Books

A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 176

simple but profoundly insightful truths of Nature which are contrary to commonly held beliefs.
In all its ramifications, homeopathy is far too sophisticated a discipline to be learned in a few seminars or by reading this book. The principles are simple in concept, but difficult to fully comprehend, and they require years of intensive training and experience to apply—as many, and more, years as are required in a standard medical school.
To properly introduce homeopathy, we must go back 170 years and examine perhaps the most remarkable story in medical history, en¬tirely encompassed in the life of one man.
With time, I am certain that this man will rank as one of the greatest in medical history, alongside such giants of discovery as Einstein, Newton, and Hippocrates. Like these men, his insights have radically and permanently altered our perceptions of not only health and disease, but also the nature of existence itself. For this reason, we shall trace the life and thought of this man in some detail as a means of explaining and clarifying the basic principles of homeopathy.
In 1810, a book entitled Organon of the Art of Healing was published in Torgau, a small town in Germany. Its author, Samuel Hahnemann, was an extremely prominent physician and medical author of the time, so that the appearance of another book under his name generated automatic interest. However, once the book was read, the European medical community was thrown into an uproar, for Hahnemann had introduced an entirely new and radical system of medicine, one fundamentally opposed to the traditional medicine of its time.
Hahnemann called his new medicine homeopathy, a word taken from the Greek omoeos, meaning ‘similar’, and pathos, meaning ‘suffering’. Thus, homeopathy means ‘to treat with something that produces an effect similar to the suffering’. In his book, Hahnemann laid out the laws and principles of the science, gathered empirically over a period of twenty years.
Briefly, Hahnemann showed that:
1. A medical cure is brought about in accordance with certain laws of
healing that exist in nature.
2. Nobody can cure outside these laws.
3. There are no diseases as such, but only diseased individuals.
4. An illness is always dynamic by nature, so the remedy must also be
in a dynamic state if it is to cure.
5. The patient needs only one particular remedy and no other at any
stage of his illness. Unless that certain remedy is found, his condition
will not be cured but, at best, be only temporarily relieved.
Because of its dramatically curative results, homeopathy was soon to win widespread approval throughout Europe and the world, but when Hahnemann’s work was first published, it met with the most bitter opposition from doctors still prescribing blood-letting, cathartics, and diaphoretics. Hahnemann was not discouraged. He was a brilliant individual and, as such, was accustomed to being misunderstood.