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HARDCORE HOMOEOPATHY PRESCRIBING
by Dr. Rajesh Shah
Background:
In the last 200 years the science of homoeopathy has witnessed and withstood numerous ups and downs, criticism and growth, failures and successes. It has withstood change due to
socio-economic factors, political factors, external factors, as well as change due to
internal (within the homoeopathic fraternity) factors. It has withstood the ultimate
test of time. The period from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century
has seen the influence of American homoeopaths notably Hering, Kent, and Allen .The latter
part of the twentieth century has seen the resurgence of classical homoeopathy with the
dominating influence of Vithoulkas, Tyler, Weir and Shepherd in the west and Bose, Sarkar
and Dhawale in the east. India has always played a substantial role by absorbing
developments from all over the world and passing the benefits to the masses.
Changing Trend:
With the
rejuvenation of classical homoeopathy in Europe (Post Vithoulkas era) a large number of
young homoeopaths took to active practice . Similarly India also
saw an influx of young practitioners in the profession. (As proof, most practitioners are
in their mid-thirties in India). A requirement for the growth of any science is the
infusion of young blood. It is for this reason that the youth deserve the credit for the
upsurge of homoeopathy among the laity.
Youth, Ambition, Haste...
The last two decades have seen the dominance of youth in homoeopathy the world over. A
characteristic of the youth is that they boldly pursue new ideas and are not
hampered by convention. In homoeopathy, too, the young practitioners have advocated
several new or even radical approaches. Some of these approaches,
particularly those related to case analysis, have been widely accepted by the fraternity.
This acceptance has spurred some homoeopaths into adopting new
untried (inadequately experimented) techniques in a hasty manner.
From Innovation to Speculation:
Some of
the radical approaches that have been too hastily adopted, have created confusion in the
fraternity. This is because these techniques are not as successful as their propagators
claim. For example, dream analysis. According to this new approach the patients' dreams
have to be evaluated to get a feel of the patient and
thereby selecting a remedy that will fit the similimum. The traditional approach is to
select the remedy under a particular dream or to select a remedy which causes the
dream. The new approach rejects the traditional approach and says that each dream has to
be evaluated for its significance and based on this a remedy should
be proposed. Now a dream is highly subjective and each dream can be interpreted in 10
different ways by 10 different practitioners. This approach has crossed the
boundary from innovation to, speculation. An examination of any scientific journal will
show that a lot of homoeopathic case studies involve speculation. The scientific
foundations of homoeopathy are in danger of being corroded by speculation.
Any science is founded on bedrock theories. All theories start as speculation. The
speculation is subjected to experimentation, criticism, alteration and even outright
rejection. It is only when the speculation has stood the test of time, it is accepted as a
theory.
Time to come-back:
The end
of the second century requires that the homoeopathic community be alert and go back to its
roots. The basis of prescription, as Hahnemann propounded, should be only drug proving:
the simple matching of the patient's history and symptoms, to the drug proving data.
Innovation and imagination are very much needed for progress but they should not result in
the scrapping of reality.
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