Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 121

medicine containing sulphur, the Itch again appeared and all the ail- ments, excepting the swelling, disappeared; but after twenty-four days the Itch again dried up, which was followed by a new inflammation in the chest with pleurisy and vomiting. (Pelargus, Obs. clin. Jahrg., 1723, p. 15)

A girl of 9 years with the Tinea Capitis had it driven away, when she was seized with a lingering fever, a general swelling and dys- pnoea; when the Tinea broke out again, she recovered. (Hagendorn, Recueil d’observ. de Med., Tom. III, p. 308)

From Itch expelled by external application there arose amaurosis, which passed away then the eruption re-appeared on the skin. (Amau- rosis, Northof, Diss, de Scabie, Gotting., 1792, p. 10)

A man who had driven off a frequently occurring eruption of Itch with an ointment fell into epileptic convulsions, which disappeared again when the eruption reappeared on the skin. (Epilepsy, ].C. Carl in Act. Nat. Cur. V., obs. 16)

Two children were freed from epilepsy by the breaking out of hu- mid Tinea, but the epilepsy returned when the Tinea was incautiously driven off. (Tulpius, Obs. Lib. I., Cap. 8) 2

Eventually, Hahnemann described three basic miasms which he believed to be the underlying causes of chronic disease. In any given patient, there could be one miasm, or any combination of them. The first that he described was the Psoric Miasm (derived from the Greek word psora, meaning “itch”). Hahnemann considered this the earliest miasm affecting the human race, and thus the most fundamental un- derlying layer of weakness upon which the others have subsequently been built. Specific diseases which Hahnemann associated with Psora ranged from virtually all physical ailments including cancer, diabetes, arthritis, etc., to the most severe mental illnesses of epilepsy, schizo- phrenia, and imbecility.

The second miasm to affect the human race Hahnemann consid- ered to be the Syphilitic Miasm. The specific disease syphilis was con- sidered to be one of the manifestations of this predisposition, but it also was implicated in a wide range of other disorders found as well in late stages of other miasms as well. Hahnemann believed that patients suffering from the Syphilis Miasm acquired its influence by exposure to syphilis, or by inheritance from an infected ancestor – the trait then being transmitted from generation to generation.


The third Hahnemannian miasm was the Sycosis Miasm (from the Greek word syco, meaning “fig”). This miasm he considered to have arisen out of gonorrhea, either contracted by the patient or by one of

2. Ibid.