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The Science of Homeopathy – page 107

Suppressive Therapies

 

I have commented throughout the book on the dangers of prescrib- ing therapeutic agents based solely on local symptoms, while ignoring the totality of the symptom expression. Allopathic medicine in partic- ular has developed an entire methodology of therapeutics based on the concept of counteracting specific symptoms and syndromes. Allopath- ic drugs themselves are morbific shocks to the organism, and there- fore stimulate reaction on the part of the defense mechanism. Such response on the part of the defense mechanism consists of symptoms which are usually called “side-effects” in the allopathic profession. On the contrary, these symptoms are themselves signs of sensitivity on the part of the organism; they are the best possible response of the defense mechanism to counteract the morbific stimulus of the drug. In this way, drugs can be seen to be diseases in themselves, following the same dynamics as described by Hahnemann in the above aphorisms.

Hahnemann specifically comments on the effect of allopathic drugs in Aphorism 76:

Only for natural diseases has the beneficent Deity granted us, in Homeopathy, the means of affording relief; but those devastations and maimings of the human organism exteriorly and interiorly, effected by years frequently, of the unsparing exercise of a false art, with its hurtful drugs and treatment, must be remedied by the vital force itself (appropriate aid being given for the eradication of any chronic miasm thai may happen to be lurking in the background), if it has not already been too much weakened by such mischievous acts, and can devote several years to this huge operation undisturbed. A human healing art, for the restoration to the normal state of those innumerable abnormal conditions so often produced by the allopathic non-healing art, there is not and cannot be.
 

Even more concisely, in Aphorism 75, Hahnemann states:

 

These inroads on human health effected by the allopathic non- healing art (more particularly in recent times) are of all chronic dis- eases the most deplorable, the most incurable; and I regret to add that it is apparently impossible to discover or to hit upon any remedies for their cure when they have reached any considerable height.

 

If this was true in Hahnemann’s time, how much more true it is today! Modern science has developed chemicals which are even more