Modern Homoeopathy

Monthly E-Newsletter April 2008

Is Hahnemannian Homeopathy doomed to go in to oblivion again?

Will the injections of "modern" ideas in to the main body of knowledge have such an effect?

By

Dr. George Vithoulkas

The rejuvenation and renaissance of Homeopathy that we have been witnessing over the past thirty years seems lately doomed to take a downward turn toward a point of degeneration, confusion and, finally, even oblivion.

This downward trend is manifesting especially in USA and England where the so called "modern homeopathy" is prevalent. This is obvious from the last assault on homeopathy by the media in these countries.

It is my strong belief that Homeopathy’s eventual downfall will be due mainly to a number of “artistic distortions” that are injected into the main body of knowledge by the “imagination” and “projections” of some "modern teachers” of Homeopathy. Since many of our students are receptive to the myths and stories concocted by flights of wild imagination, many so-called teachers have risen to fill this gap.

The motivation for this article comes from a critic of the book of an Indian homeopath in Simillimum, Vol. 7, No.3: “Perhaps the most inspired section of the book “is the exposition concerning the kingdoms of the remedies - animal, plant, and mineral...based upon easily recognisable features. He has extended the doctrine of signatures far beyond any previous scope. He has boldly stated that the imprint of the remedy is detectable in the patient. I found Sankaran has entered a realm of... intuitive science”! [my exclamation mark.]

It is extremely difficult for me to understand how an arbitrary and totally imaginary translation of the symptoms of a patient into an “easily recognisable” likeness of an animal, a vegetable, a mineral or a...nosode makes for an intuitive science!

It is obvious that many interpretations can be given by a practitioner to any given symptomatology in a patient.

That would mean in a way that just because a patient is freezing and snakes are cold blooded and frozen from the cold weather we should choose a snake venom for such a patient e.g Lachesis (which is a warm remedy aggravated by heat instead of choosing arsenicum, hep-s, silica cistus , rhus-tox etc. that are really cold remedies

It is easy for everyone then to see the confusion that will result when a doctor tries to categorise his/her patients by "whether they look like an animal or a vegetable or a...nosode, and how wrong he/she can be in his interpretations. But even if you have categorised somebody into one of these four groups, in what way will this help you to find his or her simillimum?

What will you prescribe in a case of mental disturbance when you see the desire of the patient to bite during delirium? Dog’s milk, (Lac Caninum) tiger's milk? cat's milk? or a remedy that has this symptom in its provings for instance Stramonium or Belladonna both plant remedies?

Will you prescribe Lac-can in a patient whose coughing sounds like "barking of a dog" or you will prescribe hyosc.(a plant remedy) that has this symptom as one of its great characteristic? To claim that you can find the likeness or similarity of a patient to a vegetable, an animal, a mineral, is so subjective and allows for so many interpretations that it is totally unreliable. A serious practitioner could not possibly put at risk his [patients with such nonsense.

We have had a lot of problems persuading people that Homeopathy is a Science. Now, with all this nonsense, we are once again reinforcing their arguments claiming that Homeopathy is a “non-science.” Such ideas and others, which can be discussing in the future, are signs of degeneration.

If some teachers interpret homeopathic science in such a manner and others do not question their interpretation, we may soon be witnessing the transformation of this science into a kind of “hodgepodge mythology”

I am not opposed to experimentation, conjecture, pure imaginary projections or even theorising, as long as such things remain in the domain of research and observation and are not put forth as “facts” to the rest of the profession.

There is no doubt that we are living in a crazy world with farfetched ideas, where real knowledge is interspersed with confusion, projections and misinformation.

We must not forget, however, that our task, our mission, as homeopaths is to turn the craziness, disorder and confusion of our societies into some kind of sanity and order with the right remedy.

It is true that our science today has a “degree of uncertainty,” a gap which may be filled with what may be called “artistic or intuitive interpretations,” and everyone can supply this according to his or her own point of view or imagination.

But interpreting the sensations and feelings of a patient into something beyond their meaning and reality is a dangerous road for a homeopath to take. We must perceive the reality of human suffering as signs and symptoms expressed by the patient and try to match it with what we know to be the pathognomonic picture of the remedy from the provings. We have to be careful not to project our own little theories or fancies when the health of a human being is at stake.

There is no doubt that homeopathy is difficult in its application and short cuts are eagerly welcomed by those of our profession who are longing for the new, the easy, the miraculous and the effortless. But such shortcuts will also have their own shortcomings, and, thus will add to the gradual demise of homeopathy.

Soon students of homeopathy with good intentions and enthusiasm will be seduced by such “artistic interpretations” and become disillusioned and disheartened when they try to put these ideas into practice. Many will leave these ranks for safer ground, but others will leave homeopathy permanently in bitter disappointment. The long term damage done to homeopathy will be irreparable.

For more information: www.vithoulkas.com