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The Science of Homeopathy – page 227

Principle No. 5: Do not prescribe another remedy if the remaining symptoms represent only a minor disturbance to the person. This is a corollary to the first principle. To anyone having a true understand- ing of the basic concept of cure proceeding from more central regions to more peripheral regions of the organism, this principle is obvious. Nevertheless, many mistakes are made by prescribers who are anxious to “complete the cure.”
Principle No. 6: Do not prescribe another remedy if the symptoms are clearly moving from above downwards on the body. This is an- other principle clear to anyone familiar with Hering’s Law. It applies most obviously to symptoms on the physical body, but it is also evident in terms of the conical-envelope diagrams presented in Section I.

Application in Particular Patient Categories

Once the above principles are understood, how do they manifest in individual patients? Specifically, how can these principles be used in patients of varying degrees of constitutional weakness?
To begin with, we must establish three basic categories of chronic patients. Necessarily, these are generalizations, but they serve as use- ful categories.

1. Patients with only one or two layers of disease predisposition. These patients, of course, have the best prognosis.
2. Patients with more than two layers of miasmatic predisposition. These patients represent considerably greater difficulty.
3. Incurable patients, in which cure is a practical impossibility, and palliation is the only goal.

This classification of chronic disease cases is very important be- cause it clarifies many confusing ideas regarding the long-term effec- tiveness of homeopathic treatment in different situations. It is often asked, “How effective is homeopathy in treating cancer? Or myasthe- nia gravis? Or diabetes?” To a homeopath, of course, these questions are basically meaningless, since our prescriptions are based upon the totality of pathological symptoms, and not upon the specific disease entity. The true answer to such questions, however, is that it depends upon the miasmatic severity of the case in the first place. If the constitu- tion is strong, the possibility of cure is great no matter what the disease category. On the other hand, even the supposedly least serious disease categories may be incurable in patients possessing defense mecha- nisms which have been weakened beyond the threshold of curability.