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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 5

time, so that the appearance of another book under his name gen- erated automatic interest. However, once the book was read, the European medical community was thrown into an uproar, for it introduced an entirely new and radical system of medicine, one fundamentally opposed to the traditional medicine of the time.
Hahnemann called his new medicine homeopathy, a word tak- en from the Greek words omeos, meaning ‘similar’, and pathos, meaning ‘suffering’. Thus, homeopathy means ‘to treat with something that produces an effect similar to the suffering’. In his book, Hahnemann laid out the laws and principles of his science, gathered empirically over a period of 20 years. Briefly, Hahne- mann claimed and showed that:
1. A medical cure is brought about in accordance with certain laws of healing that are in nature.
2. Nobody can cure outside these laws.
3. There are no diseases as such, but only diseased individuals.
4. An illness is always dynamic by nature, so the remedy too must therefore be in a dynamic state if it is to cure.
5. The patient needs only one particular remedy and no other at any given stage of the illness. Unless that certain remedy is found, he or she is not cured but at best the condition is only temporarily relieved.
Because of its dramatically curative results, homeopathy was soon to win widespread approval throughout Europe and the world; but when Hahnemann’s work was first published it met with the most bitter opposition from doctors who were still pre- scribing blood-letting, cathartics, and diaphoretics. Hahnemann was not discouraged; he was a brilliant individual and, as such, was used to being misunderstood.
His first biographer, Thomas Bradford, describes how Hahne- mann’s father used to lock his son up with what he called ‘thinking exercises’2 – problems the boy was required to solve himself. In this way, Hahnemann learned to develop the use of intuition and insight and to come to know the limitations of intellectual logic.
Clearly, Hahnemann was precocious at virtually everything he attempted. When he was twelve, his teacher had him teaching