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The Science of Homeopathy – page 105

er epidemic disease . . . Those suffering from pulmonary consumption are not liable to be attacked by epidemic fevers of a not very violent character.

Aph. 38: II. Or the new dissimilar disease is the stronger. In this case the disease under which the patient originally labored, being the weaker, will be kept back and suspended by the accession of the stron- ger one, until the latter shall have run its course or been cured, and then the old one reappears uncured. Two children affected with a kind of epilepsy remained free from epileptic attacks after infection with ringworm (tinea); but as soon as the eruption on the head was gone the epilepsy returned just as before . . . So also, the pulmonary phthi- sis remained stationary when the patient was attacked by a violent typhus, but went on again after the latter had run its course. If mania occur in a consumptive patient, the phthisis with all its symptoms is removed by the former; but if that go off, the phthisis returns imme- diately and proves fatal … And thus, it is with all dissimilar diseases; the stronger suspends the weaker (when they do not complicate one another, which is seldom the case with acute diseases), but they never cure one another.

Aph. 40: III. Or the new disease, after having long acted on the organism, at length joins the old one that is dissimilar to it, and forms with it a complex disease, so that each of them occupies a particular locality in the organism, namely, the organs peculiarly adapted for it, and, as it were, only the place specially belonging to it, whilst it leaves the rest to the other disease that is dissimilar to it . . . As two diseases dissimilar to each other, they cannot remove, cannot cure one another.

. . . When two dissimilar acute infectious diseases meet, as, for ex- ample smallpox and measles, the one usually suspends the other, as has been before observed; yet there have also been severe epidemics of this kind, where, in rare cases, two dissimilar acute diseases oc- curred simultaneously in one and the same body, and for a short time combined, as it were, with each other.

Aph. 43: Totally different, however, is the result when two similar diseases meet together in the organism, that is to say, when to the disease already present a stronger similar one is added. In such cases we see how a cure can be effected by the operations of nature, and we get a lesson as to how man ought to cure.

Aph. 44: Two similar diseases can neither (as is asserted of dissimi- lar diseases in I) repel one another, nor (as has been shown of dissimi- lar diseases in II) suspend one another, so that the old one shall return after the new one has run its course; and just as little can two similar diseases las has been demonstrated in III respecting dissimilar affec-