ARNICA MONTANA



610. Excitable, sensitive disposition. [Bhr.]

Fright and starting at unexpected trifles (aft. 1.1/2h.). [Kr.]

Dejection and absence of thought (aft. 3.1/2 h.) [Kr.]

After walking in the open air he becomes disinclined for thinking and speaking, although he was previously very lively (aft. 9 h.) [Fz.]

Surly humour, as after a quarrel. [Lr.]

615. Gay, talkative. (Curative and secondary action in a person of the opposite humour.) [Fz.]

Composed, cheerful humour. (Curative and secondary action in a person of the opposite humour.) [Hbg.]

Hypochondriacal anxiety.

Hypochondriacal peevishness; he is indisposed for everything.

Uncommonly peevish, everything is repugnant to her, everything annoys her. [Stf. Gss.]

620. Restlessness of body and mind (but without actual anxiety), as if he was prevented doing something necessary, with complete indisposition for occupation.

All work annoys him; he is lazy for all business.

Indifference to work, everything is indifferent to him.

(Over-busy, inclination and disposition for great and continuous literary work with no power to do it without injury to the health.)

Over-sensitiveness of the disposition; ( This appeared once later as oversensitiveness of the body, but I have seen it also alternating with te latter, and even occurring at the same time.) extreme inclination for agreeable and disagreeable mental emotions, without weakness or over-sensitiveness of the body.

625. Over-excitability; she should easily when there was no occasion for it, and when one said something annoying to her, she got angry and broke out into loud howling.

Very cross and reticent, she will not speak a word.

Surly, wants to have many things and then refuses them.

Very cross, everything annoys her, all her former cheerfulness and friendliness is gone. (aft. 1 h.) [Stf. Gss.]

Distraction of mind, her thoughts stray unobserved from the subject in hand, and diverge into phantasies and pictures of the fancy. [Stf. Gss.]

630. He contradicts; is opiniionative; no one can please him (aft. 3, 12 h.)

Quarrelsomeness crossness.

Cross; he wants to quarrel with everyone.

Stiff-necked obstinacy (aft. 4 h.)

Surly insolence and imperiousness (aft. a few h.).

635. Easily startled.

Weeping.

Fears; anxious dread of cming evil.

Hopelessness

Samuel Hahnemann
Samuel Hahnemann (1755-1843) was the founder of Homoeopathy. He is called the Father of Experimental Pharmacology because he was the first physician to prepare medicines in a specialized way; proving them on healthy human beings, to determine how the medicines acted to cure diseases.

Hahnemann's three major publications chart the development of homeopathy. In the Organon of Medicine, we see the fundamentals laid out. Materia Medica Pura records the exact symptoms of the remedy provings. In his book, The Chronic Diseases, Their Peculiar Nature and Their Homoeopathic Cure, he showed us how natural diseases become chronic in nature when suppressed by improper treatment.