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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 177

His first biographer, Thomas Bradford, describes how Hahnemann’s father used to lock his son up with what he called ‘thinking exercises’ —problems the boy was required to solve himself. In this way Hahnemann learned to develop the use of intuition and insight, and to come to know the limitations of intellectual logic.
Clearly, Hahnemann was precocious at virtually everything he attempted. When he was twelve, his teacher had him teaching Greek to the other students. He put himself through university studies of chemistry and medicine by translating English books into German. He qualified as a physician from the University of Leipzig in 1779, and soon after began publishing a series of works on medicine and chemistry. In 1791, his research in chemistry earned him election to the Academy of Science in Mayence. His Apothecary’s Lexicon became a standard textbook of the time, and he was chosen from all the physicians in Germany to standardize the German Pharmacopoeia.
Hahnemann dropped the practice of medicine, much to the dismay of his colleagues and friends. As he wrote to one friend:
"It was agony for me to walk always in the darkness, when I had to heal the sick and to prescribe, according to such or such an hypothesis concerning diseases, substances which owed their place in the Materia Medica to an arbitrary decision…Soon after my marriage, I renounced the practice of medicine, that I might no longer incur the risk of doing injury, and I engaged exclusively in chemistry, and in literary occupations."
He could have made a very comfortable living practicing medicine, but he preferred poverty to the necessity of conforming to a system
‘whose errors and uncertainties disgusted (him).’
Hahnemann’s active mind nevertheless remained curious, open and systematic. He relentlessly probed into the basic issues of health and disease. It was in this frame of mind that he stumbled onto the first fundamental principle of homeopathy. He was translating the Materia Medica written by Professor Cullen of London University. Cullen devoted twenty pages of this book to the therapeutic indication of Peruvian Bark (a source of what is known today as quinine), attributing its success in the treatment of malarias to the fact that it was bitter. Hahnemann was so dissatisfied with this explanation that he did something very extraordinary: he took a series of doses of Peruvian Bark himself! This was an action entirely unprecedented in the medical world of his time. It is not known to this day what prompted him to do such a thing, but his experiment led to an entirely new era of medicine. He describes the result as follows:
"I took by way of experiment, twice a day, four drachms of good China (Peruvian Bark). My feet, finger ends, etc., at first became cold; I grew languid and drowsy; then my heart began to palpitate, and my pulse grew hard and small; intolerable anxiety, trembling, prostration throughout all my limbs; then pulsation in my head, redness of my cheeks, thirst, and in short, all the symptoms, which are ordinarily characteristic of intermittent fever made their ap-