Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 192

specific sub descriptions are described according to a particular plan:

 

  1. General heading
  2. Time aggravations
  3. Modalities which aggravate (or ameliorate, if specified)
  4. Location
  5. Extensions

 

This sequence is then repeated over again at each level of subdivision. Thus it can be seen that the entire plan of the Repertory is analogous to an inverted telescope; each level becomes more specific than previous ones, but always with the same sequence of presentation.

Let us take a specific example in order to elucidate the organization of the Repertory. Suppose a patient describes a headache, bursting in quality, located in the Forehead, worse in the morning at 10 A.M., and better while lying down. Such a symptom can be looked up in a variety of ways, becoming more and more specific at each level.

First, we open the Repertory to the Chapter “Head.” Next, we lo- cate (alphabetically) the general heading Pain (which is 88 pages long!).

Immediately (on page 132) we encounter time aggravations having to do with headache in general, and there are several rubrics which might be helpful: Daytime, Morning, On Rising, On Waking, Until 10 A.M., Forenoon, and even 10 A.M. (which lists seven remedies). This is too vague for our purposes.

Next, we see modalities for headache in general, and note that ly- ing, Amel. (p. 142), lists sixty-one remedies. Still too general.

We then move along to the location: Forehead. This is quite a large section, so we look further to Head, Pain, Forehead, 10 A.M., which lists only two remedies (p. 155). At this point, we have included the general pain, its location, one modality, and its time aggravation, so the chances that the remedy will be one of these two seem pretty good.

Finally, we recall the patient’s description, “Bursting,” and move further into the chapter to the section describing the specific sensations under Pain. “Bursting” begins on page 178, lists some time aggrava- tions (of which we passingly note Morning), some modalities (of which we again passingly glance at Lying Down Amel.), and finally forehead. Under Forehead, there is only one remedy listed for 10 A.M., and also only one listed under Lying, While. Fortunately, they are the same remedy, which increases our confidence that it may be the remedy needed by this patient. So, the rubric which covers all the information given by the patient is found on page 179: Head, Pain, Bursting, Fore- head, at 10 A.M. and also Lying, While. For this particular symptom,