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The Bern Seminars – Page 8

ences, I found that both these hypotheses, depending on the case, have been proven correct. Certain cases require just one remedy in order to bring about a beautiful cure, while with other cases you have to follow, step-by-step, one remedy after another in order to see the same type of result that you might have seen with a single remedy in another case. What is the difference?
Let us take the first hypothesis: We have to find one remedy that is going to do everything, and that is the remedy which is indicated. Let us assume that this hypothesis, which is based on observations made during an interview, is correct; if this is so, then the hypothesis contradicts the theory of the miasms. According to Hahnemann there were three miasms: the sycotic, the syphilitic and the psoric. The cases that we encounter he says, will, most probably be complicated on the level of one of these three miasms. And our job is to take care of the syphilitic or the sycotic miasms first using different remedies.
Our primary interest lies in identifying the laws that underlie our method of treatment. I am just addressing here some of the questions and challenges that we face in this science. As homeo-pathic physicians, we have reached a point where we understand the processes and laws which underlie our actions and prescrip-tions. When you are confronted with a case, the immediate ques-tions should be: Can I find one remedy in this case? Is only one remedy indicated, or are two, three, four, five remedies necessary in order to make this patient better? What are the laws, the guide-lines, by which I see that this case needs only one remedy? What are the laws that tell me that this case needs two, three, or five remedies? Can I predict that? Can I know this beforehand? A pre-cise prognosis of a case depends on our ability to answer all these questions. What do I mean by this? Well, if I see a case in which one remedy is indicated throughout the patient’s life – let’s say that they were Phosphorus as a child, Phosphorus later on, and now the patient comes to me and I perceive him as Phosphorus – then I can predict, with great certainty, that this patient is going to