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The Science of Homeopathy – page 185

INTENSITY

PECULIAR

COMMON

EMOTIONAL

PHYSICAl

PECULIAR

COMMON

(GENERAL)

COMMON

PECULIAR

LOCAL

COMMON

SYMPTOMS

SLEEPP

PECULIAR

SEX

COMMON

GENERALS

PECULIAR

MENTAL

 

 

PECULIAR

                                   

 

 

COMMON

PATHOLOGICAL

CHANGELS

 

 

A

B

Figure 15: Three main factors are involved in grading symptoms: the location in the hier- archy of the organism, the degree of peculiarity, and the intensity of the symptom. Thus, symptom A can be more important than symptom B because it is peculiar and highly intense, even though physical symptoms are usually considered less important than emo- tional ones.

 

 

culiar, is given the most weight in the evaluation of symptoms; for example, such a symptom might be Irritability only When Alone, or Irritability Only While Reading, or Anxiety Which Is Ameliorated by Cold Drinks.

On the other hand, a common symptom affecting only a local part of the body which interferes only occasionally with the patient’s life is considered of least importance. An example of such a symptom might be a corn on the bottom of the foot, or a few warts on the fingers, or even a small blemish on the face which is only meaningful to the pa- tient for cosmetic reasons.

For the purposes of homeopathic prescribing, a peculiar symptom is one which is not only unusual in human experience, but which is also listed in the Repertory as a rubric with only a small number of