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The Science of Homeopathy – page 203

process, only a small number of remedies should remain after the full elimination has been completed. These remedies are then thoughtfully studied in the materia medicas.

This method will appeal to everyone right from the beginning be- cause it saves a lot of tedious labor. However, it is a risky procedure be- cause the original listing of symptoms is very critical. For example, if a symptom is listed first but should be listed in third place, the chances are very good that the true simillimum will be eliminated from the analysis. The patient would consequently receive an incorrect remedy at the very outset of the case. Only a homeopath with a quite good knowledge of materia medica could spot such a mistake in time to prevent it.

 

Case Analysis for Advanced Prescribers

 

As experience is acquired, gradually less reliance is placed upon a formal repertorization. Possessing an extensive knowledge of rem- edies, the homeopath may have a very strong impression of the correct remedy by the end of the case-taking. Only a quick glance to certain rubrics in the Repertory will then suffice to confirm or deny this im- pression. In this instance, the homeopath may use a mere “finger” rep- ertorization, which is my term for the process of inserting fingers into appropriate places in the Repertory, and then looking back and forth to perform the elimination procedure.

To a beginner observing an advanced prescriber, this process would seem easy indeed. Nevertheless, what seems so simple is in reality highly sophisticated. The same painstaking procedure occurs in the mind of the advanced prescriber as has been described for the begin- ner, but an advanced homeopath’s grasp of the rubrics is so complete that remedies do not have to be physically written down. In the mind of the advanced prescriber, the pertinent rubrics are virtually memo- rized from long experience of writing them out time and again, so that repertorization is mostly done in the homeopath’s head. Such prescrib- ers can accurately quote, remedy for remedy, the contents of all of the most important rubrics.

An advanced prescriber has such a deep grasp of remedy “essenc- es” that it is possible to match directly and immediately the essence of the patient to the essence of the remedy. If the essence is clearly and unequivocally seen, then only a few confirmatory symptoms are need- ed to select the remedy. Of course, the full case must be taken anyway, in order to be sure that no contra-indicating symptoms are present. Nevertheless, in a case which matches the “essence” of the remedy so