This important article by Constantine Hering, “Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms,” was printed three times, twice during his life and once shortly after his death in 1880. These were: The Hahnemannian Monthly 1865; 1:1. Reprinted in Amer. Hom. Review, Vol. 2, 1878, and The Medical Advance, Jan 1888. The latter was reprinted in Homoeopathica 21:1, Feb. 2001. I have made a copy of the Medical Advance article and compared it with the Homoeopathica version [which contained 3 bracketed corrections].
This important article by Constantine Hering, “Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms,” was printed three times, twice during his life and once shortly after his death in 1880. These were: The Hahnemannian Monthly 1865; 1:1. Reprinted in Amer. Hom. Review, Vol. 2, 1878, and The Medical Advance, Jan 1888. The latter was reprinted in Homoeopathica 21:1, Feb. 2001. I have made a copy of the Medical Advance article and compared it with the Homoeopathica version [which contained 3 bracketed corrections].
This important article by Constantine Hering, “Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms,” was printed three times, twice during his life and once shortly after his death in 1880. These were: The Hahnemannian Monthly 1865; 1:1. Reprinted in Amer. Hom. Review, Vol. 2, 1878, and The Medical Advance, Jan 1888. The latter was reprinted in Homoeopathica 21:1, Feb. 2001. I have made a copy of the Medical Advance article and compared it with the Homoeopathica version [which contained 3 bracketed corrections].
This important article by Constantine Hering, “Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms,” was printed three times, twice during his life and once shortly after his death in 1880. These were: The Hahnemannian Monthly 1865; 1:1. Reprinted in Amer. Hom. Review, Vol. 2, 1878, and The Medical Advance, Jan 1888. The latter was reprinted in Homoeopathica 21:1, Feb. 2001. I have made a copy of the Medical Advance article and compared it with the Homoeopathica version [which contained 3 bracketed corrections].
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Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms
Constantine Hering, M.D.
From The Medical Advance, January, 1888
Hahnemann's advice is to take every symptom of each case, as if it
were the only one (Organon, par. 83). The same is to be done while proving remedies; write down all the symptoms (Organon, par. 138, 139, etc.). In contradiction the common old schools examine each case in order to make a diagnosis and to be able to tell the patient 'what is the matter', and if they talk about the effects of a drug, they ask: "What disease does it cure?'" "What pathological generality is its 'character'?" The true Hahnemannian examines each case to get such symptoms as distinguish this case from all others. He observes the strictest individualization; like a portrait painter, he wants a photograph of each single case of sickness. The characteristic or distinguishing symptoms are the ones he aims at. The same is true in provings. He wants the characteristics of a medicine, i.e., such symptoms as distinguish it from all the others. Hahnemann's rules set forth that, in order to get what we necessarily must know, we must aim to record all symptoms, particularly those that have hitherto been overlooked, neglected, not listened to, or sneered at. It is the same with provings of drugs. By collecting every symptom, and particularly the so-called minutiae, we obtain the characteristics. The old schools are satisfied with the general pathological character by which drugs may be divided into classes, but never can be individualized. RULE I-- The characteristics of the case must be similar to the characteristics of the drug (Organon, par. 153 and others). This rule has also been expressed in the following words: The symptoms of a case and the symptoms of a medicine must not only be alike, one by one, but in both the same symptoms must also be of a like rank. It is thus the rank according to which we arrange the symptoms obtained by the examination of a case-- the rank, the value, the importance of the respective symptoms of the drug-- which determines the indicated remedy when several different drugs apparently have the same similarity. RULE II-- Hahnemann has given us a second rule.in his Chronic Diseases. Either one adopts his psoric theory or not, but if one follows his practical advice laid down in the Chronic Diseases he will have far better success and will be forced to adopt at least all the practical rules contained in this theory. The pith of this theory is not refuted by the discovery of Acarus scabiei, nor by the generativ aequivoca, nor the contagiousness, nor by the propagation of the animalculae, nor by anything else, not even by all the tribes of bacteria. The quintessence of his doctrine is to give, in all chronic diseases (diseases which progress from without inwardly, from the less essential parts of the body to the more essential, from the periphery to the central organs, generally from below upwards), drugs which act from within outward, from above downward, from the most to the less essential organs, from the brain and the nerves outward and down to the most outward lowest of all organs, .the