30/09/2019
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Homeopathy in history. A wonderful story.
In the early 1820s, Dr. Samuel Hahnemann (the physician who discovered homeopathy) was obliged to leave Leipzig, Germany to escape persecution by physicians and pharmacists critical of his work. With his departure, it was expected homeopathy would die out, but, as it did not, a major medical publisher in Europe sought to destroy it and asked a staunch opponent of homeopathy and professor of surgery at the university, Dr. Robbi, to write a book against homeopathy.
Dr. Robbi, the surgeon in question, was too busy at the time and recommended his assistant, as “the very best man to do the job,” as he had a brilliant scientific mind. His name was Constantine Hering.
The contract was made, and the book was nearly completed when the author came across an article of Hahnemann entitled, Nota Bene for my Reviewers, in which Hahnemann wrote, “Homeopathy appeals, not only chiefly, but solely to the verdict of experience—‘repeat the experiments,’ it cries aloud, ‘repeat them carefully and accurately, and you will find the doctrine confirmed at every step’—and it does what no medical doctrine, no system of physic, no so-called therapeutics ever did or could do, it insists upon being ‘judged by the result.’ ”
This induced the young Hering to experiment, and in the course of two years, he became, step by step, more and more convinced of the truth of all the practical rules of homeopathy. At this point in time, he developed a dissection wound, which, under the treatment of his teachers, reached such a degree of severity that amputation of the hand was advised. At the suggestion of a friend, who was a student of homeopathy, the efficacy of a potentized homeopathic drug was tried. The result was a complete cure of the wound, which led to a thorough conversion of Hering. Astonished by the results, the book was discontinued and Hering dedicated the next 58 years of his professional life to homeopathy.