consciousness; he answers correctly but drifts back into the delirium at once. In some cases stupor is interrupted from time to time by spasms.
The above is the general picture that you will face with a typical serious Antimonium tartaricum case. However, whether the disease in question be acute or chronic, the Antimonium tartaricum patient will give the impression that his ailment is serious, that death is approaching. This impression is shared by both the patient and the doctor and accurately reflects the gravity of the clinical situation. Kent describes his experience concerning this matter: "The atmosphere of the room is pungent, more pungent than foetid or putrid, and makes you feel that death is in it. The family is disturbed; they are going hither and thither, and the nurse is in an excited and busy state, and you enter upon this scene to make a homeopathic prescription. It is one of excitement and one that you cannot act rapidly in, but one in which you must make a very quick prescription. These things will interfere somewhat with your thinking at the time that you must do the best thinking and the most rapid thinking."
Many times you will have to differentiate between an Antimonium tartaricum and a Carbo uegetabilis lung inflammation. The difference is that in Carbo uegetabilis the rattling is not so prominent or coarse; also the breath and the extremities are cold. In Carbo uegetabilis the shrunken features of the face do not figure so strongly. In the Antimonium tartaricum patient you will have some nausea or retching and gagging, and though the dyspnea, the paleness of the face, the cold perspiration, and the desire to be fanned are present in both remedies, the differential diagnosis is not so difficult. Tyler writes: "One sees how invaluable it is for desperated conditions, and how with Carbo uegetabilis it is one of the "last gasp" remedies."
The homeopathic physician should be sensitive enough to such situations and at the same time balanced enough in his mind and psyche to be able to assess the situation correctly, evaluate it properly, and act accordingly. This is not a matter of intuition, but rather of clear knowledge, aided by a well-classified anamnesis consistent with the clinical situation that he is facing. We must never forget that ours is an art and a science that takes into consideration the unstable parameters of all life’s energies and how they change and interact in health and disease, and we must honor the science by applying our knowledge with prudence and wisdom. I am greatly exasperated when I hear homeopaths say in a totally irresponsible way, "My intuition