes orderly from the interior.
The curative medicine does not act violently upon
the economy, but establishes its action in a mild manner ; but while the action
is mild and gentle, very often that which follows, which is the reaction, is a
turmoil, especially when the work of traditional medicine is being undone and
former states are being re-established.
The third point is "upon
principles that are at once plain and
intelligible."
This means law, it means fixed principles ; it
means a law as certain as that of gravitation ; not guess work, empiricism, or
roundabout methods, or a cut-and-dried use of drugs as laid down by the last
manufacturer.
Our principles have never changed, they have
always been the same and will remain the same.
To become acquainted with these principles and
doctrines, with fixed knowledges, with exactitude or method, to become
acquainted with medicines that never change their properties, and to become
acquainted with their action, is the all-important aim in homoeopathic study.
When one has learned these principles, and continues
to practice them, they grow brighter and stronger.
The use of these fixed principles is the
removal of disease, the restoration to health in a mild, prompt and permanent
manner.
If one were to ask an allopathic graduate in
this class how he could demonstrate that he had cured some body, the answer
could only be such as I have mentioned already , viz., the patient did not die,
or that the manifestations prescribed for had disappeared.
If one were to ask to a physician trained in
homoepathic principles the same question, one would find that there are means
of distinctly demonstrating why he knows his patient is better.
You would naturally expect, if it is the
interior of man that is disordered in sickness, and not his tissues primarily,
that the interior must first be turned into order and the exterior last.
The first of man is his voluntary and the second
of man is his understanding, the last of man is his outermost ; from his center
to his circumference, to his organs, his skin, hair, nails, etc.
This being true, the cure must proceed from
center to circumference.
From center to circumference is from above downward,
from within outwards,
from more important to less important organs, from the head to the hands and
feet.
Every homoeopathic practitioner who understands
the art of healing, knows that symptoms which go off in these directions remain
away permanently.
Moreover he knows that symptoms which disappear in the reverse order of their coming are removed
permanently.
It is thus he knows that the patient did not
merely get well in spite of the treatment, but that he was cured by the action
of the remedy.
If a homoeopathic physician goes to the bedside
of a patient and, upon observing the onset of the symptoms and the course of
the disease, sees that the symptoms do not follow this order after his remedy,
he knows that he has had but little to do with the course of things.
But if on the contrary, he observes after the
administration of his medicine that the symptoms take a reverse course, then he
knows that his medicine has had to do with it, because if the disease were
allowed to run its course such a result would not take place.
The progression of chronic diseases is from the
surface to the center.
All chronic diseases have their first
manifestations upon the surface, and from that to the innermost of man.
Now in the proportion in which they are thrown
back upon the surface it is to be seen that the patient is recovering.
Here it is that the turmoil spoken of above
follows the true homoeopathic remedy, and the ignorant do not desire their old
outward symptom to be brought back even when it is known as the only possible
form of cure.
Complaints of the heart and chest and head must
in recovery be accompanied by manifestations upon the surface, in the extremities
upon the skin, nails and hair.
Hence you will find that these parts become
diseased when patients are getting well; the hair falls out or eruptions come
upon the skin.
In cases of rheumatism of the heart you find,
if the patient is recovering, that his knees become rheumatic, and he may say :
"Doctor, I could walk all over the house
when you first came to me, but now I cannot walk, my joints are so
swollen."
If the doctor does not know that that means
recovery he will make a prescription that will drive the rheumatism away from
the feet and knees and it will go back to the heart and the patient will die ;
and it need hardly be stated that the traditional doctor does not know this, as
he resorts to this plan as his regular and only plan of treatment, and in the
most innocent way kills the patient.
This is a simple illustration of how it is
possible for the interiors of man to cease to be affected and the exteriors to
become affected.
It may be impossible for the man to be entirely
cured, it may be impossible for this state to pass off, but that is the
direction of its passing off and there is no other course.
If the patient is incurable, while the means used
are mild, he may experience great suffering in the evolution of his disease, in
the course of his partial recovery.
To him it may not appear mild, but the means
that were used were mild. In acute diseases we do not observe so much distress
after prescribing as we see in old incurable cases, in deep-seated chronic
cornplaints that have existed a long time.
The return of the outward manifestations upon
the extremities are noticed in such cases where they have been suppressed.
To illustrate : there are many patients who have
had rheumatism in the hands and feet, in the wrists and knees and elbows, who have
been rubbed and stimulated with lotions and strong liniments, with chloroform,
with evaporating lotions, with cooling applications, until the rheumatism of
the extremities has disappeared to a great extent, but every physician knows
that as the disappearance of his rheumatism progresses cardiac symptoms are
likely to occur.
