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Resume:
The need to study materia medica as one indivisible totality. As
a single spectrum. With its diversity: in form, function and
structure. It represents gestaltism, an organized whole that is
perceived as more than the sum of its parts. The organizing
principle within the remedy intertwines all components together
to render the structure of oneness. Anekantavad is the doctrine
of many-ness of truth, that there can never be only one point of
view. Anekantavad could be an answer for many debatable points
in homoeopathy.
Totality of Symptoms
Drug one. Proving of one drug on many healthy provers.
Innumerable symptoms produced. A mess of symptoms. Provers many.
Symptoms many. Drug one. Is the drug’s action uniform? It cannot
always be hoped to be uniform because it has to be ‘modified’ or
‘shaped’ in accordance with the reflections cast by the
several provers involved, each one of them, yearning its own
uniqueness or being a ‘law unto oneself.’
Hahnemann came out with, unique solution of ‘Totality of
symptoms’. He understood well the indivisibility of a human
being. A human being who comes with varigated symptomatology is
to be looked upon through unity.
Hahnemannian concept of totality of symptoms is not related to
symptoms only. It is the gestalt concept that embraces the
holistic thinking.
Organising Principle
While dealing with the scattered, incoherent maze of symptoms in
Materia Medica, it is necessary to understand that drug’s
pathogenetic action is a unitary one, reflective of oneness. Who
maintains this oneness in data? What makes the data a live one?
How one symptom is related to other symptom? Symptoms are
important or relations which get developed are
important?
These pertinent questions have one answer and this is the
‘organizing principle’ which makes the data components bound
together. The properties of components define the relations. The
relations define the manner in which oneness is reflected. And
the oneness is present because of the organizing principle.
The Portrait
The processes of analysis, evaluation and synthesis are
fundamental to the study of Materia Medica. Through
the analysis, we try to split up the data on the basis of the
properties each component carries; while evaluation marks the
valuation of the underlying properties giving these properties
their due and synthesis binds all the properties together,
defines the relations on which the components stand
and creates the design, the portrait. Synthesis reflects the
connectedness, unfolds the phenomenon, unravels the cause------
effect ----- cause ----- effect vicious cycle, the
chronological, sequential, evolutionary and yet integrated and
standardized portrait, thus renders the strong structure to
utilize for the sake of application.
Perception
The major determinant of all these processes is ‘perception’.
Perception to a human being is a trickish aspect and hence
difficult to achieve. Sensibility involves fine feeling, keen
power of perception, sensitive openness to emotional influences
and sensibility is the most requisite of a student who wants to
study Homoeopathic Materia Medica. In contrast to
phenomenological view of study of Materia Medica, Noumenon - the
essence conceived only by intellect, intuition or reason, and
thing-in-itself- the reality, or sense or essence exists in
itself, also is an important way of contemplation.
For applying perception, however, isomorphism-the concept of
relationship on similarity base has to be followed Otherwise,
‘perception is right but application is wrong’ may result.
Perception differs from individual to individual. Individual’s
sensitivity, sensibility, his experiential field, his vision -
have bearing upon the perception. In Homoeopathy, however,
perception is the central theme of concensus.
Anekantavad
We can apply the concept of Anekantavad to the concept of
totality and hence to perception. Anekantavad is the doctrine of
many-ness of truth, that there can never be only one point of
view. There are infinite points in space from where to look at
anything. Problems occur because of inability to see the other’s
point of view, to acknowledge that one’s version of truth is
just that - one version.
The doctrine of Anekantavad is identical to the concept of
totality of symptoms. One can look at the symptoms through
various points. It is not that my point is the only point, and
that my point is the only right point. Rigidity, resources,
experience and overall the mental make-up act as a bar in
perception of right order.
This is best illustrated through the oft-quoted story of the
seven blind men and the elephant. Relying on their sense of
touch, each one groped about and tried to make sense of the
object in their path. The one who was near the elephant’s trunk,
felt it and was convinced he had touched a serpent from a
tree. The one near the pachyderm’s massive legs thought they
were pillars, another took it to be a grove of trees. Each one,
from his place near a particular part of the elephant’s anatomy,
had a different perception about the huge structure. Soon, a
quarrel ensued, as none was able to comprehend the other’s point
of view. “How can all of them be such fools”, each blind man
thought of the other.
Everyone remained rooted to his spot beside the elephant. Since
each one was convinced of the validity of his own
explanation, the quarrel went on. “Let us move around this
object”, one blind man suggested. The moment they did so, they
realized that although each one was correct in his place, they
were all wrong, since their view had been limited by their
staying in one spot. The blind men moved around, collated their
views, and finally realized that what they were trying to
describe, from different position, was in fact, an elephant.
It was only after perceiving the whole that the parts get their
sense of reality. In other words, one has to go beyond one’s
ego-bound self to a greater realization of a larger, all
encompassing self.
Study Homoeopathic Materia Medica with the Anekantavad doctrine.
Be unbiased; apply a larger, all-encompassing vision. Study with
organized, integrated thinking. Perception is not easy. It is
the most difficult part of life. It has to be developed, through
great efforts.
Homoeopathic case taking involves a perspective and prospective
vision. A Homoeopathic physician has to define his ego during
the process of an interview. If the same process is applied
towards the study of Materia Medica, it will help understanding
the heart of the remedies in a better way. |