Organon 291-294

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§ 291 Fifth Edition Even those organs which have lost their peculiar sense, e.g., a tongue and palate that have lost the faculty of tasting, or a nose that has

Organon 281-290

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§ 281 Fifth Edition Every patient is, especially in his diseased point, capable of being influenced in an incredible degree by medicinal agents corresponding by similarity of action; and there

Organon 271-280

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§ 271 Fifth Edition All other substances adapted for medicinal use - except sulphur, which has of late years been only employed in the form of a highly diluted (X)

Organon 261-270

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§ 261 The most appropriate regimen during the employment of medicine in chronic diseases consists in the removal of such obstacles to recovery, and in supplying where necessary the reverse:

Organon 251-260

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§251 There are some medicines (e.g., ignatia, also bryonia and rhus, and sometimes belladonna) whose power of altering man’s health consists chiefly in alternating actions - a kind of primary-action

Organon 241-250

 Category: Philosophy Lectures
§ 241 Epidemics of intermittent fever, in situations where none are endemic, are of the nature of chronic diseases, composed of single acute paroxysms; each single epidemic is of a