When this patient is prescribed for the
rheumatism of the extremities must come back or the heart will not be relieved.
That is true of every condition that has been
upon the extremities and driven in by local treatment. just as surely as you
live and observe the action of homeopathic remedies upon man, so surely will
you see these symptoms come back.
The patient will return and say :
"Doctor, I have the same symptoms that I had
when I was treated by Dr. So and-so for rheumatism."
This comes out in practice nearly every day.
It requires a little explanation to the
patient, and if he is intelligent enough to understand it, he will wait for the
remedy to act.
But the physician who thinks most of his
pocketbook will say :
"If I don't give him a liniment to put on that limb
he will go off and get another physician."
Now let me tell you right here is the beginning
of evil.
You had better trust to the intelligence of humanity
and trust that he will say and be cured.
If you have learned to prescribe for the
patient even though he suffer, if you have learned what is right and do not do
it, it is a violation of conscience.
This paragraph appeals to man's integrity ; it
is said in the last line "on principles that are at once plain and
intelligible", just as soon as you leave out integrity, and
believe that a man can do just as be pleases, you leave out everything that
pertains to principle and you leave out the foundation of success.
But when these principles are carried out, when a
man has made himself thoroughly conversant with the Materia Medica and
thoroughly intelligent in its application when he is circumspect in his very
interior life as to the carrying out of these principles, then he will lead
himself into a use that is most delightful, because by such means he may cause
diseases to disappear, and may win the lasting friendship and respect of a
class of people worth working for.
He has more than that, he has a clear
conscience with all that belongs to it ; he is living a life of innocence.
When he lives such a life he does not allow
himself to wink at the notions that are carried out in families, as, for
example, how to prevent the production of offspring, how to avoid bearing
children, how to separate man and wife by teaching them the nasty little
methods of avoiding the bringing forth of offspring.
The meddling with these vices and the
advocating of them will prevent the father and mother from being cured of their
chronic diseases.
Unless people lead an orderly life they will
not be cured of their chronic diseases.
It is your duty as physicians to inculcate such
principles among them that they may live an orderly life.
The physician who does not know what order is
ought not to be trusted.
It is the duty of the physician, then, first to
find out what is in man that is disorder, and then to restore him to health ;
and this return to health, which is a perfect cure, is to be accomplished by
means that are mild, that are orderly, that flow gently like the life force
itself, turning the internal of man into order, with fixed principles as his
guide, and by the homoeopathic remedy.
- Kent, J.t., “Lecture
of Homoeopathic Philosophy.”
When
they say they are treating the underlying causes, these vitalistic ideologists
refer to a metaphysical life force rather than actual causes of disease such as
viruses, bacteria, protozoa, genetic defects, radiation, chemical insult, and
so forth.
( ? )
(1)
The physicians
high and only mission is to restore the sick to health, to cure, as it is
termed.
Kent : Now. what is meant by the sick ? It is a man
that is sick and has to be restored to health, not his body or his tissues.
Tissue change is only the result of diseases. Well, then who is the sick man ?
The tissues could not become sick unless something prior to them has been
deranged to make them sick. The combination of will and the understanding,
constitute man ; conjoined they make life and activity. It is the sole duty of
the physician to heal the sick, It is not
his sole duty to heal the results of sickness, but sickness itself, and when
the man has been restored to health, there will be restored harmony in the
tissues and in the activities. Then the sole duty of the physician is to put in
order the interior of the economy ,i.e: the will and understanding. As
Hahnemann says "They are no diseases, but sick people". The idea of
sickness in man must be formed from the idea of sickness perceived in our
materia medica. As we perceive the nature of sickness in a drug image, so must
we perceive the nature of the sickness in a human being to be healed.
- Hahnemann, Dr. Samuel., “Organon of Medicine” with Kent’s Commentary)
(2)
Disease comes about only when two conditions
are fulfilled: the presence of an external morbific agent and the patient’s own
susceptibility. It is not merely the result of a number of microbic invaders.
That is why an epidemic never hits everybody in a particular area.
An allopathic
physician are taught that susceptibility is a major factor in the production of
disease. This fact is taught, but it is subsequently ignored as the
overwhelming emphasisi of medical training and practice focuses exclusively
upon the theory of viral or microbic transmission of disease. It is readily
acknowledged that people are protected from microbial attack by ‘antibodies’,
but no further inquiry is made into precisely what triggers off the production
of antibodies. Again, why is it that this happens to certain people and not to
others?
