§ 282 Fifth Edition
The smallest possible dose of homopathic medicine capable of
producing only the very slightest homopathic aggravation, will, because it has the
power of exciting symptoms bearing the greatest possible resemblance to the original
disease (but yet stronger even in the minute dose), attack principally and almost solely
the parts in the organism that are already affected, highly irritated, and rendered
excessively susceptible to such a similar stimulus, and will alter the vital force that
rules in them to a state of very similar artificial disease, somewhat greater in degree
than the natural one was; this artificial disease will substitute itself for the natural
(the original) disease, so that the living organism now suffers from the artificial
medicinal disease alone, which, from its nature and owing to the minuteness of the dose,
will soon be extinguished by the vital force that is striving to return to the normal
state, and (if the disease were only an acute one) the body is left perfectly free from
disease - that is to say, quite well.
§ 282 Sixth Edition
It would be a certain sign that the doses were altogether too large, if during treatment, especially in chronic disease, the first dose should bring forth a so-called homopathic aggravation, that is, a marked increase of the original morbid symptoms first discovered and in the same way every repeated dose (§ 247) however modified somewhat by shaking before its administration (i.e., more highly dynamized).
11 The rule to commence the homopathic treatment if chronic diseases with the smallest possible doses and only gradually to augment them is subject to a notable exception in the treatment of the three great miasms while they still effloresce on the skin, i.e., recently erupted itch, the untouched chancre (on the sexual organs, labia, mouth or lips, and so forth), and the figwarts. These not only tolerate, but indeed require, from the very beginning large doses of their specific remedies of ever higher and higher degrees of dynamization daily (possibly also several times daily). If this course be pursued, there is no danger to be feared as is the case in the treatment of diseases hidden within, that the excessive dose while it extinguishes the disease, initiates and by continued usage possible produces a chronic medicinal disease. During external manifestations of these three miasms this is not the case; for from the daily progress of their treatment it can be observed and judged to what degree the large dose withdraws the sensation of the disease from the vital principle day by day; for none of these three can be cured without giving the physician the conviction through their disappearance that there is no longer any further need of these medicines.
Since diseases in general are but dynamic attacks upon the life principle and nothing material - no materia peccans - as their basis (as the old school in its delusion has fabulated for a thousand years and treated the sick accordingly to their ruin) there is also in these cases nothing material to take away, nothing to smear away, to burn or tie or cut away, without making the patient endlessly sicker and more incurable (Chron. Dis. Part 1), than he was before local treatment of these three miasms was instituted. The dynamic, inimical principle exerting its influence upon the vital energy is the essence of these external signs of the inner malignant miasms that can be extinguished solely by the action of a homopathic medicine upon the vital principle which affects it in a similar but stronger manner and thus extracts the sensation of internal and external spirit-like (conceptual) disease enemy in such a way that it no longer exists for the life principle (for the organism) and thus releases the patient of his illness and he is cured.
Experience, however, teaches that the itch, plus its external
manifestations, as well as the chancre, together with the inner venereal miasm, can and
must be cured only by means of specific medicines taken internally. But the figwarts, if
they have existed for some time without treatment, have need for their perfect cure, the
external application of their specific medicines as well as their internal use at the same
time.
Now, in order to act really in conformity with nature, the true
physician will prescribe his well-selected homopathic medicine only in exactly as
small a dose as will just suffice to over power and annihilate the disease before him - in
a dose of such minuteness, that if human fallibility should betray him into administering
an inappropriate medicine, the injury, accruing from its nature being unsuited to the
disease will be diminished to a mere trifle; moreover the harm done by the smallest
possible dose is so slight, that it may be immediately extinguished and repaired by the
natural vital powers, and by the speedy administration of a remedy more suitable selected
according to similarity of action, and given also in the smallest dose.
§ 283 Sixth Edition
In order to work wholly according to nature, the true healing artist
will prescribe the accurately chosen homopathic medicine most suitable in all
respects in so small a dose on account of this alone. For should he be misled by human
weakness to employ an unsuitable medicine, the disadvantage of its wrong relation to the
disease would be so small that the patient could through his own vital powers and by means
of early opposition (§ 249) of the correctly chosen remedy
according to symptom similarly (and this also in the smallest dose) rapidly extinguish and
repair it.
The action of a dose, moreover, dose not diminish in the direct ratio of the quantity of material medicine contained in the dilutions used in homopathic practice. Eight drops of the tincture of a medicine to the dose do not produce four times as much effect on the human body as two drops, but only about twice the effect that is produced by two drops to the dose. In like manner, one drop of a mixture of a drop of the tincture with ten drops of some unmedicinal fluid, when taken, will not produce ten times more effect than one drop of mixture ten times more attenuated, but only about (scarcely) twice as strong an effect, and so on, in the same ratio - so that a drop of the lowest dilution must, and really does, display still a very considerable action.
11 Supposing
one drop of a mixture that contains 1/10 of a grain of medicine produces an effect = a;
one drop of a more diluted mixture containing 1/100th of a grain of the medicine will only
produce an effect = a/2; if it contain 1/10000th of a grain of medicine, about = a/4; if
it contain 1/100000000th of a grain of medicine it will produce and effect = a/8; and thus
it goes on, the volume of the doses being equal, with every (perhaps more than) quadratic
diminution of the quantity of medicine, the action on the human body will be diminished
each time to only about one-half. I have very often seen a drop of the decillion-fold
dilution of tincture of nux vomica produce pretty nearly just half as much effect as a
drop of the quintillion-fold dilution, under the same circumstances and in the same
individual.
§ 284 Sixth Edition
Besides the tongue, mouth and stomach, which are most commonly affected by the administration of medicine, the nose and respiratory organs are receptive of the action of medicines in fluid form by means of olfaction and inhalation through the mouth. But the whole remaining skin of the body clothed with epidermis, is adapted to the action of medicinal solutions, especially if the inunction is connected with simultaneous internal administration.1
1 The
power of medicines acting upon the infant through the milk of the mother or wet nurse is
wonderfully helpful. Every disease in a child yields to the rightly chosen
homopathic medicines given in moderate doses to the nursing mother and so
administered, is more easily and certainly utilized by these new world-citizens than is
possible in later years. Since most infants usually have imparted to them psora through
the milk of the nurse, if they do not already possess it through heredity from the mother,
they may be at the same time protected antipsorically by means of the milk of the nurse
rendered medicinally in this manner. But the case of mothers in their (first) pregnancy by
means of a mild antipsoric treatment, especially with sulphur dynamizations prepared
according to the directions in this edition (§ 270), is
indispensable in order to destroy the psora - that producer of most chronic diseases -
which is given them hereditarily; destroy it both within themselves and in the foetus,
thereby protecting posterity in advance. This is true of pregnant women thus treated; they
have given birth to children usually more healthy and stronger, to the astonishment of
everybody. A new confirmation of the great truth of the psora theory discovered by me.