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The Science of Homeopathy – page 137

meopath is absolutely necessary. Such instruction teaches the begin- ner the case-by-case judgment needed to become consistently accurate in decision-making. In the beginning, mistakes are inevitably made quite frequently, but feedback from an experienced homeopath can en- able the prescriber to learn from them. The very necessary quality of circumspection is learned – the ability to be decisive while simultane- ously being willing to inwardly doubt all judgments. This takes a great deal of training in homeopathy as in all other professional endeavors.

Throughout this textbook, a moderate knowledge of standard medi- cal information is assumed on the part of the reader. Such subjects as anatomy, physiology, physical and laboratory diagnosis, the many vari- eties of diagnostic disease categories, and standard medical treatments for such disease categories are important to any comprehensive view of what is occurring in a patient at any given moment. Even though standard disease labels utilized by medical science are never the basis for the selection of a homeopathic remedy, an accurate knowledge of the patient’s pathological state does have importance for arriving at an accurate prognosis in any given case.

For this reason, medical doctors automatically have an advantage in learning homeopathy. They should presumably be ready to plunge di- rectly into the purely homeopathic material presented herein. Experi- ence shows, however, that for practical and doctrinal reasons, medical doctors are not likely to respond to homeopathy in sufficient numbers to satisfy the growing public demand. It can be expected, therefore, that many nonmedical students will endeavor to undertake the disci- plined study of homeopathy. To these, it is important to emphasize that, although one need not be a true expert in standard medical subjects to become a good homeopath, it is necessary to be well-acquainted with them in order to adequately fulfill one’s responsibility to one’s patients.

In this section, we will attempt to go into considerable detail re- garding the various technical aspects of homeopathic prescribing. In every chapter, the principles described in Section I will be translated as much as possible into practical terms. For this reason these two sections are being combined into one volume: they are two ways of

describing the same laws and principles.