The great American homoeopath of the nineteenth
century, J.t.kent again writes:
“They
will tell you that the bacillus is the cause of tuberculosis. But if man had
not been susceptible to the bacillus he could have not been affected by it...
The bacteria are the results of the disease.... the microscopical little fellow
are not the disease cause, but they come after. They are the outcome of the
disease, are present wherever the disease is, and by the microscope it has been
discovered that every pathological result has its corresponding bacteria.”
- Vithoulkas, George., “Homeopathy: Medicine of the New Man.”
In
reality, chiropractic manipulative therapy's main value is symptomatic relief
from back pain. Homeopathy has always been based upon symptomatic relief.
Homeopathic remedies are based upon a process called "proving" which
identifies prospective remedies by matching the symptoms they produce in high
dosages with the symptoms reported by a patient.
Naturopathy
is eclectic, but none of its nonstandard medical modalities is truly aimed at
causation. The discovery of the true causes of disease can be attributed to the
basic sciences. Pasteur was a chemist trying to understand how wine was made.
( ? )
The
idea of a metaphysical life force has never been objectively verified, nor is
the theory of its existence required to explain a single biological phenomenon.
Scientific work on the real causes of disease are on-going. For a state of the
art look at this, NCAHF recommends a review of the Human Genome Project at the
National Institutes of Health.
Nonscientific
Health Care Based upon Vitalism
A
number of healing systems care are rooted in vitalism: "a doctrine that the functions of a living organism
are due to a vital principle distinct from physicochemical forces, [3]"
or, "the theory that biological activities are directed by a supernatural
force; opposed to mechanism," [4] which denotes a paranormal "life
force."
( ? )
In the thirteenth paragraph Hahnemann says :
"Therefore disease
(that does not come within the province of manual surgery), considered, as it
is by the allopathists, as a thing separate from the living whole, from the
organism and its animating vital force, and bidden in the interior, be it of
ever so subtle a character, is an absurdity that could only be imagined by
minds of a materialistic stamp, and has for thousands of years given to the
prevailing system of medicine all those pernicious impulses that have made it a
truly mischievous (non-healing) art."
The material notion referred to was that existing in the time of
Hahnemann.
Materialism is still growing.
It seems impossible for the majority of men of the present day to
perceive.
Perception, that is, seeing with the understanding, seems to be
entirely lost.
The materialist refuses to believe anything that does not conforms
to the laws of time and space.
It must be measured, it must be weighed, it must occupy space, or
he has no idea of it, and will distinctly affirm that without this it is
nothing and has no existence.
Everything beyond this is to the material mind poetical
dreamy, mysterious.
So they look in vain in the material world for cause.
- Kent, J.T., “Lecture of Homoeopathic
Philosophy.”
Vitalists
are not just nonscientific, they are antiscientific
because they abhor the reductionism (ie, versus holism) of science, the
materialism (versus etherealism) of science, and the mechanistic (versus
mystical) causal processes of science. They prefer subjective experience to
objective testing, and place intuitiveness above reason and logic.
( X )
Vitalistics
are in sync with postmodernist antiscience liberal arts academics and are
receiving aid and comfort from many of them who are in positions of influece.
Vitalism is a powerful motivating force because it is inextricably linked to
the concept of an immortal human soul -- a piece of the Divine that is the
essence of existence. This connects vitalism to religious ideologies and
explains why Sarton stated that "it is impossible to suppress the vitalist
point of view; it dodges every blow and reappears under a new form." [5]
( ? )
In
the thirteenth paragraph Hahnemann
says :
"Therefore
disease (that does not come within the province of manual surgery), considered,
as it is by the allopathists, as a thing separate from the living whole, from
the organism and its animating vital force, and bidden in the interior, be it
of ever so subtle a character, is an absurdity that could only be imagined by
minds of a materialistic stamp, and has for thousands of years given to the
prevailing system of medicine all those pernicious impulses that have made it a
truly mischievous (non-healing) art."
The
material notion referred to was that existing in the time of Hahnemann.
Materialism
is still growing.
It
seems impossible for the majority of men of the present day to perceive.
Perception,
that is, seeing with the understanding, seems to be entirely lost.
The
materialist refuses to believe anything that does not conforms to the laws of
time and space.
It
must be measured, it must be weighed, it must occupy space, or he has no idea
of it, and will distinctly affirm that without this it is nothing and has no
existence.
