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EDITORIAL
by Dr. Sushama
Understanding Hahnemann
Hahnemann had a high level
of conscientiousness. He had one of best possible
qualifications of his time, a MD degree and could have
practiced with ease earning a lot of money. But as we
all know his conscience did not allowed him to continue
practice with unscientific manners of treatments. He
started a search for scientific methods to treat the
sick mankind. He had the courage to go against the
established views of allopathic practice. The famous
words ‘Dare to be wise’ written in ‘Organon’ also
reflect his courageous nature.
He wanted to achieve the goal of ‘gentle, rapid and
permanent cure’. He learned whatever appeared worthy
from his contemporaries, other auxiliary systems and
experimented in his practice. He would present it to his
followers only after being fully satisfied. Aphorism 3
of ‘Organon’ is self-explanatory on this aspect of
Hahnemann. His knowledge and contribution to chemistry,
his knowledge about dietics point to this end. In fact,
Hahnemann talked about pasteurization of milk much
before Pasteur.
When Richard Hale found Dr. Hahnemann’s medicine box
years after his death, he found there were three
different potencies in it. Two thousand four hundred
bottles were having medicine in fifty millesimal
potencies and seven hundred bottles with medicine in
centesimal potencies. And there was a set of medicine
bottles with a label that no one has been able to
decipher. He was perfecting homoeopathy till his last
breath. Such was his personality.
Dr. Sushama
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