In search of the Later Hahnemann

Language
English
Type
Paperback
Publisher
Beaconsfield
Author(s) Rima Handley
Out of stock
$22.00
This book is the story of Samuel Hahnemann's practice of homeopathy in Paris during the last years of his life. It is based on his actual casebooks, which up till now have been left substantially unexamined in a German library.

It was to Paris that Hahnemann had moved with his young second wife, Melanie, and here that he completed the second edition of his Chronic Diseases and the final revision of his major theoretical work, the Organon. We see him putting into practice the implications of his thinking on chronic disease, experimenting with some of the new remedies being developed by himself and others, and pushing his conception of the infinitesimal dose to undreamed-of lengths in the LM potency.

The whole range of his Paris patients appear in these pages, many of them famous, others obscure, and still others who had travelled from elsewhere in Europe and the Americas to seek his help. We see him grappling with the scourges of the time, such as consumption and the consequences of venereal disease, as well as with conditions which had been caused or further complicated by previous treatment.

Some of the cases are quoted at length, and there are nine double- page facsimile spreads of casenotes made either by Hahnemann alone or else in conjunction with Melanie. There are successful cures, but we also see him making mistakes, improvising, getting stuck and lost in his cases, yet always trusting in the process he had himself formulated. We see him as a whole person and witness the process of the learning and making of homeopathy.


'Handley is a historian by training and her general approach creates a feeling of confidence in the reader that she has got her facts right. ... I have long been convinced that it is impossible to understand homoeopathy in depth unless one does make the effort to come to grips with its historical foundations. I should therefore say that this book will be essential reading for any serious student of the subject. Handley is to be congratulated on making this material available in a scholarly but readable form.'

British Homoeopathic Journal
More Information
ISBN9780906584354
AuthorRima Handley
TypePaperback
LanguageEnglish
Publication date1997-06-05
Pages235
PublisherBeaconsfield
Review

This book review is reprinted with permission from Volume 16, Summer 2003 Edition of Homeopathic Links.

Reviewed by Ralf Jeutter, Ph.D., UK

At a time where homoeopaths argue, mostly to prove a point, whether Hahnemann was a rigid dogmatist, a shaman, or somebody who always got it right and therefore needs to be emulated at all times, we maybe could do nothing better than to remind ourselves who he actually was and what he did. Rima Handley's meticulously researched book 'In Search of the Later Hahnemann' provides a good opportunity to compare the mental images we have of Hahnemann with the actual man.

For the author Rima Handley, this book is a second visit to a familiar scene: This time she looks less at the private Hahnemann and his relationship with Melanie, as she did in 'A Homeopathic Love Story', but takes a close look at the patient journals (housed at the Robert Bosch Institute in Stuttgart, Germany) of Hahnemann's last years in Paris from 1835-1843. The significance of her first -rate scholarly research for anyone interested in homoeopathy is evident in the sentence: 'So far we have had no clear idea how Hahnemann actually practiced, only what he put forward as his theory,. (p.11) Here now is a chance to look into his workshop, and to make up our own minds whether the Organon is a practical guide to run a busy practice, or whether it is only a statement of intent. Although it was not Rima Handley's expressed intention 'to take sides in the apparently endless

controversy between unicists and complexicists, classical and pathological prescribers' (p.15), the reader can't help trying to decide on these issues while reading the book. And it is exactly this aspect of the book that makes it so much more than a purely historical snapshot.

The individual chapters of the book deal with the different theoretical and practical facets of Hahnemann's practice in Paris. She outlines the 'Context' (chapter 1) of Hahnemann's move to Paris; we get lively images of the 'Patients' (chapter 2); she gives an overview of Hahnemann's 'Theory of Disease' (chapter 3) at this time; his routine use of Sulphur as a miasmatic remedy; we get a picture on what grounds Hahnemann chose the 'Remedy to follow Sulphur' (chapter 4); the 'Materia Medica' he had at his disposal (chapter 5); his understanding of the 'Venereal Miasms' (chapter 6); the 'iatrogenic diseases' he had to contend with (chapter 7); his 'experimentation with dosage and potency' (chapter 8), and his search for the 'ultimate attenuation' (chapter 9).

In the chapter on the 'Theory of Disease' Rima Handley outlines Hahnemann's miasm theory since 1828, which already included the well-known triad that miasm is a) an infectious disease, b) the consequences of suppression of infectious disease, and c) inherited disease patterns. It is fascinating to witness how ideas like genetic inheritance and microbiological organisms as transmitters of disease are slowly emerging without their full conceptualisation yet (which is a testimony to Hahnemann's correct intuition). Rima Handley gives a concise overview of the history of our understanding of miasms from Hahnemann, via H. Allen and IT. Kent to modern thinking 'to mean a tendency to chronic disease initiated by the acquired or inherited effects of psora, of venereal disease, of tuberculosis or cancer, or even of less apparently noxious diseases such as influenza'. (p.38) Particularly relevant to our time are the contributions by H. Allen and J-T. Kent and their moralistic and metaphorical understanding of the miasms as 'the separation from God', a type of thinking which is widespread in the homoeopathic community up to this day.

The most interesting aspects of this book concern Hahnemann's prescribing techniques. Hahnemann initially went to Paris as a 'private citizen, a retired doctor' (p.9), but then the last eight years of his life turned out to be one of the most productive and experimental phases of his life. The case books show 'the process by which he abandoned the use of the single unrepeated dry dose in favour of frequently repeated liquid doses'. (p.13) Often remedies were given daily. It seems to have been very important for him to constantly change the potency slightly to create a dynamic response to the disease. Once he started with higher potencies (beyond 30C - from mid 1838 onwards), he would use descending and later ascending scales, e.g. he would start with 100C (daily), a week later 90C (daily), then suddenly 185 C, then 199C, then 200C. He started the high potencies when he observed that the case plateaued on 30C. At this time Hahnemann became also more and more a miasmatic prescriber: '[...] whereas in the earlier years of his practice he had prescribed on the basis of what he had termed a "totality" of individual and characteristic symptoms, he now took to opening the majority of his chronic cases with Sulphur [...] it was common for him to prescribe Sulphur at the outset of a case, and to continue to do so, until other symptoms more characteristic of another remedy emerged'. (pp.40 and 44)

The casebooks make clear that Hahnemann prescribed often on 'very partial [...] indications' (p.66). Neither mental, nor dispositional factors seem to have been decisive for the choice of remedies in many cases, although they were taken into consideration occasionally. Psychological symptoms per se were not treated as more important, only if they were characteristic (as stated in Organon para 211). Rima Handley then makes the following point: 'The prominent place given to these (i.e. psychological symptoms) in modern homoeopathy seems to have originated with Kent and his followers, half a century later, when they equated illness with sin, and disease with willingly turning away from God. Seeing all disease as being primarily an affection of the inner man, they necessarily saw inner, psychological symptoms as causative'. (p.71) Here we get a glimpse of how important Rima Handley's book is beyond a specialised historical interest. By developing a historical perspective we can become aware of the one-sidedness of so much of modern homoeopathy (in favour of mental 'symptoms'), and the confusion which springs from that. We also might become aware of the hazards of treating disease as a metaphor, an expression of psychological or spiritual dynamics, instead of remaining inductive and analytical. In this context it is ironic that there is this image of Hahnemann as being rigid. What we can observe in the Paris patients' book is that he employed the whole ran e of prescribing techniques we are familiar with up to this day, all of them clearly outlined in the Organon: Miasmatic prescribing; prescriptions based on characteristic and distinctive symptoms - if these were not to be found in the case he would prescribe on at least important and prominent symptoms. If these were not present he was not adverse to rest his prescription on common symptoms, e.g. Opium or Plumbum for 'constipation'. He also employed remedies for certain pathological states, e.g. rheumatic remedies, paralytic remedies, respiratory remedies, urinary remedies, etc.

When he prescribed miasmatic ally it did not mean that his findings on totality and strict symptom similarity became obsolete. In extremis, when all possibilities were exhausted, he would also use unproven remedies, e.g. 'Auto', a remedy made from sputum of a tubercular patient. Reading the book one gets the impression that Hahnemann's development as a homoeopath mirrors the evolution of homoeopathy in general, and that dogmatism, as so often, is the prerogative of disciples. He employed many prescribing methods simultaneously, methods which many of us tend to see as exclusive to each other. On the other hand, this multipronged approach should not be confused with the empirical dictum of employing whatever helps. Rima Handley is very clear in her assessment of Hahnemann: 'Of course, Hahnemann still practices as we always thought he did, still does what he always said he did - on the whole. What is interesting, however, is to see how often he broke his own rules, as do all creative people'. (15) And she is candid enough to state in the beginning: 'Because I have been looking at Hahnemann's process rather than his conclusion I have singled out the examples of his rule breaking. [...].' (p.15)

This book can only increase our respect for Hahnemann, the physician, esp. when we appreciate the materia medica he worked with. In a sense, he was most of the time in the situation like we are now when proving a new remedy. We struggle with the 'understanding' of the remedy purely on the basis of the list of elicited symptoms without the backup of clinical experience. It is all the more admirable to see how 'complete' many of his provings are, although their full range of applicability has often evolved over decades and the use by 1000s of prescribers.

Another aspect of the anticipatory nature of Hahnemann's work is his development of homeopathy as a constitutional medicine. Despite the clarity of §5 regarding the importance of disposition, it is clear that Hahnemann only practiced it in rudimentary form. The full implications of a holistic and constitutional medicine were only developed after Hahnemann, although he was already able to stress the importance of this concept.

Hahnemann does not come over as the 'genius' prescriber (and how many we have these days in our ranks!), who produces one brilliant cure after the next. Rima Handley's assessment is sober in this respect: 'Of course he often failed. There are no miraculous transformations in these casebooks. No one emerges from the Hahnemanns' consulting room a fully realised human being with all the miasms cleared. People do often emerge, however, in better health'. (p.66) As a reader one wonders whether modern homoeopaths are so much better than Hahnemann was, or whether the Paris case books provide a further example of his integrity, which did not allow him to portray himself in a better light. Or are we getting vistas into a time of our profession where self-promotion was not 'de rigueur' yet?