Everything
beyond this is to the material mind poetical dreamy, mysterious.
So
they look in vain in the material world for cause.
You
will never find a material entity as in any way causing anything. It has no
causative power, no creative influence, no propelling influence.
Causes
or simple substances are, in the natural state, in motion, and cause motion in
the bodies that they occupy ; the natural state for simple substance is that of
power, of mobility, of activity.
The
natural state of matter is rest, quietude, silence ; it has no power to move
unless acted upon.
Like
the dead man, whose tissues are at rest, it has no action of its own.
But
the simple substance dominates matter and animates it.
The
two worlds, the world of motion, of power, and the world of inertia, exist in
one.
There
is a world of life and a world of dead matter.
The
realm of thought and the realm of matter are the realm of cause and the realm
of result.
Causes
are invisible, results are visible.
We
see the actions of material substance, but the thinking man has only to reflect
to see that these actions that are visible in material form are but result of
the cause that exist in the form of simple substance which is invisible to the
natural eye but visible to the spiritual eye or understanding.
The
materialist cannot grasp this idea, he cannot think in this way.
We
have the grandest confirmation of these things in the wonderful action of our
potencies in the varying degrees in which they operate upon man, from the
lowest to the highest.
You
will discover in course of time that in a large number of chronic diseases our
antipsorics will cause changes in the economy, curative or otherwise, in from
five to seven different potencies.
In
this you have the demonstration of degree of simple substance, and their
relation to different planes in the interior of the economy.
Organon
§ 14. There is, in the
interior of man, nothing morbid that is curable, and no invisible morbid
alteration that is curable, which does not make itself known to the accurately
observing physician by means of morbid signs and symptoms - an arrangement in
perfect conformity with the infinite goodness of the all-wise Preserver of human life.
This
we have already spoken of.
Every
curable disease is made known to the physician by signs and symptoms.
Incurable
diseases have few signs and symptoms, and by their absence, the disease is
often thus known to be incurable.
By
watching the patient gradually decline without any symptoms but those which are
the common expressions of pathological conditions, we see that the case is
incurable and is going down to death.
All
curable maladies, therefore, have signs and symptoms in order to make
themselves known ; their purpose is to shadow forth the disorderly condition of
the vital force or interior of man, so that the physician may read it and
understand its nature.
This
imaging forth when the human race is in a state of ignorance, or materialism,
is like seeds sown upon stony ground ; there is no man to understand them, to
apprehend their meaning.
The
images of sickness are continually being formed, and only wait for a man
intelligent enough to observe them, to understand their meaning to translate
them, and it is possible for men, by the doctrines of Homoeopathy, to become
wise and intelligent enough to be conversant with these signs.
In
this paragraph we also see Hahnemann's recognition of Divine Providence.
It
was the very recognition of Providence
that enabled Hahnemann to become a man, and being directed by Divine Providence enabled him to finally perceive the
law.
When
his little ones were being hurled to death by strong drugs the first thought of
Hahnemann was that Providence had not made these little ones to be
destroyed by medicine ; it seemed to him inconsistent that they should be made
to take this miserable stuff.
In
all your experiences, if you live to be very old, you will find a very poor lot
of homoeopaths among those who do not recognize Divine Order.
You
will find among them false science, experimentation, but never any government
of principle, no thought of purpose, order or use.
Hahnemann was not in the strictest sense the
discoverer of the law, for Hippocrates
said that disease might be caused either by opposites or similars, but Hahnemann discovered this by pure experimentation
and the following out of strict order.
After
reading it up he found corroboration of the principles he had discovered, and
he followed along the line, growing wiser and stronger, until he formulated the
code which is so simple and yet so complete.
Very
few are able to read the Organon at
first and see anything in it but words, and yet the oldest practitioner of pure
Homoeopathy finds nothing in it to change and the older he grows and becomes
more active in work the more lie depends upon it and the more consistent it
becomes.
Although
I have been teaching the Organon for
many years, I never go over it without discovering some new thought in harmony
with the general teaching.
The
continued study of the Organon brings
a deeper and deeper understanding of it, because it is true.
In
the 15th paragraph another thought comes tip which still
further shows the unit of government which we have dwelt upon so much in past
lectures.
Everything
that flows from a center must be considered in connection with that center.
Man
in his healthy state is but the result of the normal activities of a unit, and
he must be considered as a unit In other words, his healthy vital force is the
result of action from a Center.
On
the otherhand, when man becomes diseased in his disordered or diseased state he
is still a unit and has to be considered collectively.
