Part of your study should be to bring before the mind, as fully as possible, the diseases that the human race is subject to.
This cannot be done to any great extent from Old School books, as they do not treat of psora, syphilis and sycosis in such a way as to bring the image of the disease before the mind, and only in a limited way the acute miasms are so brought before the mind.
The diagnostic or pathognomonic symptoms are brought out for the purpose of distinguishing one disease from the other, but not with the idea of bringing the image of the disease before the mind that it may look like some remedy recorded in the Materia Medica, because that is not the allopathic physician's way of prescribing.
It is important to go over the great bulk of the psoric symptoms that Hahnemann has given to obtain as perfect an image as possible of me disease psora.
If we take the Chronic Diseases and go over them, writing out opposite every symptom that Hahnemann has mentioned as psoric all the remedies that have been found from provings to correspond to these disease symptoms, we shall have before the mind a list of the anti-psoric remedies.
It is a good exercise and a good way of preparing for the study of Materia Medica.
Try to master this :
Diseases must not be looked upon from a few symptoms that the patient may possess but from all the symptoms that the whole human race brings out.
It is just as improper to look upon psora from a few symptoms as it is to look upon a remedy from a few symptoms, just as you see the image of a remedy from all the symptoms, including the peculiar symptoms, so psora must be considered from its characteristics, the features that constitute psora.
Remedies are adjusted as to appearance ; the appearances of the remedy expressed in symptoms must be adjusted to the appearances of the disease expressed in symptoms.
When you have finished psora, take up sycosis, and spend much time in gathering together all the symptoms that sycotic patients have felt, all their suffering and all the ultimates.
Group them as one, and look upon them as one miasm. Then go to the Materia Medica again and make an anamnesis.
Take each symptom and place opposite it all the remedies that have produced that symptom.
You can readily see that the remedies that run through most strongly will be anti-sycotic remedies, i.e., the remedies that have the essentials of the disease or the nature of sycosis in them.
In the same way make an anamnesis of syphilis.
By these means you will bring before your mind the three chronic diseases of the human race, and when this is accomplished in a general way you will be prepared to enter upon their treatment.
But remember that the symptoms, when it comes to prescribing for a chronic patient, constitute the whole basis of the prescription ; we have no other.
We may theorize as much as we have a mind to, but when it comes to the actual application, the symptoms must guide to the remedy.
There are, however, a good many different ways of looking at the symptoms.
It is a very easy thing to become confused over the symptoms and fall into error by taking symptoms that are unimportant.
Your study in the Materia Medica will illustrate how you must study disease, as the plan of studying the Materia Medica for the purpose of bringing the image of a remedy before the mind is the plan we must adopt in studying a disease.
The physician who can only hold in his memory the symptoms of a disease or a remedy will never succeed as a homoeopath.
He has not taught himself to think, he has only a mass of particulars, and nothing to tie to.
There is no order.
It is like a mob.
Here I want to read you a note of Hahnemann's.
"Should it, however, he thought sometimes necessary to have names for diseases, in order to render ourselves intelligible in a few words to the ordinary classes when speaking of a patient, let none be made use of but such as are collective.
We ought to say, for instance, that a patient has a species of chorea, a species of dropsy, a species of nervous fever, a species of ague", etc.
It will lead the mind into heresy if one gets into the custom of speaking from appearances and naming diseases according to the old way.
The homoeopathic physician must avoid thinking that way.
One who has been in the habit of thinking that way must make a great effort to keep the mind from running in that groove.
Of course, it would be folly to talk to an old school physician or to a patient in any other words and we can talk to them so, for the sake of conversing but we must know when we speak in such a way that it is only an appearance.
This now brings us to paragraph § 83, which takes up the study and examination of the patient and the qualifications necessary for comprehending the image of a disease.
You have probably by this time come to the conclusion that an old school prescriber, and perhaps the majority of such as call themselves homoeopaths at the present time, are perfectly incompetent to examine a patient, and therefore incompetent to examine Homoeopathy, to test it, so as to say whether there is anything in it or not.
They have every element of failure and no element of success.
It is impossible to test Homoeopathy without learning how to get the disease image so before the eye that the homoeopathic remedy can be selected.
What a natural thing it would be for an allopathic physician to say :
"I am going to test Homoeopathy. This patient has a case of vomiting, and I will give Ipecacuanha because it produces vomiting. "
So he gives Ipeca., and the patient keeps on vomiting.
He has tested Homoeopathy and it is no good !
That is the way tests are usually made.
I have had physicians tell me that they have tested Homoeopathy and it failed ; but I know that it was not Homoeopathy that failed but the physician who failed.
Whenever failure comes it is a failure of the physician and not of the law.
This is about the kind of a test that is made today in this enlightened day and age of the world.
They have neither the knowledge nor the state of mind to make a test.
They do not know what to observe, or how to select a remedy.
