Organon of MedicineRavenio Books, 20 ביולי 2014 - 338 עמודים "Without disparaging the services which many physicians have rendered to the sciences auxiliary to medicine, to natural philosophy and chemistry, to natural history in its various branches, and to that of man in particular, to anthropology, physiology and anatomy, etc., I shall occupy myself here with the practical part of medicine only, with the healing art itself, in order to show how it is that diseases have hitherto been so imperfectly treated. Far beneath my notice is that mechanical routine of treating precious human life according to the prescription manuals, the continual publication of which shows, alas! how frequently they are still used. I pass it by unnoticed, as a despicable practice of the lowest class of ordinary practitioners. I speak merely of the medical art as hitherto practiced, which, pluming itself on its antiquity, imagines itself to possess a scientific character." |
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... alterations and emendations suggested by increased knowledge and necessitated by further experience. SAMUEL HAHNEMANN KOTHEN; Easter, 1824 Organon de l'art de guérir; traduit de l'original allemand du Preface to the Third Edition.
... alterations in the innumerable morbid states (pathology, semeiotics), to draw conclusions relative to the invisible process whereby the changes which take place in the inward being of man in diseases are affected a dim picture of the ...
... altered by the disease, those abnormal matters that occurred in congestions, as well as those that were excreted, as diseaseproducers, or at least on account of their supposed reacting power, as disease maintainers, and this latter ...
... altered in its sensations and functions. Let it be granted now, what cannot be doubted, that no diseases if they do not result from the introduction of perfectly indigestible or otherwise injurious substances into the stomach, or into ...
... alteration in the instinctive, irrational and unintelligent, but energetic automatic vital force, when it has been diverted by disease into abnormal action, and by means of a similar affection developed by a homoeopathically chosen ...