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The Science of Homeopathy – page 93

Briefly, even those symptoms which are of regular occurrence and especially characteristic – as the stupidity of mind, the kind of rigidity in all the limbs, but above all the numb, disagreeable sensation, which seems to have its seat in the periosteum, over every bone in the body

– all these make their appearance. This paroxysm lasted two or three hours each time, and recurred if I repeated this dose, not otherwise; I discontinued it, and was in good health.4

 

Thus, Hahnemann came upon the idea that a substance which can produce symptoms in a normal person can cure them in a sick person. Even more fundamentally, perhaps, he recognized the necessity for human experimentation in order to delineate the curative indications of therapeutic agents. So, he and some other like-minded physicians be- gan systematically testing substances upon themselves and recording their observations in minute detail. This continued for a period of six years, during which Hahnemann also compiled an exhaustive list of poisonings recorded by different doctors in different countries through centuries of medical history.

He and his colleagues began to try the Law of Similars on clinical cases and immediately began to see astounding results which far tran- scended the allopathic results of the time. In Aphorism 19 of the Orga- non, written after he had become very experienced and widely known for his results, Hahnemann summarizes the fundamental importance of the discovery:

 

Now, as diseases are nothing more than alterations in the state of health of the healthy individual which express themselves by morbid signs, and the cure is also only possible by a change to the healthy condition of the state of health of the diseased individual, it is very ev- ident that medicines could never cure diseases if they did not possess the power of altering man’s state of health which depends on sensa- tions and functions; indeed, that their curative power must be owing solely to this power they possess of altering man’s state of health.

 



The systematic procedure of testing substances on healthy human beings in order to elucidate the symptoms reflecting the action of the substance is called “proving.” Hahnemann developed specific proce- dures for conducting a proving, and procedures which fit modern con- ditions and circumstances will be provided later in this book. Provings have continued since Hahnemann’s time and have become the basis upon which a given remedy is chosen for a given patient. In this way,

4. Ibid., pp. 36-37