Organon aphorism §35
In order to illustrate this, we shall consider in three different cases, as well what happens in nature when two dissimilar natural diseases meet together in one person, as also the result of the ordinary medical treatment of diseases with unsuitable allopathic drugs, which are incapable of producing an artificial morbid condition similar to the disease to be cured, whereby it will appear that even Nature herself is unable to remove a dissimilar disease already present by one that is unhomeopathic, even though it be stronger, and just as little is the unhomeopathic employment of even the strongest medicines ever capable of curing any disease whatsoever.
Organon aphorism §36
i. If the two DISSIMILAR diseases meeting together in the human being be of equal strength, or still more if the OLDER ONE BE THE STRONGER, the new disease will be repelled by the old one from the body and not allowed to affect it. A patient suffering from a severe chronic disease will not be infected by a moderate autumnal dysentery or other epidemic disease. The plague of the Levant, according to Larry, 1 does not break out where scurvy is prevalent, and persons suffering from eczema are not infected by it. Rachitis, Jenner alleges, prevents vaccination from taking effect. Those suffering from pulmonary consumption are not liable to be attacked by epidemic fevers of a not very violent character, according to Von Hildenbrand.
Organon aphorism §37
So, also, UNDER ORDINARY MEDICAL TREATMENT, an old chronic disease remains uncured and unaltered if it is treated according to the common ALLOPATHIC method, that is to say, with medicines that are incapable of producing in healthy individuals a state of health similar to the disease, even though the treatment should last for years and is not of too violent character. 2 This is daily witnessed in practice, it is therefore unnecessary to give any illustrative examples.
Organon aphorism §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 stronger 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, as Tulpius 3 observed. The itch, as Schopf 4 saw, disappeared on the occurrence of the scurvy, but after the cure of the latter it again broke out. So also the pulmonary phthisis remained stationary when the patient was attacked by a violent typhus, but went on again after the latter had run its course.5 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 immediately and proves fatal. 6 When measles and smallpox are prevalent at the same time, and both attack the same child, the measles that had already broken out is generally checked by the smallpox that came somewhat later; nor does the measles resume its course until after the cure of the smallpox; but it not infrequently happens that the inoculated smallpox is suspended for four days by the supervention of the measles, as observed by Manget, 7 after the desquamation of which the smallpox completes its course. Even when the inoculation of the smallpox had taken effect for six days, and the measles then broke out, the inflammation of the inoculation remained stationary and the smallpox did not ensue until the measles had completed its regular course of seven days. 8 In an epidemic of measles, that disease attacked many individuals on the fourth or fifth day after the inoculation of smallpox and prevented the development of the smallpox until it had completed its own course, whereupon the smallpox appeared and proceeded regularly to its termination. 9 The true, smooth, erysipelatous-looking scarlatina of Sydenham, 10 with sore throat, was checked on the fourth day by the eruption of cowpox, which ran its regular course, and not till it was ended did the scarlatina again establish itself; but on another occasion, as both diseases seem to be of equal strength, the cow-pox was suspended on the eighth day by the supervention of the true, smooth scarlatina of Sydenham, and the red areola of the former disappeared until the scarlatina was gone, whereon the cow-pox immediately resumed its course, and went on to its regular termination. 11 The measles suspended the cow-pox; on the eighth day, when the cow-pox had nearly attained its climax, the measles broke out; the cow-pox now remained stationary, and did not resume and complete its course until the desquamation of the measles had taken place, so that on the sixteenth day it presented the appearance it otherwise would have shown on the tenth day, as Kortum observed.12
Even after the measles had broken out the cow-pox inoculation took effect, but did not run its course until the measles had disappeared, as Kortum likewise witnessed.
I myself saw the mumps (ANGINA PAROTIDEA) immediately disappear when the cow-pox inoculation had taken effect and had nearly attained its height; it was not until the complete termination of the cow-pox and the disappearance of its red areola that this febrile tumefaction of the parotid and submaxillary glands, that is caused by a peculiar miasm, reappeared and ran its regular course of seven days.
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.