It
is not to be considered that his physiological action produces his morbid
actions, but that his morbid actions so completely dominate him that he is one
morbid state.
This
is again illustrated when he is dominated by the action of a drug (when a drug
instead of a disease possesses him), then we see a morbid state, but it is
still a unit of action.
There
are three different subjects forming a union of study, the study of man in his
natural state, the study of man in his sick state from natural disorder, and
the study of man in his sick state from artificial disorder.
-
James
Tyler KENT, A.M., M. D., “LECTURES ON HOMOEOPATHIC PHILOSOPHY”
Original reference:
"Allopathy"
William T. Jarvis, Ph.D
The term "allopathy" was invented by German
physician Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843). He conjoined allos "opposite" and pathos
"suffering" as a referent to harsh medical practices of his era which
included bleeding, purging, vomiting and the administration of highly toxic
drugs. These practices were based on the ancient Greek humoral theory which attributed disease to an imbalance of four
humors (i.e., blood, phlegm, and black and yellow bile) and four bodily
conditions (i.e, hot, cold, wet and dry) that corresponded to four elements
(earth, air, fire, and water). Physicians following the Hippocratic tradition
attempted to balance the humors by treating symptoms with
"opposites." For instance, fever (hot) was believed due to excess
blood because patients were flush; therefore, balance was sought by
blood-letting in order to "cool" the patient. Hahnemann sought to
replace allopathy with his "law of
similia" that treated "like with like," a prescientific idea
that he had discovered from reading ancient sources. Hahnemann had abandoned
medical practice because of his inability to heal his patients by the methods
of his era. He earned money by translating classical works into German leading
him to ancient medical ideas. (Kaufman M. "Homeopathy in America: The Rise
and Fall and Persistence of a Medical Heresy," in Other Healers: Unorthodox Medicine in America, Ed. Norman Gevitz,
Johns Hopkins, 1988.
Although many modern therapies can be construed to conform
to an allopathic rationale (eg, using a laxative to relieve constipation),
standard medicine has never paid allegiance to an allopathic principle. The
label "allopath" was considered highly derisive by regular medicine.
A 1902 book intended for new medical graduates reveals just how vehemently
Medical Doctors once opposed and resented the label:
Remember that the term "Allopath" is a false
nickname not chosen by regular physicians at all, but cunningly coined, and put
in wicked use against us, in his venomous crusade against Regular Medicine by
its enemy, Hahnemann, and ever since applied to us by our enemies with all the
insinuations and derisive use the term afford. "Allopathy" applied to
regular medicine is both untrue and offensive and is no more accepted by us
that the term "Heretics" is accepted by the Protestants, or
"Niggers" by the Blacks [1]. The terms "allopath" and
"allopathy" are often used in reference to Medical Doctors and
standard medicine by medical writers. Such use generally reflects an alternate
definition of allopathy: "a
system of medical practice making use of all measures proved of value (emphasis added) in treatment of disease." [2]
This definition accurately describes modern, science-based medicine, but is
inconsistent with its root words "allos" and "pathos." The
duplicity of the term aids those who wish to misrepresent medicine as
ideologically allopathic (i.e., symptom suppression). NCAHF recommends that
these terms not be used in reference to standard medicine or MDs.
Significance of a Misnomer.
Although medicine never accepted the label of allopathy,
nonmedical practitioners such as chiropractors, homeopaths, and naturopaths
regularly misrepresent physicians as "allopaths." This is usually
done in order to make differences between their practice guilds appear based
upon conflicting philosophies rather than ideology versus science. Opponents of
medicine claim that they treat the underlying causes of disease, while MDs
treat only the symptoms. Further, they claim that medicine suppresses the
symptoms, thus interfering with the body's inherent healing processes. A close
examination reveals that this line of reasoning is only clever rhetoric. When
they say the are treating the underlying causes, these vitalistic ideologists
refer to a metaphysical life force rather than actual causes of disease such as
viruses, bacteria, protozoa, genetic defects, radiation, chemical insult, and
so forth. In reality, chiropractic manipulative therapy's main value is
symptomatic relief from back pain. Homeopathy has always been based upon
symptomatic relief. Homeopathic remedies are based upon a process called
"proving" which identifies prospective remedies by matching the
symptoms they produce in high dosages with the symptoms reported by a patient.