skin. (Note the preface to the treatise on Chronic Diseases, p. 7.) The metaphysics of our science tell us that all drug diseases are in their essence and offspring opposite to the whole mass of epidemic, contagious, and other diseases, all of the latter being originated by a conflux of causes. All the anti-psoric drugs of Hahnemann have the peculiar charac- teristic of causing the evolution of the effects from within outwards. Thus all symptoms indicating such a direction in the cases from without inwards, and in the drugs the opposite from within outwards, are of the highest rank. RULE III-- Hahnemann gives us a third rule which has been overlooked by all the low dilutionists, or is at least never mentioned by them, and has even been entirely neglected by the theorizers of our school. Without this chief rule the homoeopathic healing art would be a most imperfect one. This rule enables the true Hahnemannian artist not only to cure the most obstinate chronic diseases but also to make a certain prognosis when discharging a case, whether the patient will remain cured or whether the disease will return, like a half-paid creditor, at the first opportunity. Hahnemann states, in his Chronic Diseases, American translation, p. 171 [Indian edition p. 211]: Symptoms recently developed are the first to yield. Older [Oldest] symptoms disappear last. Here we have one of Hahnemann's general observations which, like all of them, is of endless value, a plain, practical rule of immense importance. It might seem to some so very natural that recent symptoms should be the first to disappear, older ones last, that it ought to have been observed by each and every physician at all times. But this is not the case. It was never observed before Hahnemann, nor was it ever stated as a rule. I will set forth all the consequences of this rule of succession, but first I repeat it in another form. In diseases of long standing where the symptoms or groups of symptoms have befallen the sick in a certain order, succeeding each other, more and more being added from time to time to those already existing, in such cases this order should be reversed during the cure, the last ought to disappear first and the first last. Suppose a patient had experienced the symptoms he suffers in the order a, b, c, d, e, then they ought to leave him, if the cure is to be perfect and permanent, in the order: e, d, c, b, a. The latest symptoms have thus the highest rank in deciding the choice of a remedy. Suppose a patient complains of new symptoms, as it often happens during the treatment of cases of long standing, particularly if we have chosen with great care a so-called anti-psoric medicine, and the improvement has, of course, continued uninterruptedly four, six, eight weeks, after which time the improvement gradually ceases, runs out, and the patient begins to complain more. In such cases we will very often find, if we again take an accurate image of the newly increased disease state, exactly as we did before, that several new symptoms have appeared. We may represent it by the formula: a, b, c, d, e, have lessened, especially e, d, c; and now a, b, are on the increase again, even c reappears; d, e, are gone, but another symptom f, has been added, or even f, g. These new symptoms are always of the highest rank, even if apparently unimportant. It may be observed that generally they are among the symptoms of the last-given remedy. Thus one must proceed with caution, for after such a long interval, or after such a real gain as the disappearance of d, e, the same drug will never be of any more benefit, the counter-indication being the new symptoms. Another medicine has to be selected, one which has f, or f, g especially as characteristic. The practical influence of these three rules of rank proves to be not only a manifold one, but their observance becomes a characteristic sign of difference between a mere empiric in Homoeopathics, a perverted homoeopathician, and a real Hahnemannian. The first will cover symptom by symptom without knowing or making any distinction; the second will be satisfied with a few such symptoms which reflect what he calls the scientific character, and enable him to go on the stilts of pathology; the third will observe the rules and heal the sick as Hahnemann did. It is thus worth while to look at the rules more closely and let them pass before our eyes once more. RULE I-- According to the first rule, one must inquire not only for the seat of the symptoms, which organ seems to be the center of the pathological action, but also for the minutiae in locality, notwithstanding their complete unimportance in pathology, e.g., little inflammations on the point of the nose or lobe of the ear may help to indicate Nitrum [Kali nitricum]. One must carefully note if any of these sensations of a patient are on one side of the body or the other, if they predominate on one side, or if they pass over from one side to the other. One further inquires for each kind of sensation with much more accuracy than would be required if he had nothing else to decide than the pathological character. Some peculiar sensations, trifles in themselves, may be of importance in the choice of the medicines, even such as are unexplainable by physiology or never taken notice of by