Rima Handley has written a thought-provoking book. The book shows (without necessarily meaning to) that many of the oppositions in the current debate on the state of homeopathy are false oppositions, and that Hahnemann was much more versatile than his friends and foes might like to think. What also comes through is the importance of the time before Kent. It seems that in our pursuit of the MIND we have lost a few treasures on the way. This book, beautifully and professionally published by the excellent publishing house Beaconsfield, can possibly help to refocus our attention.

 

This book review is reprinted from The Homoeopath with permission from Nick Churchill of The Society of Homoeopaths.

I've written a number of book reviews that end, "This is a book every homoeopath needs on their shelf!" Rima Handley's new volume, In Search of the Later Hahnemann, is not one of those books.

This small volume has been a massive undertaking for Handley. It is a work that has been waiting almost a hundred years to be printed, and only because of Handley's unswerving dedication to the project has it become manifest. But the audience will be small. It is not the wonderfully told tale of A Homoeopathic Love Story, her last book. It offers no tips on how to practice. It has no therapeutics hints. It contains no materia medica. It is, for most homoeopaths, a book of no practical use.

So what is it? It is a short visit to an amazing historical record. When Dr. Richard Haehl uncovered the manuscript of Hahnemann's 6th Edition of the Organon, he also found Hahnemann's casebooks - 54 of them. The books, along with over 5,000 letters, were eventually given to the Robert Bosch Foundation in Stuttgart, where they have been carefully preserved.

The books contain the case records of all of Hahnemann's cases from 1801 until his death in 1843. When Hahnemann moved to Paris in 1835, lie began to practice with his wife, Melanie. The casebooks from this time are generally written in French, usually by Melanie, with comments and additions made by Hahnemann.

It was during this time that Hahnemann was also working on the 6th edition of the Organon. Ready for publication in 1842, it was not published until Haehl found the manuscript in 1920. Even then, with homoeopathy in decline, most homoeopaths were still practicing from the 5th edition that was written in 1833. Few looked at the changes that Hahnemann made in his last years. Handley's previous book tells us a bit about Hahnemann's practice in Paris. We read how he "opened his cases" with Sulphur, and how he experimented with various scales of potency. In this book the picture is fleshed out, and a strange picture it is indeed. Handley presents us with a precis of the last few years of Hahnemann's practice, as well as three complete cases from Hahnemann's casebooks. It is a fascinating record. Says Handley, "Until the very end of his life be continued to observe and experiment. However a life of continuous opposition had made him secretive and he allowed little to be published of the results of these last years' practice. This book is an attempt to uncover its true nature."

I question this statement and wonder if this is a judgement on the part of Handley. Hahnemann, when presenting two cases in his Materia Medica Pura in 1833 said, "Many persons of my acquaintance but half converted to homoeopathy have repeatedly begged me to publish still more exact directions as to how this doctrine may be actually applied in practice, and how we are to proceed. I am astonished that after the very particular directions contained in the Organon more special instructions are wished for. I am also asked, 'how are we to examine the disease in each particular case?' As if special enough direction were not to be found in the book mentioned." And later he says, "The request of some friends, halting half-way on the road to this method of treatment, to detail some examples of this treatment is difficult to comply with, and no great advantage can attend a compliance with it. Every cured case of disease shows only how that case has been treated..." From MY reading, Hahnemann was hesitant to publish more cases because he was afraid that people would start seeing "this" remedy for "that" disease - something he did not want to encourage.

In Search of the Later Hahnemann introduces us to a parade of patients, including the rich and famous, with a catalogue of their ills. We see a sick population. Many had syphilis and/or gonorrhoea, and most had been victims of conventional allopathic medication. Among the patients we find Lord Elgin (of the Elgin marbles) who came for chronic neuralgia, Dr. Quin from England who came for his arthritis and asthma, Baron Rothschild who was seeking relief from his arthritis and neuralgia, the sculptor David d'Angers who came with rheumatism and gout, and the violinist Nicolo Paganini who came with a variety of complaints. Some of the patients had seen other homoeopaths before coming to Hahnemann. We see Hahnemann struggling with the remedies, most of which had only his provings to guide him. We see him using remedies that had minimal provings.

We see him, on occasion, using a remedy called "Isopath," made from the discharges of the patient. Says Handley, "Of course Hahnemann still practices as we always thought he did, still does what he always says he did - on the whole. What is interesting, however, is to see how often he broke his own rules, as do all creative people."

Put yourself in Hahnemann's position. You have devised a system of treatment. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Where are you going wrong? Are you looking at the cases right? How much can you expect in the way of cure when the patient has been subjected to mercurial baths and has lost all her teeth? How do you use the few remedies you have available?

By the end of Hahnemann's life, he had only 201 remedies in his medicine case -, not all of them with full provings. Apis and Glonoine were still 10 years in the future. Syphilinum and Medorrhinum were about 40 years away.

Handley says it clearly in her introduction: "To read Hahnemann's cases is to see him 'wobble, improvise, and grope for direction' a great deal. It is to see him as a whole person and to share in the process of the making of homoeopathy."

Because of a few of the cases in Handley's earlier work, many people are under the impression that Hahnemann, in his last years of practice, gave daily doses and started all his cases with Sulphur. The few cases in this book show quite the opposite. Although he often gave a series of doses, once lie saw strong action he gave placebos and waited and watched. He did not continue daily dosing for very long without a break. Similarly, he did not open "every" case with Sulphur- but he certainly did open many of his cases that way - and in the nature of the cases, many of them drug- suppressed active psora, it is an almost understandable tack to take.

One of the problems that exists with the notebooks is that Hahnemann's method is not spelled out clearly but expressed in his own shorthand. Sometimes his posology is clear and at other times we are not completely sure what he was doing. Handley says that "...the pattern is sufficiently clear to provide a reasonable degree of certainty in expanding the abbreviations", and she has taken the liberty of completing phrases within square brackets. So we have a prescription like this: "Lauroceras (potency not specified) in 10 [tablespoonfuls of water and half alcohol]. Put I tablespoonful in a glass and take 1 teaspoonful [of that daily]."

The frequent placing of the word "daily" in brackets on the notations of Hahnemann's prescriptions is problematic. Handley seems to assume that Hahnemann gave doses daily but offers no proof of her assertions other than the "reasonable degree of certainty" offered above. It is important to separate what is coming from Hahnemann and what is inferred by the author. At one point, commenting on Hahnemann's cases, she says, "He did not know what would happen and was often taken by complete surprise." Is this a judgement of the author, or a statement made, directly by Hahnemann?

Handley says: "By the time Hahnemann came to Paris he had considerably modified his previous practice with regard to dose and potency; he had stopped prescribing in single dry doses repeated very infrequently (the way of prescribing advocated in the main text of the 5th edition) and had begun to prescribe the centesimals in liquid." This does not fit with what Hahnemann said in his writings, and I am surprised that Handley is continuing to foster the myths. The method of giving the single dry dose and waiting until there was a relapse of symptoms before repetition was mentioned in the 4th edition of the Organon (1829). By the time Hahnemann wrote the introduction to Boenninghausen's A Systemiatic Alphabetic Repertory in 1832 he had revised the single dry dose posology. The "main text" of 5th edition of the Organon (1833) clearly advocates the use of liquid doses in paragraphs 285 to 288 ("The action of the medicines in liquid form..."). By the 6th edition he introduced the use of the LM scale.

Through the few cases that are presented in this book we see Hahnemann "wobble and grope", - - going up in potency, going down in potency, trying one remedy after another. Often he seems to be chasing the symptoms. Using the analogy of illness as being "out of tune" Hahnemann seemed to be trying to "tune each note" before moving on. He rarely, if ever, seemed to find the elusive simillimum. He was working at the beginning of homoeopathy with a very sick population and with remedies whose usages were barely realised.

With a few exceptions as noted, the author has not inserted herself into the work. It is my understanding that she had writ- ten a final chapter discussing the implications of the work, but decided not to use it. All she says, in recognition of the import of the material presented is, "I have not been in any way concerned to take sides in apparently endless controversy between unicists and complexists, classical and pathological prescribers."

And, indeed, these controversies will continue. There are those - alternating remedies, switching remedies often, using isopathic remedies, going up and down in scales, starting with a nosode or with Sulphur- who will point to this work and say, "well, Hahnemann was doing it, so I am practicing like Hahnemann!"

The point is missed by those who say that Hahnemann was "breaking his rules" and therefore, they can too. Through this book we can follow a piece of a practice that was taking place in the first forty years of homoeopathy - when there were few remedies, little clinical experience, and no understanding of the potential of the remedies, nor the possible depth of the true simillimum.

Certainly Hahnemann, in his practice, "wobbled." Would any of us be any better having to face the same conditions with the same box of remedies? Perhaps current homoeopaths who are well versed in the Organon and have been practicing for a few years might be better homoeopaths than Hahnemann - were he to appear to us today -but, on occasion, they "wobble" too.

What we should not forget is that what Hahnemann gave us was the Organon; "the operating manual." In it, lie sets out the system as he believed it should be. His last revision of it was completed just a year before his death. When I read paragraph nine ("we use homoeopathy to let our patients achieve the higher purposes of their existence") I realise that this is the ultimate expression of what we should be doing and that Hahnemann was setting a goal much higher than he was ever able to personally achieve.

I recall reading a transcript of an inquest held for a little girl who died in Brooklyn, NY in the early 1850's. She had been under homoeopathic care. Her homoeopathic physicians were Carroll Dunham, A. G. Hull, John Gray, and P. P. Wells. Reading the transcript of the inquest lets you understand that these "grand homoeopaths" had NO idea of what they were doing. "We thought it was this, so we gave her that, and then we changed our mind, and gave her..." It was early in their careers. It reads, to us now, like terrible homeopathy. These homoeopaths were the proverbial "babes in the woods." Will homeopaths a hundred years from now look back and think the same of our work?

To sit and digest the material in Hahnemann's casebooks is a massive venture. The first obstacle is to decipher the handwriting of both Samuel and Melanie Hahnemann. The second is to translate it from the original French (with a smattering of German) into English. By undertaking this massive feat, Rima Handley has done a great service in bringing this information about Hahnemann's practice to our attention. It serves to show us how far homoeopathy has come in the last 150 years and to show us the daily . realities of practice by Hahnemann and his best pupil. It shows us the Emperor without his clothes. It serves to put it all into perspective and have us realise how clear was Hahnemann's vision, as presented in the Organon, even though he was generally unable to achieve that level of clarity in his own practice.