Organon aphorism §39
Now the adherents of the ordinary school of medicine saw all this for so many centuries; they saw that Nature herself cannot cure any disease by the accession of another, be it ever so strong, if the new disease be DISSIMILAR to that already present in the body. What shall we think of them, that they nevertheless went on treating chronic diseases with allopathic remedies, namely, with medicines and prescriptions capable of producing God knows what morbid state—almost invariably, however, one DISSIMILAR to the disease to be cured ? And even though physicians did not hitherto observe nature attentively, the miserable results of their treatment should have taught them that they were pursuing an inappropriate, a false path. Did they not perceive when they employed, as was their custom, an aggressive allopathic treatment in a chronic disease, that thereby they only created an artificial disease DISSIMILAR to the original one, which, as long as it was kept up, merely held in abeyance, merely suppressed, merely suspended the original disease, which latter, however, always returned, and must return, as soon as the diminished strength of the patient no longer admitted of a continuance of the allopathic attacks on the life? Thus the itch exanthema certainly disappears very soon from the skin under the employment of violent purgatives, frequently repeated; but when the patient can no longer stand the factitious (DISSIMILAR) disease of the bowels, and can take no more purgatives, then either the cutaneous eruption breaks out as before, or the internal psora displays itself in some bad symptom, and the patient, in addition to his undiminished original disease, has to endure the misery of a painful ruined digestion and impaired strength to boot. So, also, when the ordinary physicians keep up artificial ulcerations of the skin and issues on the exterior of the body, with the view of thereby eradicating a chronic disease, they can NEVER attain their object by so doing, they can NEVER cure them by that means, as such artificial cutaneous ulcers are quite alien and allopathic to the internal affection; but inasmuch as the irritation produced by several tissues is at least sometimes a stronger (DISSIMILAR) disease than the indwelling malady, the latter is thereby sometimes silenced and suspended for a week or two. But it is ONLY SUSPENDED, and that for a very short time, whilst the patient’s powers are gradually worn out. Epilepsy, suppressed for many years by means of issues, invariably recurred, and in an aggravated form, when they were allowed to heal up, as Pechlin 13 and others testify. But purgatives for itch, and issues for epilepsy, cannot be more heterogeneous, more dissimilar deranging agents—cannot be more allopathic, more exhausting modes of treatment—than are the customary prescriptions, composed of unknown ingredients, used in ordinary practice for the other nameless, innumerable forms of disease. These likewise do nothing but debilitate, and only suppress or suspend the malady for a short time without being able to cure it, and when used for a long time always add a new morbid state to the old disease.
Organon aphorism §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. Thus a syphilitic patient may become psoric, and VICE VERSA. AS TWO DISEASES DISSIMILAR TO EACH OTHER, THEY CANNOT REMOVE, CANNOT CURE ONE ANOTHER. At first the venereal symptoms are kept in abeyance and suspended when the psoric eruption begins to appear; in course of time, however (as the syphilis is at least as strong as the psora), the two join together, 14 that is, each involves those parts of the organism only which are most adapted for it, and the patient is thereby rendered more diseased and more difficult to cure.
When two dissimilar acute infectious diseases meet, as, for example, 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 occurred simultaneously in one and the same body, and for a short time combined, as it were, with each other. During an epidemic, in which smallpox and measles were prevalent at the same time, among three hundred cases (in which these diseases avoided or suspended one another, and the measles attacked patients twenty days after the smallpox broke out, the smallpox, however, from seventeen to eighteen days after the appearance of the measles, so that the first disease had previously completed its regular course) there was yet one single case in which P. Russell 15 met with both these dissimilar diseases in one person at the same time. Rainey 16 witnessed the simultaneous occurrence of smallpox and measles in two girls. J. Maurice, 17 in his whole practice, only observed two such cases. Similar cases are to be found in Ettmuller’s 18 works, and in the writings of a few others.
Zencker 19 saw cow-pox run its regular course along with measles and along with purpura.
The cow-pox went on its course undisturbed during a mercurial treatment for syphilis, as Jenner saw.
Organon aphorism §41
Much more frequent than the natural diseases associating with and complicating one another in the same body are the morbid complications which the inappropriate medical treatment (the allopathic method) is apt to produce by the long-continued employment of unsuitable drugs. To the natural disease, which it is proposed to cure, there are then added, by the constant repetition of the unsuitable medicinal agent, the new, often very tedious, morbid conditions corresponding to the nature of this agent; these gradually coa- lesce with and complicate the chronic malady which is dissimilar to them (which they were unable to cure by similarity of action, that is, homeopathically), adding to the old disease a new, dissimilar, artificial malady of a chronic nature, and thus give the patient a double in place of a single disease, that is to say, render him much worse and more difficult to cure, often quite incurable. Many of the cases for which advice is asked in medical journals, as also the records of other cases in medical writings, attest the truth of this. Of a similar character are the frequent cases in which the venereal chancrous disease, complicated especially with psora or with the dyscrasia of condylomatous gonorrhoea, is not cured by long-continued or frequently repeated treatment with large doses of unsuitable mercurial preparations, but assumes its place in the organism beside the chronic mercurial affection 20 that has been in the meantime gradually developed, and thus along with it often forms a hideous monster of complicated disease (under the general name of masked venereal disease), which then, when not quite incurable, can only be transformed into health with the greatest difficulty.
Organon aphorism §42
Nature herself permits, as has been stated, in some cases, the simultaneous occurrence of two (indeed, of three) natural diseases in one and the same body. This complication, however, it must be remarked, happens only in the case of two DISSIMILAR diseases, which according to the eternal laws of nature do not remove, do not annihilate and cannot cure one another, but, as it seems, both (or all three) remain, as it were, separate in the organism, and each takes possession of the parts and systems peculiarly appropriate to it, which, on account of the want of resemblance of these maladies to each other, can very well happen without disparagement to the unity of life.
