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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1801

time and produces colic of a very irritating type. Slight touch on the site of the pain will aggravate.
Often in connection with this the digestion is poor, with bad indigestion, fermentation in the abdomen, and tremendous bloating in the whole belly. The bloating is not ameliorated by passing wind, either upward or downward. Passage of gas will sometimes even aggravate their state. In connection with the gall-bladder trouble there is frequently a bitter taste with everything; even water tastes bitter.
It is very interesting that China is often helpful in gall-bladder disorders and produces great irritability without reason. If you connect in your mind this type of gall-bladder person, together with the kind of emotional stresses which produce such irritability, China should come to mind.
Generalities
China is probably the most famous remedy in Homeopathy. It was the first one to be proved by Hahnemann, and the one that made him see clearly the ‘new dawn’ of the law of similars, the true science and art of healing. The remedy itself, however, is not Hahnemann’s invention; in his time it was already well-known as a medication ‘against’ intermittent fevers. However, in those times it was used indiscriminately ‘against the fever’ (contraria contraribus) and ‘for more strength’ and, moreover, in extremely high dosage which often provoked symptoms of intoxication; therefore it hardly ever cured the pathological conditions for which it was given, except by chance, in the way of ‘unintentional homeopathy.’
In his long and excellent preface to the China proving in his Materia Medica Pura, Hahnemann gives a hard but just criticism of the then widespread practice of giving huge doses of Cinchona bark in ‘all sorts of weakness.’ ‘How can these ‘practical’ doctors believe to