The Homoeopath
No. 68, Winter 1998

 

This book review is reprinted from the British Homoeopathic Journal Volume 87, January 1998, with permission from Peter Fisher, Editor.

Reviewed by Anthony Campbell

Most students of homoeopathy are familiar with the outline of Hahnemann's life and know that in 1834, in his 79th year, Hahnemann made a surprising second marriage, to a young Frenchwoman called Melanie d'Hervilly. At this time he was living in semi-seclusion in the little dukedom of Kothen, but soon afterwards he went with his wife to Paris, where he quickly established a successful and fashionable practice. However, it is not so widely realised that the homoeopathy he was practising at this time differed in important respects from what had gone before. One reason for this relative unfamiliarity with Hahnemann's later thought may be the predominance of Kent's view of homoeopathy. Kent died in 1916, but the sixth edition of The Organon, written while Hahnemann was in Paris, did not come to light until 1923; thus Kent was familiar with the fifth edition and based his practice on that, but the sixth edition differs in important respects from the fifth. Rima Handley has therefore performed an important service to homoeopathy by making this account of Hahnemann's late phase available to the homoeopathic community.

The publication of the sixth edition of The Organon was due to Hahnemann's chief biographer, Richard Haehl. Shortly after this Haehl died, leaving a vast amount of material unedited and unpublished. Fortunately, it survived the Second World War and has been preserved in a collection in Stuttgart. It appears to be of unparalleled importance for homoeopathy. There are, for example, 54 thick volumes containing the records of most of the patients treated by Hahnemann since 1801; this material is almost unknown though a few preliminary articles have appeared in German. Handley's book deals with only that part of the archives which relates to Hahnemann's Paris period, but though it is fairly brief this is a scholarly study well supported by notes and references. Handley is a historian by training and her general approach creates a feeling of confidence in the reader that she has got her facts right. I was therefore intrigued to find Melanie referred to as a Marquise; I have not seen this appellation applied to her previously and it is a pity that Handley does not elaborate on it.

We often hear or read references to something called 'classical homoeopathy'. This is usually taken to be synonymous with Kentian homoeopathy (reliance on the single dose, emphasis on the use of 'mentals' in prescribing, and so on). Anyone who has read the sixth edition of The Organon will already know that Hahnemann himself had departed considerably from this way of practising at the end of his life, and this book will make that even clearer. There is of course no mention of 'constitutional prescribing, which is a post-Hahnemannian innovation, but it is perhaps more surprising to find that there is nothing much about trying to cover the totality of the symptoms. Instead, Hahnemann lays great emphasis on the psora theory; almost all his patients are prescribed sulphur and some get only sulphur. Moreover, they don't get single doses, but prolonged courses of repeated daily doses. Usually the potency of successive doses is slightly altered by a technique similar to that known today as 'plussing'. The LM potencies are also used extensively, and we see Hahnemann just beginning to experiment with nosodes, though not the ones which we are familiar with today; he even tries some isopathic remedies.

For Hahnemann at this stage of his career, psora is virtually the key to disease and its treatment. Handley rightly identifies the theory as based on the notion of infection. Psora is thus in principle an acquired disease, although there is a glancing reference in a note in the sixth edition of The Organon which hints at the notion that psora might be inherited. It was later homoeopaths, especially in the USA, who made the question of inheritance an integral part of the theory. As Handley correctly remarks, 'Lamarckian' ideas of heredity were current at this time and it is a historical anachronism to project our own understanding of heredity onto Hahnemann.

One of the ways in which homoeopathy differs from mainstream medicine is the extent to which it is historically based, Newcomers are generally told that it is founded on the provings and on Hahnemann's writings. This is at best a half-truth; it would be more exact to say that it is founded on what various writers have said about these things. Few modern homoeopaths read the original proving material and The Organon, it has to be said, is not light reading. Nevertheless, I have long been convinced that it is impossible to understand homoeopathy in depth unless one does make the effort to come to grips with its historical foundations. I should therefore say that this book will be essential reading for any serious student of the subject. Handley is to be congratulated on making this material available in a scholarly but readable form. I hope that she will return to the Stuttgart archives to shed further light on the earlier development of homoeopathy.

British Homoeopathic Journal
January 1998

This book review is reprinted with permission from The American Homeopath.

Reviewer: David Little

In the 5th and 6th editions of The Organon of the Healing Art (1833 & c. 1843), Samuel Hahnemann claimed his new revised techniques could speed the time of homeopathic cure to _, _, or less, the time it took with the methods of the 4th Organon (1829.) What could have led the Old Master to make such a profound statement? What is the difference between the methods of the 4th, 5th, and 6th editions of the Organon, and what innovations did the Founder introduce during the last 10 years of his life?

One of the major changes was the replacement of the ordinary dry pellet dose with a succussed aqueous solution. Hahnemann used a full range Of potencies from 6c to 200c with his liquid delivery system and introduced a completely new potency range called the 50 millesimal remedies (LM). The LM potencies are made with a 1 to 50,000 dilution ratio and are administered in gradually ascending potencies marked LM 0/1, 0/2, 0/3, up to 0/30. These new methods greatly expand the therapeutic range of homeopathy by offering a new, flexible posology system which is applied to two complementary potency ranges (Cs and LMs.) For these, and other reasons, I have always found the last 10 years of Hahnemann's life and works fascinating.

In 1984, while in Nepal, I began a careful study of Hahnemann's final methods through The Organon, The Chronic Diseases, eyewitness accounts, letters to colleagues, and a few of Hahnemann's cases from 1843. With these resources I reconstructed the Founder's revised methods, and for a 12-year period I put these techniques through an extensive trial while running free clinics in North India. The results of this experiment confirmed Hahnemann's postulates that his new posology techniques offer definite advantages over his older methods. With this as a basis, I was excited to hear of Rima Handley's publication, In Search of the Later Hahnemann, as it offers a view of the casebooks from the Paris epoch.

Hahnemann's Casebooks
First of all, I would like to thank Ms. Handley for her extensive study of Samuel Hahnemann's casebooks. She has done a fine job of painting a portrait of the time period, the people, the places, as well as the diseases they suffered. I would recommend that all serious homeopaths read her work, as it gives us insight into how our science first developed. Between the years 1833 to 1843, Samuel Hahnemann began a series of radical experiments with the goal of perfecting homeopathic methodology.

This makes a historical review of this critical period important because it sheds light on Hahnemann's revised views on homeopathic posology. Unfortunately, the casebooks are very cryptic, especially to those who are not familiar with the use of the medicinal solution or the LM potency. For this reason, I have obtained from the Robert Bosch Institute the microfiches of Hahnemann's cases between 1840 and 1843 so that I may review the material related to the LM period personally. This has allowed me to corroborate the nature of the material and confirm a few fundamental mistakes in Ms. Handley's text through a study of the original sources.

The casebooks from this period are the records of Hahnemann's sizable practice in Paris. Due to the great number of clients, Samuel and Melanie were only able to devote a limited time to each patient. For this reason it is not suprising that the case notes only contain the chief complaints of the individuals and the treatment undertaken. These cases were used as concise records of their clients rather then a complete record of all of Hahnemann's thoughts and observations.

The cases were recorded by Melanie and then passed to Samuel, who would often record repertory rubrics and write out the chosen remedy, potency (LM or C), and dose of the medicinal solution.

Hahnemann gave birth to homeopathy and the following generations of homeopaths have nurtured this infant to full maturity. Nevertheless, modern homeopathy still has a lot to learn from the methods Hahnemann employed, especially in his last 3 years. The fruits of his experiment are recorded in the 6th Organon, but for the most part, the methodology remains a mystery. This is beginning to change.

Understanding Hahnemann's Legacy
Ms. Handley has done a great work, but she has developed one of her central themes on a misconception of what is actually published in the various editions of the Organon. This is particularly obvious in the following quote:

By the time Hahnemann came to Paris he had considerably modified his previous practice with regard to dose and potency; he had stopped prescribing in single dry doses repeated very infrequently (the way of prescribing advocated in the main text of the 5th edition), and had begun to prescribe the centesimals in liquid. Throughout the Paris period he prescribed his remedies in liquid doses repeated frequently, either every other day, daily or several times a day. He also made considerable use of the method of olfaction, or inhaling of remedies.

Ms. Handley includes in this theme the idea that Hahnemann's private practice was considerably different from his published works because he kept his new experiments secret:

Until the very end of his life he continued to observe and experiment. However, a life of continuous opposition had made him secretive and he allowed little to be published of the results of these last years practice. This book is an attempt to uncover its true nature.

In truth, all of the methods Ms. Handley mentions above were placed in the public domain by Hahnemann rather than kept private. The Founder introduced the liquid delivery system in aph. 286, 287, and 288 of the 5th edition (1833), well before he went to Paris with Melanie in 1835. He first discussed the method of olfaction in the introduction to Boenninghausen's repertory (1832), and the most detailed explanation of olfaction is found in the 5th Organon.

All of Hahnemann's revised methods depend on the correct use of the medicinal solution. The last time Hahnemann recommended the use of the single unit dry dose was in aph. 242 of the 4th Organon. If the homeopath is still using the dry pellet dose, they must abide by the rules of the 4th Organon (1829) and the first edition of The Chronic Diseases (1828.) I call this the 'single dose wait and watch' method. This is the most common form of classical homeopathy.

In the 5th Organon, the Old Homeopath proposed a *new posology method which utilizes a single dose when there is a striking remedy response (§ 245), and the re-etition of the remedy at suitable intervals to speed the cure in slowly or moderately improving cases (§ 246.) He called his **new posology the "middle path" because it represents the balance point between the exclusive single dose and the systematic repetition of homeopathic remedies.

*Organon of Medicine, 5th edition by Dudgeon & 6th by Boericke, page 122 and 123.
**note to § 246, 123.

Posology Questions
Ms. Handley also maintains that Hahnemann gave his remedies "daily" and she notes this in brackets on every case from his notebook. A study of the casebooks shows this is incorrect. In the 1837 edition of The Chronic Diseases, the Old Master suggested the use of a series of doses daily, or every other day, followed by placebo when necessary. Even the example cases Ms. Handley presents demonstrate a series of liquid doses followed by a period of placebos rather than daily doses.

