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Organon Paragraph 7 (and comment by Dr. Kent)

Dr. Jeff

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Hi everyone-

Let's continue our study of the Organon with this paragraph where Hahnemann introduces "causa occasionalis" as part of the patient's dis-ease.

Let's say that your pet's lameness goes away after you remove a splinter from her paw.

Is the splinter an example of a "causa occasionalis" or is the lameness from an internal imbalance?

"Now, as in a disease, from which no manifest exciting or maintaining cause (causa occasionalis) has to be removed, we can perceive nothing but the morbid symptoms, it must (regard being had to the possibility of a miasm, and attention paid to the accessory circumstances, be the symptoms alone by which the disease demands and points to the remedy suited to relieve it - and, moreover, the totality of these its symptoms, of this outwardly reflected picture of the internal essence of the disease, that is, of the affection of the vital force, must be the principal, or the sole means, whereby the disease can make known what remedy it requires - the only thing that can determine the choice of the most appropriate remedy - and thus, in a word, the totality of the symptoms must be the principal, indeed the only thing the physician has to take note of in every case of disease and to remove by means of his art, in order that it shall be cured and transformed into health."

Kent : "The physician must discriminate between the causes that are apparent or external, the grosser things from the true causes of disease. If a man has disordered his stomach, a dose of Nux vomica or whatever remedy indicated, will help the stomach to right itself, and so long as he lives in an orderly way he will cease to feel this indisposition.The Organon condemns on principle the removal of external manifestations of disease by any external means whatever. This divides homeopathy into two parts - the science and the art. The science relies treats of the knowledge relating to the doctrine of cure ; the art is the art of healing, for all healing consists in making application of the science."
 
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Dr. Jeff

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Here are the footnotes to that paragraph (some of Hahnemann's foot notes are longer than the paragraphs they help clarify!).

The first gives some specific examples of maintaining causes in people.

What's a common example of one in your pets?

"It is not necessary to say that every intelligent physician would first remove this where it exists; the indisposition thereupon generally ceases spontaneously. He will remove from the room strong-smelling flowers, which have a tendency to cause syncope and hysterical sufferings; extract from the cornea the foreign body that excites inflammation of the eye; loosen the over-tight bandage on a wounded limb that threatens to cause mortification, and apply a more suitable one; lay bare and put ligature on the wounded artery that produces fainting; endeavour to promote the expulsion by vomiting of belladonna berries etc., that may have been swallowed; extract foreign substances that may have got into the orifices of the body (the nose, gullet, ears, urethra, rectum, vagina); crush the vesical calculus; open the imperforate anus of the newborn infant, etc."

"In all times, the old school physicians, not knowing how else to give relief, have sought to combat and if possible to suppress by medicines, here and there, a single symptom from among a number in diseases – a one-sided procedure, which, under the name of symptomatic treatment, has justly excited universal contempt, because by it, not only was nothing gained, but much harm was inflicted. A single one of the symptoms present is no more the disease itself than a foot is the man himself. This procedure was so much the more reprehensible, that such a single symptom was only treated by an antagonistic remedy (therefore only in an enantiopathic and palliative manner), whereby, after a slight alleviation, it was subsequently only rendered all the worse."
 

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