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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 23

pain that comes every fourth day; a rheumatic pain that strikes only between two and four in the morning or an asthmatic attack that comes at midnight.
By this time the resources at the homeopath’s disposal – his knowledge of the science and its laws, his techniques of prepar- ing the remedies – were much greater, considerably more refined and accurate. Seeing this, Hahnemann applied himself, from 1816 onwards, with his customary order and penetration to the understanding of disease itself.
He observed that diseases are of two general classes. The first are usually self-limited and brief; in Aphorism 72, Hahnemann defines them: ‘Such affections usually run their course within a brief period of variable duration, and are called acute diseas- es.’ Chronic diseases, the second class of diseases, are more in- sidious and destructive in the long run. They represent an entire- ly different problem both for the vital force of the patient and for the homeopath. Hahnemann continues:
The second class embraces diseases which often seem trifling and imperceptible in the beginning; but which, in a manner peculiar to themselves, act deleteriously upon the living organism, dynamically deranging the latter, and insidiously undermining its health to such a degree, that the automatic energy of the vita! force, designed for the preservation of life, can only make imperfect and ineffectual resistance to these diseases in their beginning, as well as during their progress. Unable to extinguish them without assistance, the vital force is powerless to prevent their growth or its own gradual deterioration, resulting in the final destruction of the organism.
For Hahnemann, the cure of acute diseases presented no great problem. Simply find that substance which produces similar symptoms in a healthy organism, and the cure is rapid and com- plete. But chronic diseases were a different matter. To compre- hend how Hahnemann met this challenge, we must go back and follow his discoveries step by step.
From 1810 to 1816, the six years after he published the Orga- non, he was inundated with pupils and patients from all over the world. He kept a complete record of every case, and noticed that, although the great majority of complaints were cleared up,