In the 5th Organon, Hahnemann recommended that any striking response to a single dose of a remedy completely contraindicates the repetition of the remedy. In the 6th Organon he points out that a remedy may be given daily, IF NECESSARY! If it is not "necessary" to speed the cure, such a dosage schedule will only slow down the cure and lead to aggravations. The idea that Hahnemann gave all his doses daily is a false representation.

Hahnemann's casebooks show that the Old Master constantly experimented with his methodology. In the cases from 1840 to 1843 we find Hahnemann giving a remedy and placebo in medicinal solution to the same client. He did not mark down exactly how many times he gave the remedy nor how many times he gave the placebo. Some of these doses may have been single doses while in others they could have been a series of doses or in alternation with a placebo. To understand just how he gave his dose we must also study the eyewitness accounts of those who were with him in the last years.

Eyewitness Accounts
Dr. Croserio, whom Ms. Handley calls the foremost homeopath in Paris, was an eyewitness to Hahnemann's work and an inner confidant during these last years. In the Neues Archiv der Hom. Heilkunst vol. 1, no. 2, 1844, he published a testimonial of Hahnemann's practice in Paris in the last LM period. This letter can be found in Boenninghausen's Lesser Writings in an article called 'Hahnemann's Doses of Medicine.' Croserio clearly states:

Only in rare cases he would give daily a tablespoonful or coffeespoonful of the first solution in 8 to 15 tablespoons of water. If he gave a powder to be taken at once in a tablespoon of water, this was never anything else then sugar of milk.

Also:

In chronic disease he would in no case allow the patient to smell at the medicine oftener than once a week, and would give nothing but sugar of milk besides; and in this way he would make the most admirable cures, even in cases where we others had not been able to do anything.

The period just before and after the 5th Organon was one of radical experimentation and constant transformation. Due to the limited number of proven remedies it was sometimes very hard to find a remedy that fit the totality of the symptoms. For this reason, in the 1830s Hahnemann performed trials with double remedies, remedies in tandem, remedies in alternation and remedies in series. As the materia medica expanded he did not need to use tandem remedies, alternations, or change medications as often. By the 1840s his casebooks show that for the most part, Hahnemann left these former methods behind as he found more successful methods. These methods center on the medicinal solution and the high potencies, centesimal, and LM potency.

The cases from the final period show Hahnemann using 6c, 12c, 24c, 30c, and 190-200c as well as a wide range of LM potencies (0/1 to 0/24) in the manner suggested in the 6th edition of The Organon. The new posology methods were applied to the centesimal remedies in the exact same manner as the LM potencies. This is what Dr. Croserio saw Hahnemann doing, and the method he learned from him personally. He never prescribed two different remedies, to be used in alternation or one after the other, he always wanted to see first the effect of the one remedy, before he gave another, and this even with the patient who he treated at a distance of two or three hundred miles. Nor would he change. Even in acute disease it was a rare case to see him allow the patient to take more than one spoonful in 24 hours.

Now, this eyewitness account of the LM period paints quite a different picture of Hahnemann's practice in his last years than Ms. Handley's book. This is because she does not really differentiate between the mid-1830s, where he used more tandem prescriptions, alternations and series of remedies from his more perfected methods of the last 3 years. The cases in my possession from 1840-1843 correspond to the testimony of Dr. Croserio and reflect the methods published in the 6th Organon. It would be wrong to think that the cases from 1835 are the same as the cases from 1843 where the Paris experiments reach their conclusion.

The Minimal Dose
Another area where Ms. Handley is mistaken is where she speaks of Hahnemann making medicinal solutions from drops of the 30c stock dilution. She incorrectly translates Hahnemann's notation "./x in 7 cab" as 1 drop of liquid of the 30c potency in 7 tablespoons. She suggests that the period (.) stands for the one drop. This notation actually stands for the use of one small poppy seed size #10 pellet in 7 tablespoons. From the time of the 4th Organon (1829), Hahnemann prepared his homeopathic remedies by placing one drop of the stock potency on 500 hundred tiny pellets. In the 5th Organon (1833) and The Chronic Diseases (1837 edition), Hahnemann suggested the use of 1, or more rarely, 2 pellets to make the medicinal solution. Again we can look to Dr. Creserio's letter for confirmation:

But I can assure you that he was most fully convinced that it was not necessary in any case, or under any circumstance, nor even useful, to give drop doses of the medicines, and that he from day to day more clearly saw the injury of giving larger doses.

The entire movement toward the higher potencies was accompanied by a corresponding reduction of the size of the dose to the tiny pellets. In Hahnemann's advanced methods, one of these tiny pellets is used to make a medicinal solution of at least 3_ oz. The most explicit instructions on how to make and apply a medicinal solution are found in the 6th Organon. The following is an extraction from a letter composed by Reverend Everest, a close personal friend of Hahnemann's, to a Dr. Luther. It was published in The Times in 1853 and records his observations of the Master at work:

His next experiment was to dissolve three, two or one globule in a glass of water, and then, after carefully stim'ng, to put a dessert or teaspoonful of this into another glass.

All of Hahnemann's experiments with the liquid delivery system revolve around the use of 1, or rarely, 2 tiny #10 pills. Ms. Handley confuses the instructions related to the different pharmaceutical methods for manufacturing centesimal and LM potencies with the instructions on how to prepare the medicinal solutions for the patient. Hahnemann called the centesimal potencies "medicament au la goutte" (medicines of the drop) in juxtaposition to the LM potency which he called "medicament au globule" (medicines of the pellet.)

The centesimal potencies are medicines made from a "drop," while LMs are medicines made from a "pill." The centesimal potencies of the 5th Organon were produced by taking one drop of the remedial agent and diluting it with 100 drops of alcohol and then giving 10 succussions. The LM potency is made by taking one tiny #10 pill of LM1 and diluting it with 100 drops of alcohol and applying 100 succussions. This then makes a LM2 potency of which one drop is placed on 500 #10 pills.

Normally only one small pill of the centesimal or LM potency is dissolved in a minimum of 3- oz in a glass bottle. This bottle is then succussed from 1 to 12 times depending on the sensitivity of the individual constitution. From this bottle 1, 2, or 3 teaspoons are taken and stirred into 4 oz of water in a glass, and 1, 2, or 3 teaspoons are given to the client. In order to put these new posology concepts into practice one must study the 6th Organon of the Healing Art very closely with someone who has put the methods into practice for some years.

Hahnemann sent his 6th and final edition of the Organon to his publisher before he left for his heavenly abode on July 2, 1843. Unfortunately, the publication was not completed and the manuscript was returned to the Hahnemanns. Mrs. Hahnemann took possession of the document after the departure of her revered husband but was unable to publish it due to a number of practical and personal reasons. It was not until 1921 that an English version of the Dudgeon- Boericke translation of the 6th Organon was published. The O'Reilly edition, called The Organon of the Medical Art, has offered homeopaths a new, excellent translation. Our generation of homeopaths has just begun to understand the true depth of this masterpiece.

There are those who say that Hahnemann's private practice was completely different then his published works like The Organon. They say that Hahnemann used combination and tandem remedies and point to Ms. Handley's work as proof This is certainly not fair to Rima's foundational research work, which portrays a series of experiments extending over 8 years (1835-1843.) She clearly says that in his final years Hahnemann become more conservative with his remedies and gave more placebos.

The dual remedy experiment was between 1832-1833 before Hahnemann left for Paris, which Rima does not cover. *As to the dual remedy experiments, Hahnemann wrote that from the "many attempts" with the dual remedies, only "one or two have been successful," which was insufficient for the "establishment of the new rule." The dual remedy experiments failed to produce sufficient results, and for this reason was abandoned by Hahnemann, Boenninghausen and Aegidi, its originator.

*Refer letter, Hahnemann to Boenninghausen, October 16th, 1833, Samuel Hahnemann, his Life and Works, Richard Haehl, page 253.

We have others who profess the so-called homogenic teachings of Hahnemann which treats "disease irritations not the symptoms." They are followers of sequential therapy, which uses combinations of high potency remedies chosen by a reductionist view of etiology and isopathic relationships. "Tolle Causum" (remove the cause), they cry, just like the allopaths of old school. They still cling to the idea that the *proximate cause of a disease is the disease itself and do not understand that the cause of the thing or event can not be, at the same time, the thing or event itself.* Hahnemann reminds us that such understanding is just sound common sense. The true healing art removes both the etiology (proximate cause) as well as the symptoms (event) with a similar remedy.

*Organon, O'Reilly edition, page 10 of the Introduction

To learn Hahnemannian homeopathy properly, one should study its methodology with those who have tested its principles in the field for years. Experience with the method is golden. This is what the pretenders lack.

Hahnemann's last 10 years were ones of great transformation as he worked to perfect his homeopathic system. One cannot get the complete picture from the casebooks in isolation. They must be complemented by the corresponding editions of the Organon and The Chronic Diseases, as well as eyewitness accounts and personal letters. Our study shows that the cases from Hahnemann's last 3 years are in perfect harmony with the techniques he recorded in the 6th edition of the Organon and eyewitness accounts.

The Organon is the text in which Hahnemann sets out the lofty goals of homeopathy. It is a vision of De Medicina Futura, the medicine of the future. The old doctor pointed in the direction he wanted his new system to go and left valuable advice for his students. Much of his hopes for homeopathy were beyond his grasp, but the principles which make homeopathy unique remain the key to the system. I'm sure the old homeopath would have been happy to see the expansion of the materia medica and repertory. Nevertheless, the advanced posology methods of his last 3 years (1840-1843) are still little understood.

Ms. Handley has done a great service by opening up the field and calling on her colleagues to go deeper into the subject. She acknowledges that such a grand undertaking as translating Hahnemann's casebooks is bound to contain inaccuracies. It is always easy to be a critic but very hard to do the work. I have made several mistakes over the years yet they always helped my understanding to grow. Rima opened up the subject and we are grateful for her works. As to experiments with the medicinal solutions Kent once said:

The question next to be considered is the giving of a dose of medicine in water and divided doses. This has at times seemed to have favor over the single dry dose. This is open for discussion, requiring testim ony of the many, not of few, to give weight. The best reports are made from both methods, and both are in harmony with correct practice.

