How Shall I Find The Remedy


The manner and moods that patients display are of far greater value than any particular words that we may listen to . This we call personality; something quite apart. It is the objective halo with which the mind surround itself; the true tincture of its action and is deserving of our closest scrutiny. The mind that hides itself in the subtleties of speech is far removed from the one that almost invariably uses direct and positive language.


As long as we depend too largely upon scattered fact our claim to be called scientific physicians can not be said to be the best; on the other hand, science demands more than reason alone, which left to itself has slain hosts of human beings.

In so far as the ills of the flesh are many and the art of cure fallible, a natural law of cure is needed; one upon which we may rest the foundation of a systematic analysis, by which cures can be worked out. In so far as the law of similia harmonizes and dovetails with general science in a way that validates its position, even if there are many who fail to see it, is implies a naturalistic view of the functions of medicine; one that looks upon disease as a state rather than a thing, although the latter may be an accompaniment: Its application teaches discernment, as well as better prognosis; so that we need not measure the work of homoeopathy by allopathic standards.

While the chances for prescribing are many, the occasions therefore are far fewer. Ordinarily sickness flies her signals enough; but if they call for a diagnosis only, our sight is poor indeed and our therapeutic nihilism tends to destroy hope and spells out death.

Homoeopathy, in common with the science is on the verge of a new day that is sweeping everything before it; one that demands exact knowledge and weapons of precision for we must realize that the time is here when the melting pot of performance will refine our product. The modern man doesnt care for your ideas and visions of what may help; to him, the man who knows so well how to diagnose and then cannot cure, is supremely ridiculous; professing a cant of the most offensive kind.

How many men enter the sick room, make an exhaustive diagnosis and then helplessly prescribe upon the flimsiest of probabilities; only too often concocted from within their own brains. Such things have helped to elevate surgery and disparage therapeutics; more particularly because the former offers fewer chances and less uncertainty than the latter.

In looking about for reasons why therapeutics rests upon so insecure a foundation, it soon becomes apparent that it has suffered more from the frailties inherent to theory than anything else. The dicta of professors and of a dead-house pathology have hung like a dead weight about its neck and paralyzed every movement, but we will gradually come to see that sickness must be weighed solely by the evidence which it produces, regardless of all theories and idle speculations. This method is the only way that contains the germs of real curative procedure or can even compete with that physiological prescribing which palliates, but we know never cures.

While we should strive to know the meaning of symptoms, I hold that their ultimate origin lies well beyond our keen; but the more accurately we can photograph their every detail upon our minds eye and match it correspondingly from the pathogeneses, the more surely will we cure. This involves much more than the mere statements of the patient, for he does not always speak, or the encyclopaedic knowledge of symptoms, for their connections are not always germane. It is these connecting links that govern our results and they should control our methods.

Unfortunately we still say that such and such medicines are good for this or that disease because a certain percentage of cases has been helped thereby. How could an argument be more onesided and lame. Just as though the personal equation upon which diseases rests and from which it mainly derives its subsistence, were of no value at all. It is a specious reasoning that makes disease an entity with a vengeance and bug hunting a vain glorious pursuit.

Because casts of mind color ideas and warp our conclusions, reason strives to correct individual opinion by starting out form some fixed point, a premise, as it were. Applied to homoeopathic practice, this resolves itself into locating the part of the body in which distressed vital action is expressing itself; thus touching hands with diagnosis.

After finding the seat of disease and collating the remedies which have a decidedly elective action within the affected area or regions, we have in hands a basis from which its various ramifications may be worked out. This is the first and most fundamental step in a natural analysis and the one from which all others must proceed.

Exciting causes and modifying influences individualize sickness, as well as condition the remedies therefore. This entitles the modalities to the second place, for they not only apply to the location found but, in one way or another also govern all of the symptoms. They are just as important as any regional effects possibly can be and help in many a differentiation.

If regions and conditions outline the forms of sickness, symptoms very generally picture the sensations thereof. Their language is largely ideographic and at times very clear, but also so elastic and variable as to leave much to interpretation. They may offer the greatest help or the most serious obstacles to the physician and should, for this reason, be assigned to the third place.

