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CHRISTIAN FRIEDRICH SAMUEL HAHNEMANN
10 APRIL 1755 - 2 JULY 1843
SIMILIA SIMILUBUS CURENTUR
A
brilliant student in science and the languages, Samuel Hahnemann,
fluent in German, English, Spanish, French, Greek, Italian, Hebrew,
Arabic and Latin, was born 10 April 1755 in the seven member family of
a German pottery painter of modest means in Meissen, Saxony.
He
pursued medical studies in Leipzig and Vienna from April 1775 to
October 1777, when financial hardship forced him to abandon his
studentship. He then worked for 18 months as a family physician and
curator of the museum and library of Samuel von Brukenthal (1721-1803),
Governor of Hermannstadt (now Sibiu, Romania).
Hahnemann
registered for the degree of MD at Erlangen in August 1779. In 1781, he
took a village doctor’s position in the copper-mining area of Mansfeld,
Saxony. Hahnemann married Johanna Leopoldine Henriette Küchler, an
apothecary's daughter, in 1782.
Hahnemann
moved to Dresden in 1784 and then to Leipzig. By 1790 completely
disillusioned with medicine of the times he ceased to practice. In 1791
poverty compelled him to move from Leipzig to Stotteritz. From
1792-1804 he lived in fourteen different towns.
Between
1777 and 1806 he translated 24 large textbooks and numerous articles
into German, usually accompanied with extensive footnotes and detailed
corrections of his own. His medical views were undergoing a revolution
as he slowly accumulated evidence for radically new medical concepts
and methods.
In
1790 Hahnemann translated William Cullen’s Materia Medica. Not
convinced by Cullen’s theory that Cinchona was a specific for Malaria
because of its tonic action on the stomach, Hahnemann decided to take a
small dose of Cinchona over several days to observe its effects.
Hahnemann observed symptoms broadly similar to those of malaria,
including spasms and fever. With Cinchona, he had produced in himself
the symptoms of intermittent fever, which suggested to him a medical
principle. He re-established the validity of the therapeutic maxim,
‘like cures like’ or similia similibus curentur. In 1796 Hahnemann
published 'Essay on a New Principle' in which he states 'One should
apply in the disease to be healed... that remedy which is able to
stimulate another artifically produced disease, as similar as possible,
and the former will be healed - similia similibus -- likes with likes.'
Homeopathy may be said to originate from around this date.
In
1798 Hahnemann started experimenting with dose reduction, which led to
the development of potency scales. There was a revolutionary change
from the massive doses he prescribed in 1798 to the unprecedented
minuteness of doses prescribed in 1799. By 1800 Homeopathy was born. In
1800 a scarlet fever epidemic gave Hahnemann the opportunity to
demonstrate the effectiveness of the new type of medicine he was
researching, based not only on the Law of Similars but also on the
concept of highly diluted, potentized doses. Hahnemann stayed in Torgau
from 1804-1811. All his major works were produced in the Torgau period.
Hahnemann published, in 1805, the 'Fragmenta de viribus medicamentorum
positivis' (accounts of twenty-seven provings in Latin), in 1810, the
'Organon', and in 1811, the 'Materia Medica Pura', the last two in
German. In 1813 Hahnemann used homeopathy to treat an epidemic of
typhus.
Hahnemann's
idea at first was simply to reduce the 'strength' or material mass of
his drug, but his passion for accuracy led him to adopt a scale, that
he might always be sure of the degree of reduction and establish a
standard for comparison.
Homeopathy
stems entirely from Hahnemann's abandonment of allopathic drugging,
during 1782-90 when he resolved to formulate, entirely through
experimentation, a more humane, effective and rational system of
medicine, as opposed to strong drugging.
His
experiments with the proving of drugs covered the period 1790-1820, and
thus homeopathy as a full system dates from about 1810.
In
1812 Hahnemann moved back to Leipzig with the intention of taking on
the allopathic establishment. His lectures to medical students were
bitter assaults upon the medical mainstream and he lost the sympathy of
his audience. Orthodox attacks upon him and upon homeopathy became
increasingly coordinated, amounting to a vicious campaign of
persecution, which soon made his life in Leipzig intolerable. He was
obliged to leave Leipzig in 1821. At a later stage in his life he
became intolerant of contradiction, viewing with suspicion anyone who
did not agree with him in every detail.
Duke
Ferdinand of Altona-Coethen passed an edict giving Hahnemann approval
for a position in Coethen. Hahnemann moved there in June 1821. This
allowed Hahnemann to prepare his own medicines. He remained in Coethen
from 1821-1835. He continued to publish essays and books, updating the
Organon, and Materia Medica Pura. Hahnemann published in 1828 'The
Chronic Diseases', exploring the underlying causes of disease as
rooted solely in three ancient dyscrasias: skin diseases (Psora),
gonorrhoea (Sycosis) and Syphilis. The theory did not receive unanimous
support from his followers.
His
first wife, Johanna died in 1830. In 1831 Hahnemann used homeopathy to
treat a cholera epidemic. In 1835 Hahnemann married Melanie D’Hervilly
Gohier (1800-1878) in Coethen and moved to Paris later in the same
year. He established a thriving medical practice in Paris with his
second wife, becoming a celebrity and the preferred physician of the
rich and famous. Sixth Organon (1842) was written but was not published
until 1922, long after his death in Paris on 2 July 1843 at the age of
88.
Important works
Essay on a New Principle (1796)
Are the Obstacles to Medical Practice Insurmountable? (1797)
Cure & Prevention of Scarlet Fever (1801)
On the Power of Small Doses (1801)
Aesculapius in the Balance (1805)
Fragmenta de viribus medicamentorum positivis (1805)
The Medicine of Experience (1805)
On the Value of the Speculative Systems of Medicine (1808)
Observations on the Three Modes of Medical Practice (1809)
Hellebore thesis (1812)
Sources of the Materia Medica (1817)
Contrast of Old and New Medical Systems (1825)
Four essays on Cholera (1831)
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