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The Science of Homeopathy – page 201

one medicine running through all of the rubrics. This remedy is then carefully studied in the materia medica. If the “essence” of the remedy seems to fit the “essence” of the patient, and if the bulk of the symp- toms are covered, then the remedy can be given with confidence.

This ideal is very rarely realized in actual practice, however. Usu- ally, three or four drugs run through the rubrics, but only one must be chosen. Rubrics covering the peculiar symptoms are then consulted, and those remedies which have come through the full repertorization and are also seen in the peculiar rubrics are studied first. If the pecu- liar symptoms do not confirm any of the medicines from the repertor- ization, then all three or four drugs are carefully studied in the materia medicas to find the one most completely matching the totality of the patient.

Never should a remedy be given simply because it scores highest on repertorization. Even a remedy scoring much higher than the others should be rejected if its description in the materia medicas does not fit well with the patient. As mentioned before, repertorization is merely a clue; it is not a final answer.

Some homeopaths have developed “repertory sheets” which en- able a numerical tabulation of remedies according to symptom. These sheets are handy to use, but they are not recommended for the begin- ner. Part of the purpose of studying a case in the early years is to gain a broader understanding of homeopathy and of medicines. The use of “repertory sheets” tends to prevent one from really thinking about each remedy in relation to the patient. The process of writing out each rubric with all drugs that can produce it, although tedious, can be a helpful way of learning the comparative value of remedies. As more and more medicines are learned, this method enables the prescriber to anticipate whether a particular symptom will be found in the proving of a particular drug. The process of actually writing out the rubric then provides feedback to the prescriber’s “guess.” This is a tedious pro- cess, but it nevertheless should not be given to assistants or secretaries, because a major part of its purpose is to add to the knowledge of the homeopath.

Attention should be paid to “small” remedies which run through a few rubrics in a repertorization, even though their grade was “1” all the way through. “Small” remedies are those whose provings are as yet incomplete, and therefore the number of symptoms listed for them is small. If such a medicine runs all the way through the repertoriza- tion, this can be an important sign. It should be carefully studied in as many materia medicas as possible. It may not cover the entire case, simply because the provings are incomplete, but enough of the image