pathology, e.g., a feeling 'as if drops of water were falling' may help to indicate Cannabis. One must inquire for the time of the day when the symptoms of a patient appear to increase, are ameliorated, or disappear. This is very often the only criterion by which he decides his choice. Even the hours of the day are very often of a decisive influence, e.g., the hours after midnight, one to three, may help to indicate Arsenicum or Kali carb; from four to seven in the evening may help to select Helleborus or Lycopodium. Likewise every function of our body, sleeping or waking, eating, drinking, walking, standing, rest or motion, etc., must be taken into consideration in so far as they may be one of the conditions of aggravation or amelioration of any of the symptoms of the sick. In the same way all connections of symptoms following each other or alternating with one another, whether they have a pathological importance or not, are all for us of the highest rank, if, aided by them, the physician may distinguish one case from another, or one drug from another. The first rule, then, is that not only the characteristics must be alike, but there must also be a similarity of their respective rank. RULE II-- The second rule of Hahnemann introduces a kind of distinction between the different medicines which have been proved and applied, which must gradually lead to the adoption of an order of rank among them. It is a similar division to that of the so-called Polychrests. But it is not this alone; the same rule is also of great influence when one arranges the symptoms of the sick. All symptoms of inward affections, all the symptoms of the mind or other inward actions, are, according to it, of much higher value than the most molesting or destructive symptoms on the surface of the body. A decrease or an amelioration of outward symptoms, with an increase of inward complaints, even if the latter apparently are of little importance, will be an indication that the patient is getting worse, and one must try to find among the symptoms those indicating another medicine which will act curatively. Very frequently one will see ineffectual attempts of the inward actions to throw out and bring to the surface that which attacks the center of life. The physician must try to assist such attempts, but neither by outward applications nor by a mere removal of that which the disease produces, and still less by medicines only similar to the same outward symptoms: on the contrary, he must inquire principally for the hidden inward symptoms, and study them with the utmost care to find medicines which correspond exactly to the subjective or inward symptoms; and by preference he chooses among the anti-psorics, i.e., remedies which act more than others from within outwards. The principle characteristics of the anti-psorics were obtained from the sick, and only by the use of potencies. Drugs cannot manifest these most important peculiarities except by high potencies and with the most sensible persons, RULE III-- During the examination of the sick one must inquire as much as possible in which order, according to time, did the different symptoms make their first appearance. After such a careful and complete examination of a case one must arrange his collection of symptoms according to their value, their impor- tance; he must bring the latest-appearing symptoms into the foreground, of course without neglecting the others and even the oldest. Furthermore, he must compare, when selecting a medicine, and find whether the one to be chosen has a characteristic similarity, particularly with the symptoms which appeared last. If the patient had been drugged by the old school the physician must direct his antidotes against the last given drugs. For instance, against abuse of alcohol or aromatics, Nux vomica; against tea, Pulsatilla or Thuja; against quinine, Pulsatilla, Arsenicum, Natrum mur.; against bleeding, purging, or losses of blood, Cinchona; against mechanical injuries by stretching (straining), Rhus; by bruising, Arnica; against chloroform, Hyoscyamus. In every chronic case, after a well-chosen medicine has had time to improve the case, and ceases to do good, and one has to make a new examination to obtain a full image of the new state of the sick, he must again inquire particularly about newly appearing symptoms. As he will find in almost all carefully observed cases. the new symptoms correspond to the last applied medicine, and as he knows, a repetition of the same drug would only aggravate, without giving relief, particularly if general characteristics have changed, e.g., with regard to times of day, sides of the body or other localities, or if other general conditions are altered; the new medicines must be chosen with regard to such new symptoms, considering them as the most indicative or of high rank. If one has succeeded in restoring a chronic case of long standing, and the symptoms have disappeared in the reverse order of their appearance, he can dismiss the case with full confidence as being cured and not being in danger of the symptoms returning again; if not, the physician had better tell the patient, even if he should be satisfied with a partial cure, that he may before long be sick again.
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