Proving cannot be said to be complete until we can designate the location of each symptom, define the manner of its existence, the modality tell what kind of sensations it produces. This is the foundation upon which pathogenesy and its understanding must rest.

Hahnemann called attention to the bizarreness of symptoms, as being definitive, whether of direct or correlative origin. While in acute disease this differentiation is easier, in chronic ones or knowledge of the outcroppings of the miasms is more fragmentary, making it harder to separate common from individualistic manifestations.

The tendency to take seemingly, erratic effects as the soles guides for the selection of the remedy, regardless of their relative position, is wrong. While it is reasonable to grade a given symptom by its strangeness when the connections harmonize with it, this is not always the case, nor do all add clinical symptoms fall within the limits of our pathogenesy and vice versa.

The value of indications is determined by their natural settings, stripped of all extraneous and immaterial influences; a point that requires nice discrimination and much knowledge of what properly belongs to sickness, what is constitutional and what is negligible. Here it may not be amiss to point out that nature tries to attract our attention to the most important things by developing them last of all; putting them right under our noses, as it were. Amazing subtlety; always appealing to our inner senses, she never makes coarse demands.

If we would understand her, we must find out her ways rather than state at results; we must see more than fever, or weakness, or pain, and in doing so see how she has sickened and why she is unable to reassert herself. The problem is surely large enough, but what we gain by looking into microscopes and examining cadavers is pitifully small as compared with what she freely hands us through signs and symptoms.

She doesnt cry in a loud voice and say, I want Aconite or Bryonia because I have fever or rheumatism; but she speaks in the particular language of Aconite or Bryonia asking for what she needs according to the signs of the different remedies. In order to do better work it is needful to learn how to read these signs in our patients; to lay diagnosis restfully aside, with discretion perhaps, and look at our patients thro the eyes of our remedies.

Woe unto the victims of the man whose orbs are therapeutically strabismic or cataractous; it were better had they fallen into the hands of an allopathic or surgical philistine. The amount of mischief of which such a man is capable passes all comprehension, and far out weighs the sins of the therapeutic pessimist; he knows just enough Homoeopathy to spoil everything that he touches and sufficient of allopathic practice to make a fool of himself.

We are accustomed to find symptoms in associated groups, and guided by their peculiarities search out the similimum for each; an interesting and instructive labor, in that a symptom of a rather common sort may by its relative position and bearings take on an extraordinary value. When this proves to be the case it belongs in the highest rank.

It is notable that most provers develop a few central effects, around which the other symptoms revolve in a greater or less degree. A collection of these constitutes the essentials of our materia medica, especially as they are thrown into various groupings by clinical application. The concordances are condensed cross-references of such associated groups.

While it is theoretically true that symptoms may appear in any combination, it is nevertheless a fact that in acute diseases they occur in pretty well defined aggregations, with now-this then that feature in the lead, according to predisposing, epidemic or other influences. The ruling feature of every case puts the stamp of some particular type, such as bilious, haemorrhagic, etc., upon it, and when we select remedies, which in their action and order of development conform to the presenting type, we say that the genius of the drug corresponds to that of the disease.

C.M. Boger
Cyrus Maxwell Boger 5/ 13/ 1861 "“ 9/ 2/ 1935
Born in Western Pennsylvania, he graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and subsequently Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia. He moved to Parkersburg, W. Va., in 1888, practicing there, but also consulting worldwide. He gave lectures at the Pulte Medical College in Cincinnati and taught philosophy, materia medica, and repertory at the American Foundation for Homoeopathy Postgraduate School. Boger brought BÅ“nninghausen's Characteristics and Repertory into the English Language in 1905. His publications include :
Boenninghausen's Characteristics and Repertory
Boenninghausen's Antipsorics
Boger's Diphtheria, (The Homoeopathic Therapeutics of)
A Synoptic Key of the Materia Medica, 1915
General Analysis with Card Index, 1931
Samarskite-A Proving
The Times Which Characterize the Appearance and Aggravation of the Symptoms and their Remedies