We are slowly building the testimony of the many and the weight of our experience is building. In the 5th and 6th Organons (1833 & 1843), Samuel Hahnemann claimed his revised methods could speed the time of homeopathic cure to _, _, or less, the time it took with the methods of the 4th Organon (1829.) It is for classical homeopaths who have mastered the 4th Organon methods to take up the challenge and begin new experiments. Only they have the background and depth of experience necessary to really test Hahnemann's It new methods" in the field.

David is releasing his 1000 page textbook on homeopathic methodology, 'Hahnemann's Advanced Methods' in an online course with an interactive commentary, email discussion group, and private tutoring. This course will provide practical instructions in administering the medicinal solution of the centesimal and LM potency, as well as elucidate the case management procedures associated with 5th and 6th edition of the Organon. Anyone wishing to communicate with David about homeopathy may contact little@del2.vsnl.net.in or our email forwarder at little@simillimum.com

For more details about our projects and articles on homeopathy please visit the web site at http://www.simillimum.com

The American Homeopath - 1999

Review

This book review is reprinted with permission from Volume 16, Summer 2003 Edition of Homeopathic Links.

Reviewed by Ralf Jeutter, Ph.D., UK

At a time where homoeopaths argue, mostly to prove a point, whether Hahnemann was a rigid dogmatist, a shaman, or somebody who always got it right and therefore needs to be emulated at all times, we maybe could do nothing better than to remind ourselves who he actually was and what he did. Rima Handley's meticulously researched book 'In Search of the Later Hahnemann' provides a good opportunity to compare the mental images we have of Hahnemann with the actual man.

For the author Rima Handley, this book is a second visit to a familiar scene: This time she looks less at the private Hahnemann and his relationship with Melanie, as she did in 'A Homeopathic Love Story', but takes a close look at the patient journals (housed at the Robert Bosch Institute in Stuttgart, Germany) of Hahnemann's last years in Paris from 1835-1843. The significance of her first -rate scholarly research for anyone interested in homoeopathy is evident in the sentence: 'So far we have had no clear idea how Hahnemann actually practiced, only what he put forward as his theory,. (p.11) Here now is a chance to look into his workshop, and to make up our own minds whether the Organon is a practical guide to run a busy practice, or whether it is only a statement of intent. Although it was not Rima Handley's expressed intention 'to take sides in the apparently endless

controversy between unicists and complexicists, classical and pathological prescribers' (p.15), the reader can't help trying to decide on these issues while reading the book. And it is exactly this aspect of the book that makes it so much more than a purely historical snapshot.

The individual chapters of the book deal with the different theoretical and practical facets of Hahnemann's practice in Paris. She outlines the 'Context' (chapter 1) of Hahnemann's move to Paris; we get lively images of the 'Patients' (chapter 2); she gives an overview of Hahnemann's 'Theory of Disease' (chapter 3) at this time; his routine use of Sulphur as a miasmatic remedy; we get a picture on what grounds Hahnemann chose the 'Remedy to follow Sulphur' (chapter 4); the 'Materia Medica' he had at his disposal (chapter 5); his understanding of the 'Venereal Miasms' (chapter 6); the 'iatrogenic diseases' he had to contend with (chapter 7); his 'experimentation with dosage and potency' (chapter 8), and his search for the 'ultimate attenuation' (chapter 9).

In the chapter on the 'Theory of Disease' Rima Handley outlines Hahnemann's miasm theory since 1828, which already included the well-known triad that miasm is a) an infectious disease, b) the consequences of suppression of infectious disease, and c) inherited disease patterns. It is fascinating to witness how ideas like genetic inheritance and microbiological organisms as transmitters of disease are slowly emerging without their full conceptualisation yet (which is a testimony to Hahnemann's correct intuition). Rima Handley gives a concise overview of the history of our understanding of miasms from Hahnemann, via H. Allen and IT. Kent to modern thinking 'to mean a tendency to chronic disease initiated by the acquired or inherited effects of psora, of venereal disease, of tuberculosis or cancer, or even of less apparently noxious diseases such as influenza'. (p.38) Particularly relevant to our time are the contributions by H. Allen and J-T. Kent and their moralistic and metaphorical understanding of the miasms as 'the separation from God', a type of thinking which is widespread in the homoeopathic community up to this day.

The most interesting aspects of this book concern Hahnemann's prescribing techniques. Hahnemann initially went to Paris as a 'private citizen, a retired doctor' (p.9), but then the last eight years of his life turned out to be one of the most productive and experimental phases of his life. The case books show 'the process by which he abandoned the use of the single unrepeated dry dose in favour of frequently repeated liquid doses'. (p.13) Often remedies were given daily. It seems to have been very important for him to constantly change the potency slightly to create a dynamic response to the disease. Once he started with higher potencies (beyond 30C - from mid 1838 onwards), he would use descending and later ascending scales, e.g. he would start with 100C (daily), a week later 90C (daily), then suddenly 185 C, then 199C, then 200C. He started the high potencies when he observed that the case plateaued on 30C. At this time Hahnemann became also more and more a miasmatic prescriber: '[...] whereas in the earlier years of his practice he had prescribed on the basis of what he had termed a "totality" of individual and characteristic symptoms, he now took to opening the majority of his chronic cases with Sulphur [...] it was common for him to prescribe Sulphur at the outset of a case, and to continue to do so, until other symptoms more characteristic of another remedy emerged'. (pp.40 and 44)

The casebooks make clear that Hahnemann prescribed often on 'very partial [...] indications' (p.66). Neither mental, nor dispositional factors seem to have been decisive for the choice of remedies in many cases, although they were taken into consideration occasionally. Psychological symptoms per se were not treated as more important, only if they were characteristic (as stated in Organon para 211). Rima Handley then makes the following point: 'The prominent place given to these (i.e. psychological symptoms) in modern homoeopathy seems to have originated with Kent and his followers, half a century later, when they equated illness with sin, and disease with willingly turning away from God. Seeing all disease as being primarily an affection of the inner man, they necessarily saw inner, psychological symptoms as causative'. (p.71) Here we get a glimpse of how important Rima Handley's book is beyond a specialised historical interest. By developing a historical perspective we can become aware of the one-sidedness of so much of modern homoeopathy (in favour of mental 'symptoms'), and the confusion which springs from that. We also might become aware of the hazards of treating disease as a metaphor, an expression of psychological or spiritual dynamics, instead of remaining inductive and analytical. In this context it is ironic that there is this image of Hahnemann as being rigid. What we can observe in the Paris patients' book is that he employed the whole ran e of prescribing techniques we are familiar with up to this day, all of them clearly outlined in the Organon: Miasmatic prescribing; prescriptions based on characteristic and distinctive symptoms - if these were not to be found in the case he would prescribe on at least important and prominent symptoms. If these were not present he was not adverse to rest his prescription on common symptoms, e.g. Opium or Plumbum for 'constipation'. He also employed remedies for certain pathological states, e.g. rheumatic remedies, paralytic remedies, respiratory remedies, urinary remedies, etc.

When he prescribed miasmatic ally it did not mean that his findings on totality and strict symptom similarity became obsolete. In extremis, when all possibilities were exhausted, he would also use unproven remedies, e.g. 'Auto', a remedy made from sputum of a tubercular patient. Reading the book one gets the impression that Hahnemann's development as a homoeopath mirrors the evolution of homoeopathy in general, and that dogmatism, as so often, is the prerogative of disciples. He employed many prescribing methods simultaneously, methods which many of us tend to see as exclusive to each other. On the other hand, this multipronged approach should not be confused with the empirical dictum of employing whatever helps. Rima Handley is very clear in her assessment of Hahnemann: 'Of course, Hahnemann still practices as we always thought he did, still does what he always said he did - on the whole. What is interesting, however, is to see how often he broke his own rules, as do all creative people'. (15) And she is candid enough to state in the beginning: 'Because I have been looking at Hahnemann's process rather than his conclusion I have singled out the examples of his rule breaking. [...].' (p.15)

This book can only increase our respect for Hahnemann, the physician, esp. when we appreciate the materia medica he worked with. In a sense, he was most of the time in the situation like we are now when proving a new remedy. We struggle with the 'understanding' of the remedy purely on the basis of the list of elicited symptoms without the backup of clinical experience. It is all the more admirable to see how 'complete' many of his provings are, although their full range of applicability has often evolved over decades and the use by 1000s of prescribers.

Another aspect of the anticipatory nature of Hahnemann's work is his development of homeopathy as a constitutional medicine. Despite the clarity of §5 regarding the importance of disposition, it is clear that Hahnemann only practiced it in rudimentary form. The full implications of a holistic and constitutional medicine were only developed after Hahnemann, although he was already able to stress the importance of this concept.

Hahnemann does not come over as the 'genius' prescriber (and how many we have these days in our ranks!), who produces one brilliant cure after the next. Rima Handley's assessment is sober in this respect: 'Of course he often failed. There are no miraculous transformations in these casebooks. No one emerges from the Hahnemanns' consulting room a fully realised human being with all the miasms cleared. People do often emerge, however, in better health'. (p.66) As a reader one wonders whether modern homoeopaths are so much better than Hahnemann was, or whether the Paris case books provide a further example of his integrity, which did not allow him to portray himself in a better light. Or are we getting vistas into a time of our profession where self-promotion was not 'de rigueur' yet?

Rima Handley has written a thought-provoking book. The book shows (without necessarily meaning to) that many of the oppositions in the current debate on the state of homeopathy are false oppositions, and that Hahnemann was much more versatile than his friends and foes might like to think. What also comes through is the importance of the time before Kent. It seems that in our pursuit of the MIND we have lost a few treasures on the way. This book, beautifully and professionally published by the excellent publishing house Beaconsfield, can possibly help to refocus our attention.

 

This book review is reprinted from The Homoeopath with permission from Nick Churchill of The Society of Homoeopaths.

I've written a number of book reviews that end, "This is a book every homoeopath needs on their shelf!" Rima Handley's new volume, In Search of the Later Hahnemann, is not one of those books.

This small volume has been a massive undertaking for Handley. It is a work that has been waiting almost a hundred years to be printed, and only because of Handley's unswerving dedication to the project has it become manifest. But the audience will be small. It is not the wonderfully told tale of A Homoeopathic Love Story, her last book. It offers no tips on how to practice. It has no therapeutics hints. It contains no materia medica. It is, for most homoeopaths, a book of no practical use.