If we should look up all the remedies that have vomiting we would find a pretty good list, but to make use of that list the mind must be prepared to see which one in it is similar to this individual patient.
"The examination of a particular case of disease, with the intent of presenting it in its formal state and individuality, only demands on the part of the physician an unprejudiced mind, sound understanding, attention and fidelity in observing and tracing the image of the disease, I will content myself in the present instance with merely explaining the general principles of the course that is to be pursued, leaving it to the physician to select those which are applicable to each particular case."
The first statement is that the physician must be of unprejudiced mind.
Where are you going to find such a person ?
If that is essential, there is almost nobody that can examine a case for the purpose of finding a remedy for that case.
An unprejudiced mind !
At the present day there is almost no such thing as an unprejudiced mind.
Go out among the doctors who profess to practice Homeopathy and you will find they are full of prejudice.
They will at once commence to tell you what they believe ; one believes one thing and another another thing ; they all have varying kinds of belief.
This does not come from a question of fact, but it comes from what each man has laid down as fact.
What each man wants to be so, in his view, is so.
That establishes in his mind a state of prejudice, and as no two agree there are many different opinions, the majority of which must be false.
Go into anything that you have a mind to, and you will find man full of prejudice.
This state of prejudice exists in the examination of a patient.
The physician goes to the patient prejudiced as to his own theories.
He has his own ideas as to what constitutes the correct method of examination, and so he does not examine the patient for the purpose of bringing out the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
His prejudices lead him to snap the patient up as soon as he begins to tell his story.
He will thump him all over, from head to foot, and then tell him what is the matter with him.
A prescription that has no earthly relation to the constitutional state of the patient follows, but no examination has really been made.
It might readily and truthfully be said that the true man has no prejudices.
It is certain that the true man is one freest from prejudices, one who can listen, who can examine, evidence and who, can meditate.
What would we think of a judge who would go into a case with strong prejudice ?
The law provides that a judge cannot sit in judgment over his brother or over his wife, or over big other relatives.
In a homoeopathic physician an unprejudiced mind can only be attained by learning all the truth and all the doctrines of Homoeopathy.
If a physician goes in with prejudice for a certain, potency or a certain disease, or a prejudice against certain principles, he is not in a rational state, he is not in freedom with the patient and he goes into the examination in ignorance, and if he cannot free himself from prejudice he cannot prescribe.
If a man has arrived at a degree of sound understanding concerning the doctrines of Homoeopathy, concerning the doctrines of potentization, concerning the doctrines that relate to chronic and acute diseases, concerning the Materia Medica, he goes into it with full freedom, with an intention to examine the case in all its length and breadth, and to listen patiently.
He listens to the friends of the patient and he observes without prejudice, with wisdom and with judgment.
He must go into the case without forming any judgment whatever until all the witnesses have told their tale and all the evidence is before him.
Then he commences to study the whole case.
That is doing it without prejudice and for this a sound understanding is necessary, with a clear knowledge of all things relating to the subject and to all of his duties.
If an allopathic physician was to come in and listen to the long examination of a case by a homoeopath he would want to know what it was all about.
He does not see anything in it, because he has not a knowledge of true materia medica.
The homoeopath's purpose is to transfer a man's sickness to paper and so find the image of the sickness in the Materia Medica.
The allopathic physician could not do that ; he could not put the image of the sickness on canvas so that he could fit the picture to the Materia Medica, for he would not know one of our medicines with which to compare it.
The unprejudiced mind then comes from sound understanding, and a sound understanding comes from education.
The education we are now talking about is an education in Homoeopathy, becoming acquainted with all the doctrines step by step.
After being taught how to give attention and what to give attention to fidelity is necessary.
This faithfulness would never be shown by one who had not removed all his prejudices by opening his mind to the principles and doctrines.
Here we work together ; we all work after the same fashion.
Take everyone of the students that goes through here for a year, and you will find that he has the ways of the school and carries the stamp of the school.
Just as the stamp of Harvard or the stamp of Yale is upon every student that comes from either of these institutions so the stamp of the Post Graduate School is upon every student that goes through its curriculum with faithfulness and earnestness.
What we are now about to consider is the plan for the faithful and careful examination of a case.
It is our purpose to cure the case, and it is necessary for this purpose to bring the patient's symptoms in the very best possible way before the mind.
This is a long and tedious study, and there are many difficulties in the way.
Disease must be brought out in symptoms, with the end of its becoming a likeness of some remedy of the Materia Medica.
All the diseases known to man have their likeness in the Materia Medica, and the physician must become so conversant with this art that he may perceive this likeness.
You will find at first it is not an easy matter and that, to become expert, requires the continual application of patience.
All the senses must be on the alert in order to perceive that which is similar, and most similar.
Now we come to the directions to the physician for discovering and tracing out the image of the disease.
by James Tyler Kent