If we give too strong a dose of a medicine which may have been even quite homoeopathically chosen for the morbid state before us, it must, notwithstanding the inherent beneficial character of its nature, prove injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the... Organon of Medicine - Page 188de Samuel Hahnemann - 1906 - 304 pagesAffichage du livre entier - À propos de ce livre
| Samuel Christian F. Hahnemann - 1849 - 382 pages
...suitableness of a medicine for any given case of disease does not depend on its accurate homeopathic selection alone, but likewise on the proper size,...injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary, excessive impression it makes upon the vital force which it convulses, and, through the vital force,... | |
| James Young Simpson - 1853 - 312 pages
...rendered their maladies worse instead of better. " The suitableness of a medicine," says Hahnemann, " for any given case of disease does not depend on its...injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary, excessive impression it makes upon the vital force which it convulses," &c.—(Organon, p. 321.) For,... | |
| Sir James Young Simpson - 1853 - 314 pages
...rendered their maladies worse instead of better. " The suitableness of a medicine," says Hahnemann, " for any given case of disease does not depend on its...injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary, excessive impression it makes upon the vital force which it convulses," &c. — (Organon, p. 321.)... | |
| Alonzo Benjamin Palmer - 1880 - 124 pages
...dose. " The suitableness of a medicine," says Hahnemann, in his Organon, p. 231, (English Edition), "for any given case of disease, does not depend on...injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary excessive impression it makes upon the vital force which it convulses." For " a medicine," says he,... | |
| 1904 - 534 pages
...next case of diphtheria and that I knew that it was, how would I use it? "If we give too strong a dose it must, notwithstanding the inherent beneficial character...its nature, prove injurious by its mere magnitude." "The dose of the homeopathically selected remedy can never be prepared so small that it shall not be... | |
| P. S. Rawat - 2002 - 792 pages
...neither be too large or too strong even if the medicine is quite homoeopathic in its selection. He says, "If we give too strong a dose of a medicine which...notwithstanding the inherent beneficial character prove injurious by its mere magnitude, and by me unnecessary, too strong impression which, by virtue... | |
| Fernando Flores Villalva - 2005 - 132 pages
...have been even quite homoeopathically chosen for the morbid state before us, it must, not withstanding the inherent beneficial character of its nature, prove...parts of the organism which are the most sensitive, andare already most affected by the natural disease. Why are doses so important? If in our practice... | |
| 1854 - 878 pages
...on its accurate homoeopathic selection alone, but likewise on the proper size, or rather smalloess, of the dose. If we give too strong a dose of a medicine,...injurious by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary, excessive impression it makes upon the vital force which it convulses, &c." (Organon, p. 290). For... | |
| 1910 - 462 pages
...the dose. If we give too strong a dose of a medicine which may have been even quite homeopathically chosen for the morbid state before us, it must, notwithstanding...unnecessary too strong impression, which, by virtue of its homeopathic similarity of action, it makes upon the vital force upon those parts of the organism which... | |
| 1861 - 604 pages
...the dose. If we give too strong a dose of a medicine, which may have been even quite homceopathically chosen for the morbid state before us, it must, notwithstanding...injurious, by its mere magnitude, and by the unnecessary, excessive impression it makes upon the vital force, which it convulses, and, through the vital force,... | |
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