So what is it? It is a short visit to an amazing historical record. When Dr. Richard Haehl uncovered the manuscript of Hahnemann's 6th Edition of the Organon, he also found Hahnemann's casebooks - 54 of them. The books, along with over 5,000 letters, were eventually given to the Robert Bosch Foundation in Stuttgart, where they have been carefully preserved.

The books contain the case records of all of Hahnemann's cases from 1801 until his death in 1843. When Hahnemann moved to Paris in 1835, lie began to practice with his wife, Melanie. The casebooks from this time are generally written in French, usually by Melanie, with comments and additions made by Hahnemann.

It was during this time that Hahnemann was also working on the 6th edition of the Organon. Ready for publication in 1842, it was not published until Haehl found the manuscript in 1920. Even then, with homoeopathy in decline, most homoeopaths were still practicing from the 5th edition that was written in 1833. Few looked at the changes that Hahnemann made in his last years. Handley's previous book tells us a bit about Hahnemann's practice in Paris. We read how he "opened his cases" with Sulphur, and how he experimented with various scales of potency. In this book the picture is fleshed out, and a strange picture it is indeed. Handley presents us with a precis of the last few years of Hahnemann's practice, as well as three complete cases from Hahnemann's casebooks. It is a fascinating record. Says Handley, "Until the very end of his life be continued to observe and experiment. However a life of continuous opposition had made him secretive and he allowed little to be published of the results of these last years' practice. This book is an attempt to uncover its true nature."

I question this statement and wonder if this is a judgement on the part of Handley. Hahnemann, when presenting two cases in his Materia Medica Pura in 1833 said, "Many persons of my acquaintance but half converted to homoeopathy have repeatedly begged me to publish still more exact directions as to how this doctrine may be actually applied in practice, and how we are to proceed. I am astonished that after the very particular directions contained in the Organon more special instructions are wished for. I am also asked, 'how are we to examine the disease in each particular case?' As if special enough direction were not to be found in the book mentioned." And later he says, "The request of some friends, halting half-way on the road to this method of treatment, to detail some examples of this treatment is difficult to comply with, and no great advantage can attend a compliance with it. Every cured case of disease shows only how that case has been treated..." From MY reading, Hahnemann was hesitant to publish more cases because he was afraid that people would start seeing "this" remedy for "that" disease - something he did not want to encourage.

In Search of the Later Hahnemann introduces us to a parade of patients, including the rich and famous, with a catalogue of their ills. We see a sick population. Many had syphilis and/or gonorrhoea, and most had been victims of conventional allopathic medication. Among the patients we find Lord Elgin (of the Elgin marbles) who came for chronic neuralgia, Dr. Quin from England who came for his arthritis and asthma, Baron Rothschild who was seeking relief from his arthritis and neuralgia, the sculptor David d'Angers who came with rheumatism and gout, and the violinist Nicolo Paganini who came with a variety of complaints. Some of the patients had seen other homoeopaths before coming to Hahnemann. We see Hahnemann struggling with the remedies, most of which had only his provings to guide him. We see him using remedies that had minimal provings.

We see him, on occasion, using a remedy called "Isopath," made from the discharges of the patient. Says Handley, "Of course Hahnemann still practices as we always thought he did, still does what he always says he did - on the whole. What is interesting, however, is to see how often he broke his own rules, as do all creative people."

Put yourself in Hahnemann's position. You have devised a system of treatment. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. Where are you going wrong? Are you looking at the cases right? How much can you expect in the way of cure when the patient has been subjected to mercurial baths and has lost all her teeth? How do you use the few remedies you have available?

By the end of Hahnemann's life, he had only 201 remedies in his medicine case -, not all of them with full provings. Apis and Glonoine were still 10 years in the future. Syphilinum and Medorrhinum were about 40 years away.

Handley says it clearly in her introduction: "To read Hahnemann's cases is to see him 'wobble, improvise, and grope for direction' a great deal. It is to see him as a whole person and to share in the process of the making of homoeopathy."

Because of a few of the cases in Handley's earlier work, many people are under the impression that Hahnemann, in his last years of practice, gave daily doses and started all his cases with Sulphur. The few cases in this book show quite the opposite. Although he often gave a series of doses, once lie saw strong action he gave placebos and waited and watched. He did not continue daily dosing for very long without a break. Similarly, he did not open "every" case with Sulphur- but he certainly did open many of his cases that way - and in the nature of the cases, many of them drug- suppressed active psora, it is an almost understandable tack to take.

One of the problems that exists with the notebooks is that Hahnemann's method is not spelled out clearly but expressed in his own shorthand. Sometimes his posology is clear and at other times we are not completely sure what he was doing. Handley says that "...the pattern is sufficiently clear to provide a reasonable degree of certainty in expanding the abbreviations", and she has taken the liberty of completing phrases within square brackets. So we have a prescription like this: "Lauroceras (potency not specified) in 10 [tablespoonfuls of water and half alcohol]. Put I tablespoonful in a glass and take 1 teaspoonful [of that daily]."

The frequent placing of the word "daily" in brackets on the notations of Hahnemann's prescriptions is problematic. Handley seems to assume that Hahnemann gave doses daily but offers no proof of her assertions other than the "reasonable degree of certainty" offered above. It is important to separate what is coming from Hahnemann and what is inferred by the author. At one point, commenting on Hahnemann's cases, she says, "He did not know what would happen and was often taken by complete surprise." Is this a judgement of the author, or a statement made, directly by Hahnemann?

Handley says: "By the time Hahnemann came to Paris he had considerably modified his previous practice with regard to dose and potency; he had stopped prescribing in single dry doses repeated very infrequently (the way of prescribing advocated in the main text of the 5th edition) and had begun to prescribe the centesimals in liquid." This does not fit with what Hahnemann said in his writings, and I am surprised that Handley is continuing to foster the myths. The method of giving the single dry dose and waiting until there was a relapse of symptoms before repetition was mentioned in the 4th edition of the Organon (1829). By the time Hahnemann wrote the introduction to Boenninghausen's A Systemiatic Alphabetic Repertory in 1832 he had revised the single dry dose posology. The "main text" of 5th edition of the Organon (1833) clearly advocates the use of liquid doses in paragraphs 285 to 288 ("The action of the medicines in liquid form..."). By the 6th edition he introduced the use of the LM scale.

Through the few cases that are presented in this book we see Hahnemann "wobble and grope", - - going up in potency, going down in potency, trying one remedy after another. Often he seems to be chasing the symptoms. Using the analogy of illness as being "out of tune" Hahnemann seemed to be trying to "tune each note" before moving on. He rarely, if ever, seemed to find the elusive simillimum. He was working at the beginning of homoeopathy with a very sick population and with remedies whose usages were barely realised.

With a few exceptions as noted, the author has not inserted herself into the work. It is my understanding that she had writ- ten a final chapter discussing the implications of the work, but decided not to use it. All she says, in recognition of the import of the material presented is, "I have not been in any way concerned to take sides in apparently endless controversy between unicists and complexists, classical and pathological prescribers."

And, indeed, these controversies will continue. There are those - alternating remedies, switching remedies often, using isopathic remedies, going up and down in scales, starting with a nosode or with Sulphur- who will point to this work and say, "well, Hahnemann was doing it, so I am practicing like Hahnemann!"

The point is missed by those who say that Hahnemann was "breaking his rules" and therefore, they can too. Through this book we can follow a piece of a practice that was taking place in the first forty years of homoeopathy - when there were few remedies, little clinical experience, and no understanding of the potential of the remedies, nor the possible depth of the true simillimum.

Certainly Hahnemann, in his practice, "wobbled." Would any of us be any better having to face the same conditions with the same box of remedies? Perhaps current homoeopaths who are well versed in the Organon and have been practicing for a few years might be better homoeopaths than Hahnemann - were he to appear to us today -but, on occasion, they "wobble" too.

What we should not forget is that what Hahnemann gave us was the Organon; "the operating manual." In it, lie sets out the system as he believed it should be. His last revision of it was completed just a year before his death. When I read paragraph nine ("we use homoeopathy to let our patients achieve the higher purposes of their existence") I realise that this is the ultimate expression of what we should be doing and that Hahnemann was setting a goal much higher than he was ever able to personally achieve.

I recall reading a transcript of an inquest held for a little girl who died in Brooklyn, NY in the early 1850's. She had been under homoeopathic care. Her homoeopathic physicians were Carroll Dunham, A. G. Hull, John Gray, and P. P. Wells. Reading the transcript of the inquest lets you understand that these "grand homoeopaths" had NO idea of what they were doing. "We thought it was this, so we gave her that, and then we changed our mind, and gave her..." It was early in their careers. It reads, to us now, like terrible homeopathy. These homoeopaths were the proverbial "babes in the woods." Will homeopaths a hundred years from now look back and think the same of our work?

To sit and digest the material in Hahnemann's casebooks is a massive venture. The first obstacle is to decipher the handwriting of both Samuel and Melanie Hahnemann. The second is to translate it from the original French (with a smattering of German) into English. By undertaking this massive feat, Rima Handley has done a great service in bringing this information about Hahnemann's practice to our attention. It serves to show us how far homoeopathy has come in the last 150 years and to show us the daily . realities of practice by Hahnemann and his best pupil. It shows us the Emperor without his clothes. It serves to put it all into perspective and have us realise how clear was Hahnemann's vision, as presented in the Organon, even though he was generally unable to achieve that level of clarity in his own practice.

The Homoeopath
No. 68, Winter 1998

 

This book review is reprinted from the British Homoeopathic Journal Volume 87, January 1998, with permission from Peter Fisher, Editor.

Reviewed by Anthony Campbell

Most students of homoeopathy are familiar with the outline of Hahnemann's life and know that in 1834, in his 79th year, Hahnemann made a surprising second marriage, to a young Frenchwoman called Melanie d'Hervilly. At this time he was living in semi-seclusion in the little dukedom of Kothen, but soon afterwards he went with his wife to Paris, where he quickly established a successful and fashionable practice. However, it is not so widely realised that the homoeopathy he was practising at this time differed in important respects from what had gone before. One reason for this relative unfamiliarity with Hahnemann's later thought may be the predominance of Kent's view of homoeopathy. Kent died in 1916, but the sixth edition of The Organon, written while Hahnemann was in Paris, did not come to light until 1923; thus Kent was familiar with the fifth edition and based his practice on that, but the sixth edition differs in important respects from the fifth. Rima Handley has therefore performed an important service to homoeopathy by making this account of Hahnemann's late phase available to the homoeopathic community.

