Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 136

derlying principles have been understood, the next step is to plunge into the art of homeopathy. Each patient is an individual. The precise approach to each patient is therefore highly individualized. One can try to analyze, step-by-step, the precise manner in which basic prin- ciples are applied to the patient, but the actual process of prescribing a remedy is more akin to an art. Possessing an understanding of the principles, the homeopath learns the art of getting to know the patient, of drawing out of the patient the unique image of the pathological state, and finally of choosing precisely the remedy and potency needed by that particular patient. This begins a process which stimulates the de- fense mechanism, leading eventually to another decision as to whether the remedy has acted at all, and in what manner. Then the next remedy and potency must be chosen, and the process continues. Each decision demands a full understanding of the fundamental laws and principles, but in each instance this knowledge is fused in an artistic manner into a unique application for each patient.

The encounter between a patient and a homeopath is an intimate interaction for both. The patient, of course, has a responsibility to re- port as fully and accurately as possible every aspect of his or her own existence, even when describing the most private of symptoms. The prescriber, however, is not merely a passive observer, protected behind a wall of objectivity. Each patient engages the homeopath in a deep and meaningful way. Because of the very nature of homeopathy, the prescriber becomes an intimate participant in the life of the patient, involved in every aspect of it, and being at once sympathetic and sensi- tive as well as objective and accepting. For the homeopath, every day becomes a living process, and experience is gained very rapidly of the deepest regions of human existence. When homeopathy is practiced with this degree of involvement, it stimulates growth in the prescriber just as it does in the patient.

With each case, the homeopath faces a new variation on the many ways in which the fundamental laws are applied to individuals. Each case is so unique that it is literally impossible to write a textbook which will apply with perfect precision to a specific individual. Even so, it is possible to describe patterns which are commonly seen in homeo- pathic practice; this is the purpose of Section II of the book. It is in- tended to provide guidelines by which homeopaths can learn to apply the principles enunciated in Section I.

It is very important to recognize that the art of practical applica- tion cannot be learned merely from books. Books can provide a gen- eral framework, but they are not enough to enable the prescriber to manage a specific case. Supervised instruction by an experienced ho-