Naturopathy is eclectic, but none of its nonstandard medical
modalities is truly aimed at causation. The discovery of the true causes of
disease can be attributed to the basic sciences. Pasteur was a chemist trying
to understand how wine was made. The idea of a metaphysical life force has
never been objectively verified, nor is the theory of its existence required to
explain a single biological phenomenon. Scientific work on the real causes of
disease are on-going. For a state of the art look at this, NCAHF recommends a
review of the Human Genome Project at the National Institutes of Health.
Nonscientific Health Care Based upon Vitalism
A number of healing systems care are rooted in vitalism: "a doctrine that the
functions of a living organism are due to a vital principle distinct from
physicochemical forces, [3]" or, "the theory that biological
activities are directed by a supernatural force; opposed to mechanism,"
[4] which denotes a paranormal "life force." Vitalists are not just
nonscientific, they are antiscientific
because they abhor the reductionism (ie, versus holism) of science, the
materialism (versus etherealism) of science, and the mechanistic (versus
mystical) causal processes of science. They prefer subjective experience to
objective testing, and place intuitiveness above reason and logic. Vitalistics
are in sync with postmodernist antiscience liberal arts academics and are
receiving aid and comfort from many of them who are in positions of influece.
Vitalism is a powerful motivating force because it is inextricably linked to
the concept of an immortal human soul -- a piece of the Divine that is the
essence of existence. This connects vitalism to religious ideologies and
explains why Sarton stated that "it is impossible to suppress the vitalist
point of view; it dodges every blow and reappears under a new form." [5]
This table lists the names given to the alleged "life force" in the
commonly promoted vitalistic systems:
|
Healing System // Originator
|
Name(s) Given
the Alleged "Life Force"
|
|
Anthroposophical Medicine // Rudolph Steiner
|
Divine element in nature; astral body; formative force;
ether body
|
|
Ayurvedic Medicine // Traditional Hindu medicine
|
Prana
|
|
Chiropractic // Daniel D. Palmer
|
Innate
|
|
Energy Medicine
|
Energy body, aura, Kirlian effect, etc.
|
|
Homeopathy // Samuel Hahnemann)
|
Vital energy
|
|
Magnetic Healing // Franz Anton Mesmer
|
Animal magnetism
|
|
Naturopathy
|
Vis Medicatrix Naturae
|
|
Primitive Medicine
|
(see cultural manifestations above)
|
|
Radiesthesia (Medical Dowsing)
|
Radiation
|
|
Reichian psychotherapy // Wilhelm Reich
|
Orgone energy
|
|
Therapeutic Touch // Dolores Krieger
|
Prana ("pranic healing" in ancient
earth/fertility religion, Wicca)
|
|
Traditional Chinese Medicine // Taoism
|
Chi, Qi, Ki
|
Quotations from
authoritative sources from a few of the above healing systems express the
quasi-religious natures of vitalistic ideologies better than any words NCAHF
could choose.
Chiropractic. "The founder of...chiropractic appreciated
the working of Universal Intelligence (God); the function of Innate
Intelligence (Soul, Spirit or Spark of Life) within each, which he recognized
as a minute segment of Universal; and the fundamental causes of interference to
the planned expression of that Innate Intelligence in the form of Mental,
Chemical and/or Mechanical Stresses, which create the structural distortions
that interfere with nerve supply." [6]
Homeopathy. "Hahnemann is a child of the modern age of
natural science, an adept in the chemistry of his day. But he can still hold a
conviction that an immaterial vital entity animates our organism until death
when the purely chemical forces prevail and decompose it. This vital entity
which he characterizes as immaterial, spirit-like, and which maintains in
health the harmonious wholeness of the organism, is in fact the wholeness of
it." [7] Naturopathy. "Orthodox medicine assumes that the world is
chaotic, mechanistic. We believe in the Vital Force which has inherent
organization, is intelligent and intelligible. Chiropractors have adjustments,
Acupuncturists have needles, we have Vis
Medicatrix Naturae. Our way is to research the mystery and beauty of the
life force, in which we have faith. Our power and our responsibility is to
bring the life force into the light." [8]
Naturopaths claim to be the inheritors of the Hippocratic
tradition, and pay lip service to the Vis
Medicatrix Naturae [9], but their belief in the "life force"
reveals that they do not understand the most important point of Hippocrates's
revolutionary proposition that the healing power of nature was not a
supernatural force.
References
- Cathel DW and Cathel W. Book on the Physician Himself, Philadelphia: Davis, 1902,
pp.300-301; in Stalker and Glymour. Examining
Holistic Medicine, Buffalo: Prometheus, 1985, p.34.
- Webster's New
Collegiate Dictionary.
- Webster's New
Collegiate Dictionary.
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