The publication of the sixth edition of The Organon was due to Hahnemann's chief biographer, Richard Haehl. Shortly after this Haehl died, leaving a vast amount of material unedited and unpublished. Fortunately, it survived the Second World War and has been preserved in a collection in Stuttgart. It appears to be of unparalleled importance for homoeopathy. There are, for example, 54 thick volumes containing the records of most of the patients treated by Hahnemann since 1801; this material is almost unknown though a few preliminary articles have appeared in German. Handley's book deals with only that part of the archives which relates to Hahnemann's Paris period, but though it is fairly brief this is a scholarly study well supported by notes and references. Handley is a historian by training and her general approach creates a feeling of confidence in the reader that she has got her facts right. I was therefore intrigued to find Melanie referred to as a Marquise; I have not seen this appellation applied to her previously and it is a pity that Handley does not elaborate on it.

We often hear or read references to something called 'classical homoeopathy'. This is usually taken to be synonymous with Kentian homoeopathy (reliance on the single dose, emphasis on the use of 'mentals' in prescribing, and so on). Anyone who has read the sixth edition of The Organon will already know that Hahnemann himself had departed considerably from this way of practising at the end of his life, and this book will make that even clearer. There is of course no mention of 'constitutional prescribing, which is a post-Hahnemannian innovation, but it is perhaps more surprising to find that there is nothing much about trying to cover the totality of the symptoms. Instead, Hahnemann lays great emphasis on the psora theory; almost all his patients are prescribed sulphur and some get only sulphur. Moreover, they don't get single doses, but prolonged courses of repeated daily doses. Usually the potency of successive doses is slightly altered by a technique similar to that known today as 'plussing'. The LM potencies are also used extensively, and we see Hahnemann just beginning to experiment with nosodes, though not the ones which we are familiar with today; he even tries some isopathic remedies.

For Hahnemann at this stage of his career, psora is virtually the key to disease and its treatment. Handley rightly identifies the theory as based on the notion of infection. Psora is thus in principle an acquired disease, although there is a glancing reference in a note in the sixth edition of The Organon which hints at the notion that psora might be inherited. It was later homoeopaths, especially in the USA, who made the question of inheritance an integral part of the theory. As Handley correctly remarks, 'Lamarckian' ideas of heredity were current at this time and it is a historical anachronism to project our own understanding of heredity onto Hahnemann.

One of the ways in which homoeopathy differs from mainstream medicine is the extent to which it is historically based, Newcomers are generally told that it is founded on the provings and on Hahnemann's writings. This is at best a half-truth; it would be more exact to say that it is founded on what various writers have said about these things. Few modern homoeopaths read the original proving material and The Organon, it has to be said, is not light reading. Nevertheless, I have long been convinced that it is impossible to understand homoeopathy in depth unless one does make the effort to come to grips with its historical foundations. I should therefore say that this book will be essential reading for any serious student of the subject. Handley is to be congratulated on making this material available in a scholarly but readable form. I hope that she will return to the Stuttgart archives to shed further light on the earlier development of homoeopathy.

British Homoeopathic Journal
January 1998

This book review is reprinted with permission from The American Homeopath.

Reviewer: David Little

In the 5th and 6th editions of The Organon of the Healing Art (1833 & c. 1843), Samuel Hahnemann claimed his new revised techniques could speed the time of homeopathic cure to _, _, or less, the time it took with the methods of the 4th Organon (1829.) What could have led the Old Master to make such a profound statement? What is the difference between the methods of the 4th, 5th, and 6th editions of the Organon, and what innovations did the Founder introduce during the last 10 years of his life?

One of the major changes was the replacement of the ordinary dry pellet dose with a succussed aqueous solution. Hahnemann used a full range Of potencies from 6c to 200c with his liquid delivery system and introduced a completely new potency range called the 50 millesimal remedies (LM). The LM potencies are made with a 1 to 50,000 dilution ratio and are administered in gradually ascending potencies marked LM 0/1, 0/2, 0/3, up to 0/30. These new methods greatly expand the therapeutic range of homeopathy by offering a new, flexible posology system which is applied to two complementary potency ranges (Cs and LMs.) For these, and other reasons, I have always found the last 10 years of Hahnemann's life and works fascinating.

In 1984, while in Nepal, I began a careful study of Hahnemann's final methods through The Organon, The Chronic Diseases, eyewitness accounts, letters to colleagues, and a few of Hahnemann's cases from 1843. With these resources I reconstructed the Founder's revised methods, and for a 12-year period I put these techniques through an extensive trial while running free clinics in North India. The results of this experiment confirmed Hahnemann's postulates that his new posology techniques offer definite advantages over his older methods. With this as a basis, I was excited to hear of Rima Handley's publication, In Search of the Later Hahnemann, as it offers a view of the casebooks from the Paris epoch.

Hahnemann's Casebooks
First of all, I would like to thank Ms. Handley for her extensive study of Samuel Hahnemann's casebooks. She has done a fine job of painting a portrait of the time period, the people, the places, as well as the diseases they suffered. I would recommend that all serious homeopaths read her work, as it gives us insight into how our science first developed. Between the years 1833 to 1843, Samuel Hahnemann began a series of radical experiments with the goal of perfecting homeopathic methodology.

This makes a historical review of this critical period important because it sheds light on Hahnemann's revised views on homeopathic posology. Unfortunately, the casebooks are very cryptic, especially to those who are not familiar with the use of the medicinal solution or the LM potency. For this reason, I have obtained from the Robert Bosch Institute the microfiches of Hahnemann's cases between 1840 and 1843 so that I may review the material related to the LM period personally. This has allowed me to corroborate the nature of the material and confirm a few fundamental mistakes in Ms. Handley's text through a study of the original sources.

The casebooks from this period are the records of Hahnemann's sizable practice in Paris. Due to the great number of clients, Samuel and Melanie were only able to devote a limited time to each patient. For this reason it is not suprising that the case notes only contain the chief complaints of the individuals and the treatment undertaken. These cases were used as concise records of their clients rather then a complete record of all of Hahnemann's thoughts and observations.

The cases were recorded by Melanie and then passed to Samuel, who would often record repertory rubrics and write out the chosen remedy, potency (LM or C), and dose of the medicinal solution.

Hahnemann gave birth to homeopathy and the following generations of homeopaths have nurtured this infant to full maturity. Nevertheless, modern homeopathy still has a lot to learn from the methods Hahnemann employed, especially in his last 3 years. The fruits of his experiment are recorded in the 6th Organon, but for the most part, the methodology remains a mystery. This is beginning to change.

Understanding Hahnemann's Legacy
Ms. Handley has done a great work, but she has developed one of her central themes on a misconception of what is actually published in the various editions of the Organon. This is particularly obvious in the following quote:

By the time Hahnemann came to Paris he had considerably modified his previous practice with regard to dose and potency; he had stopped prescribing in single dry doses repeated very infrequently (the way of prescribing advocated in the main text of the 5th edition), and had begun to prescribe the centesimals in liquid. Throughout the Paris period he prescribed his remedies in liquid doses repeated frequently, either every other day, daily or several times a day. He also made considerable use of the method of olfaction, or inhaling of remedies.

Ms. Handley includes in this theme the idea that Hahnemann's private practice was considerably different from his published works because he kept his new experiments secret:

Until the very end of his life he continued to observe and experiment. However, a life of continuous opposition had made him secretive and he allowed little to be published of the results of these last years practice. This book is an attempt to uncover its true nature.

In truth, all of the methods Ms. Handley mentions above were placed in the public domain by Hahnemann rather than kept private. The Founder introduced the liquid delivery system in aph. 286, 287, and 288 of the 5th edition (1833), well before he went to Paris with Melanie in 1835. He first discussed the method of olfaction in the introduction to Boenninghausen's repertory (1832), and the most detailed explanation of olfaction is found in the 5th Organon.

All of Hahnemann's revised methods depend on the correct use of the medicinal solution. The last time Hahnemann recommended the use of the single unit dry dose was in aph. 242 of the 4th Organon. If the homeopath is still using the dry pellet dose, they must abide by the rules of the 4th Organon (1829) and the first edition of The Chronic Diseases (1828.) I call this the 'single dose wait and watch' method. This is the most common form of classical homeopathy.

In the 5th Organon, the Old Homeopath proposed a *new posology method which utilizes a single dose when there is a striking remedy response (§ 245), and the re-etition of the remedy at suitable intervals to speed the cure in slowly or moderately improving cases (§ 246.) He called his **new posology the "middle path" because it represents the balance point between the exclusive single dose and the systematic repetition of homeopathic remedies.

*Organon of Medicine, 5th edition by Dudgeon & 6th by Boericke, page 122 and 123.
**note to § 246, 123.

Posology Questions
Ms. Handley also maintains that Hahnemann gave his remedies "daily" and she notes this in brackets on every case from his notebook. A study of the casebooks shows this is incorrect. In the 1837 edition of The Chronic Diseases, the Old Master suggested the use of a series of doses daily, or every other day, followed by placebo when necessary. Even the example cases Ms. Handley presents demonstrate a series of liquid doses followed by a period of placebos rather than daily doses.

In the 5th Organon, Hahnemann recommended that any striking response to a single dose of a remedy completely contraindicates the repetition of the remedy. In the 6th Organon he points out that a remedy may be given daily, IF NECESSARY! If it is not "necessary" to speed the cure, such a dosage schedule will only slow down the cure and lead to aggravations. The idea that Hahnemann gave all his doses daily is a false representation.

Hahnemann's casebooks show that the Old Master constantly experimented with his methodology. In the cases from 1840 to 1843 we find Hahnemann giving a remedy and placebo in medicinal solution to the same client. He did not mark down exactly how many times he gave the remedy nor how many times he gave the placebo. Some of these doses may have been single doses while in others they could have been a series of doses or in alternation with a placebo. To understand just how he gave his dose we must also study the eyewitness accounts of those who were with him in the last years.