References
“Memoires et Observations,” in the DESCRIPTION DE V EGYPTE, torn. i.
But if treated with violent allopathic remedies, other diseases will be formed in its place which are more difficult and dangerous to life.
OBS., lib. i, obs. 8.
In HUFELAND’S JOURNAL, xv, 2.
Chevalier, in Hufeland’s NEUESTEN ANNALEN DER FRANSOSXCHEN HEILKUNDC, ii, p. 192.
Mania phthisi superveniens earn cum omnibus suis phsenom-enis auffert, verum mox redit phthisis et occidit, abeunte mania. Reil MEMORAB., fasc. iii, v, p. 171.
In the EDINB. MED. COMMENT., pt. i, I.
John Hunter, ON THE VENEREAL DISEASE, p. 5.
Rainey, in the EDINB. MED. COMMENT., iii, p. 480.
Very accurately described by Withering and Plenciz, but differing greatly from the purpura (or Roodvonk), which is often erroneously denominated scarlet fever. It is only of late years that the two, which were originally very different diseases, have come to resemble each other in their symptoms.
Jenner, in MEDKINISCHE ANNALEN, August, 1800, p. 747.
In HUFELAND’S JOURNAL DER PRAKTISCHEN ARZNEIKUNDC, xx, 3, p. 50.
LOC. AT.
OBS. PHYS. MED., lib. ii, obs. 30.
From careful experiments and cures of complex diseases of this kind, I am now firmly convinced that no real amalgamation of the two takes place, but that in such cases the one exists in the ORGANISM BESIDES the other only, each in the part that are adapted for it, and their cure will be completely effected by a judicious alternation of the best mercurial preparation, with the remedies specific for the psora, each given in the most suitable dose and form.
Vide TRANSACTIONS OF A SOCIETY FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF MED. AND CHIR. KNOWLEDGE, ii.
IN EDINB. MED. COMMENT., iii, p. 480.
In MED. AND PHYS. JOURN., 1805.
OPERA, ii, p. i., cap. 10.
In HUF ELAND’S JOURNAL, xvii.
For mercury, besides the morbid symptoms which by virtue of similarity can cure the venereal disease homeopathically, has among its effects many others unlike those of syphilis, for instance, swelling and ulceration of bones, which, if it be employed in large doses, cause new maladies and commit great ravages in the body, especially when complicated with psora, as is so frequently the case.
- “Memoires et Observations,” in the DESCRIPTION DE V EGYPTE, torn. i.
- But if treated with violent allopathic remedies, other diseases will be formed in its place which are more difficult and dangerous to life.
- OBS., lib. i, obs. 8.
- In HUFELAND’S JOURNAL, xv, 2.
- Chevalier, in Hufeland’s NEUESTEN ANNALEN DER FRANSOSXCHEN HEILKUNDC, ii, p. 192.
- Mania phthisi superveniens earn cum omnibus suis phsenom-enis auffert, verum mox redit phthisis et occidit, abeunte mania. Reil MEMORAB., fasc. iii, v, p. 171.
- In the EDINB. MED. COMMENT., pt. i, I.
- John Hunter, ON THE VENEREAL DISEASE, p. 5.
- Rainey, in the EDINB. MED. COMMENT., iii, p. 480.
- Very accurately described by Withering and Plenciz, but differing greatly from the purpura (or Roodvonk), which is often erroneously denominated scarlet fever. It is only of late years that the two, which were originally very different diseases, have come to resemble each other in their symptoms.
- Jenner, in MEDKINISCHE ANNALEN, August, 1800, p. 747.
- In HUFELAND’S JOURNAL DER PRAKTISCHEN ARZNEIKUNDC, xx, 3, p. 50.
- OBS. PHYS. MED., lib. ii, obs. 30.
- From careful experiments and cures of complex diseases of this kind, I am now firmly convinced that no real amalgamation of the two takes place, but that in such cases the one exists in the ORGANISM BESIDES the other only, each in the part that are adapted for it, and their cure will be completely effected by a judicious alternation of the best mercurial preparation, with the remedies specific for the psora, each given in the most suitable dose and form.
- Vide TRANSACTIONS OF A SOCIETY FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF MED. AND CHIR. KNOWLEDGE, ii.
- IN EDINB. MED. COMMENT., iii, p. 480.
- In MED. AND PHYS. JOURN., 1805.
- OPERA, ii, p. i., cap. 10.
- In HUF ELAND’S JOURNAL, xvii.
- For mercury, besides the morbid symptoms which by virtue of similarity can cure the venereal disease homeopathically, has among its effects many others unlike those of syphilis, for instance, swelling and ulceration of bones, which, if it be employed in large doses, cause new maladies and commit great ravages in the body, especially when complicated with psora, as is so frequently the case.