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no symptomatology on which you can base your next remedy. But if you’re observant you might find that, little by little, things will crop up which indicate a further remedy. It might be that you perceive Calcarea carbonica underneath this Phosphorus case. If you are able to give Calcarea carbonica, the patient will tend not to relapse as easily. Furthermore, if the patient relapses, he will not revert to the pathology of Phosphorus, but rather to the pathology of Calcarea carbonica.
I don’t uphold the theory of the three miasms – sycosis, syphilis and psora – because I believe that, due to our societies, we have become imprinted with more than three miasms. Let’s take the cancerinic miasm for example: What is the cancer miasm? It is a cumulative genetic influence on the patient’s predecessors and their constitutions, which in turn leads to a predisposition in the patient for developing cancer. Once this genetic predisposition becomes too strong you may have to give Cancerinum; it will act because there is already imprinted on the individual a new layer, which is completely separate. Even though the patient himself does not have cancer – perhaps they are suffering from asthma or colitis – Cancerinum nevertheless acts because the miasm has been imprinted upon this individual. For example, you would give Cancerinum because the patient’s mother, father, or sibling died of cancer. In the same way we would prescribe Tuberculinum or Bacillinwn if we’ve seen frequent cases of tuberculosis in the family history. The problem is, when to start with Cancerinum, or Tuberculinum, or Phosphorus.
The questions I mentioned here are of central importance. I don’t have all the answers; I just ask as many questions as I can under the circumstances in the hopes of learning as much as I can about each case. I hope that all of you, especially my students who have followed my teaching closely, will one day be able to give precise answers to these questions, because there are precise answers. Let me give you an example of what I mean: You have a case of Calcarea carbonica. Now, suppose underneath Calcarea carbonica, as a second remedy, you need to give Tuberculinum. And let’s suppose that you have another case of Calcarea carbonica, which is of the constitutional type, and underneath you see the need to give Lycopodium or Nitricum acidum. The manifestation or expression of Calcarea carbonica on one level, one type, will be different from the other; so that it is possible that you might see underlying hints of, say, Tuberculinum. Let’s look at an example: Take the case of a Calcarea carbonica who gets frequent colds with a lot of bronchitis, and who is very sensitive in the lungs, with a tend-