Eyewitness Accounts
Dr. Croserio, whom Ms. Handley calls the foremost homeopath in Paris, was an eyewitness to Hahnemann's work and an inner confidant during these last years. In the Neues Archiv der Hom. Heilkunst vol. 1, no. 2, 1844, he published a testimonial of Hahnemann's practice in Paris in the last LM period. This letter can be found in Boenninghausen's Lesser Writings in an article called 'Hahnemann's Doses of Medicine.' Croserio clearly states:

Only in rare cases he would give daily a tablespoonful or coffeespoonful of the first solution in 8 to 15 tablespoons of water. If he gave a powder to be taken at once in a tablespoon of water, this was never anything else then sugar of milk.

Also:

In chronic disease he would in no case allow the patient to smell at the medicine oftener than once a week, and would give nothing but sugar of milk besides; and in this way he would make the most admirable cures, even in cases where we others had not been able to do anything.

The period just before and after the 5th Organon was one of radical experimentation and constant transformation. Due to the limited number of proven remedies it was sometimes very hard to find a remedy that fit the totality of the symptoms. For this reason, in the 1830s Hahnemann performed trials with double remedies, remedies in tandem, remedies in alternation and remedies in series. As the materia medica expanded he did not need to use tandem remedies, alternations, or change medications as often. By the 1840s his casebooks show that for the most part, Hahnemann left these former methods behind as he found more successful methods. These methods center on the medicinal solution and the high potencies, centesimal, and LM potency.

The cases from the final period show Hahnemann using 6c, 12c, 24c, 30c, and 190-200c as well as a wide range of LM potencies (0/1 to 0/24) in the manner suggested in the 6th edition of The Organon. The new posology methods were applied to the centesimal remedies in the exact same manner as the LM potencies. This is what Dr. Croserio saw Hahnemann doing, and the method he learned from him personally. He never prescribed two different remedies, to be used in alternation or one after the other, he always wanted to see first the effect of the one remedy, before he gave another, and this even with the patient who he treated at a distance of two or three hundred miles. Nor would he change. Even in acute disease it was a rare case to see him allow the patient to take more than one spoonful in 24 hours.

Now, this eyewitness account of the LM period paints quite a different picture of Hahnemann's practice in his last years than Ms. Handley's book. This is because she does not really differentiate between the mid-1830s, where he used more tandem prescriptions, alternations and series of remedies from his more perfected methods of the last 3 years. The cases in my possession from 1840-1843 correspond to the testimony of Dr. Croserio and reflect the methods published in the 6th Organon. It would be wrong to think that the cases from 1835 are the same as the cases from 1843 where the Paris experiments reach their conclusion.

The Minimal Dose
Another area where Ms. Handley is mistaken is where she speaks of Hahnemann making medicinal solutions from drops of the 30c stock dilution. She incorrectly translates Hahnemann's notation "./x in 7 cab" as 1 drop of liquid of the 30c potency in 7 tablespoons. She suggests that the period (.) stands for the one drop. This notation actually stands for the use of one small poppy seed size #10 pellet in 7 tablespoons. From the time of the 4th Organon (1829), Hahnemann prepared his homeopathic remedies by placing one drop of the stock potency on 500 hundred tiny pellets. In the 5th Organon (1833) and The Chronic Diseases (1837 edition), Hahnemann suggested the use of 1, or more rarely, 2 pellets to make the medicinal solution. Again we can look to Dr. Creserio's letter for confirmation:

But I can assure you that he was most fully convinced that it was not necessary in any case, or under any circumstance, nor even useful, to give drop doses of the medicines, and that he from day to day more clearly saw the injury of giving larger doses.

The entire movement toward the higher potencies was accompanied by a corresponding reduction of the size of the dose to the tiny pellets. In Hahnemann's advanced methods, one of these tiny pellets is used to make a medicinal solution of at least 3_ oz. The most explicit instructions on how to make and apply a medicinal solution are found in the 6th Organon. The following is an extraction from a letter composed by Reverend Everest, a close personal friend of Hahnemann's, to a Dr. Luther. It was published in The Times in 1853 and records his observations of the Master at work:

His next experiment was to dissolve three, two or one globule in a glass of water, and then, after carefully stim'ng, to put a dessert or teaspoonful of this into another glass.

All of Hahnemann's experiments with the liquid delivery system revolve around the use of 1, or rarely, 2 tiny #10 pills. Ms. Handley confuses the instructions related to the different pharmaceutical methods for manufacturing centesimal and LM potencies with the instructions on how to prepare the medicinal solutions for the patient. Hahnemann called the centesimal potencies "medicament au la goutte" (medicines of the drop) in juxtaposition to the LM potency which he called "medicament au globule" (medicines of the pellet.)

The centesimal potencies are medicines made from a "drop," while LMs are medicines made from a "pill." The centesimal potencies of the 5th Organon were produced by taking one drop of the remedial agent and diluting it with 100 drops of alcohol and then giving 10 succussions. The LM potency is made by taking one tiny #10 pill of LM1 and diluting it with 100 drops of alcohol and applying 100 succussions. This then makes a LM2 potency of which one drop is placed on 500 #10 pills.

Normally only one small pill of the centesimal or LM potency is dissolved in a minimum of 3- oz in a glass bottle. This bottle is then succussed from 1 to 12 times depending on the sensitivity of the individual constitution. From this bottle 1, 2, or 3 teaspoons are taken and stirred into 4 oz of water in a glass, and 1, 2, or 3 teaspoons are given to the client. In order to put these new posology concepts into practice one must study the 6th Organon of the Healing Art very closely with someone who has put the methods into practice for some years.

Hahnemann sent his 6th and final edition of the Organon to his publisher before he left for his heavenly abode on July 2, 1843. Unfortunately, the publication was not completed and the manuscript was returned to the Hahnemanns. Mrs. Hahnemann took possession of the document after the departure of her revered husband but was unable to publish it due to a number of practical and personal reasons. It was not until 1921 that an English version of the Dudgeon- Boericke translation of the 6th Organon was published. The O'Reilly edition, called The Organon of the Medical Art, has offered homeopaths a new, excellent translation. Our generation of homeopaths has just begun to understand the true depth of this masterpiece.

There are those who say that Hahnemann's private practice was completely different then his published works like The Organon. They say that Hahnemann used combination and tandem remedies and point to Ms. Handley's work as proof This is certainly not fair to Rima's foundational research work, which portrays a series of experiments extending over 8 years (1835-1843.) She clearly says that in his final years Hahnemann become more conservative with his remedies and gave more placebos.

The dual remedy experiment was between 1832-1833 before Hahnemann left for Paris, which Rima does not cover. *As to the dual remedy experiments, Hahnemann wrote that from the "many attempts" with the dual remedies, only "one or two have been successful," which was insufficient for the "establishment of the new rule." The dual remedy experiments failed to produce sufficient results, and for this reason was abandoned by Hahnemann, Boenninghausen and Aegidi, its originator.

*Refer letter, Hahnemann to Boenninghausen, October 16th, 1833, Samuel Hahnemann, his Life and Works, Richard Haehl, page 253.

We have others who profess the so-called homogenic teachings of Hahnemann which treats "disease irritations not the symptoms." They are followers of sequential therapy, which uses combinations of high potency remedies chosen by a reductionist view of etiology and isopathic relationships. "Tolle Causum" (remove the cause), they cry, just like the allopaths of old school. They still cling to the idea that the *proximate cause of a disease is the disease itself and do not understand that the cause of the thing or event can not be, at the same time, the thing or event itself.* Hahnemann reminds us that such understanding is just sound common sense. The true healing art removes both the etiology (proximate cause) as well as the symptoms (event) with a similar remedy.

*Organon, O'Reilly edition, page 10 of the Introduction

To learn Hahnemannian homeopathy properly, one should study its methodology with those who have tested its principles in the field for years. Experience with the method is golden. This is what the pretenders lack.

Hahnemann's last 10 years were ones of great transformation as he worked to perfect his homeopathic system. One cannot get the complete picture from the casebooks in isolation. They must be complemented by the corresponding editions of the Organon and The Chronic Diseases, as well as eyewitness accounts and personal letters. Our study shows that the cases from Hahnemann's last 3 years are in perfect harmony with the techniques he recorded in the 6th edition of the Organon and eyewitness accounts.

The Organon is the text in which Hahnemann sets out the lofty goals of homeopathy. It is a vision of De Medicina Futura, the medicine of the future. The old doctor pointed in the direction he wanted his new system to go and left valuable advice for his students. Much of his hopes for homeopathy were beyond his grasp, but the principles which make homeopathy unique remain the key to the system. I'm sure the old homeopath would have been happy to see the expansion of the materia medica and repertory. Nevertheless, the advanced posology methods of his last 3 years (1840-1843) are still little understood.

Ms. Handley has done a great service by opening up the field and calling on her colleagues to go deeper into the subject. She acknowledges that such a grand undertaking as translating Hahnemann's casebooks is bound to contain inaccuracies. It is always easy to be a critic but very hard to do the work. I have made several mistakes over the years yet they always helped my understanding to grow. Rima opened up the subject and we are grateful for her works. As to experiments with the medicinal solutions Kent once said:

The question next to be considered is the giving of a dose of medicine in water and divided doses. This has at times seemed to have favor over the single dry dose. This is open for discussion, requiring testim ony of the many, not of few, to give weight. The best reports are made from both methods, and both are in harmony with correct practice.

We are slowly building the testimony of the many and the weight of our experience is building. In the 5th and 6th Organons (1833 & 1843), Samuel Hahnemann claimed his revised methods could speed the time of homeopathic cure to _, _, or less, the time it took with the methods of the 4th Organon (1829.) It is for classical homeopaths who have mastered the 4th Organon methods to take up the challenge and begin new experiments. Only they have the background and depth of experience necessary to really test Hahnemann's It new methods" in the field.

David is releasing his 1000 page textbook on homeopathic methodology, 'Hahnemann's Advanced Methods' in an online course with an interactive commentary, email discussion group, and private tutoring. This course will provide practical instructions in administering the medicinal solution of the centesimal and LM potency, as well as elucidate the case management procedures associated with 5th and 6th edition of the Organon. Anyone wishing to communicate with David about homeopathy may contact little@del2.vsnl.net.in or our email forwarder at little@simillimum.com

For more details about our projects and articles on homeopathy please visit the web site at http://www.simillimum.com

The American Homeopath - 1999