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Published by Soham
Prakashan, 38, Bhavani peth, Satara
First edition – 1999
Second enlarged edition – 2005
Pages- 72
Price – Rs. 50/-
Book reviewed by Dr. Mistry M.S., Editor, Homoeopathic Clinical
Case Recorder
The
popularity of this book is evident from the fact that it has
come out as a second edition after the first one was published
in 1999. As the author has stated in its preface, he has made a
further earnest effort to give his readers clarity into this
difficult, often confused, and vexed situation regarding potency
selection. As we all know that potencies range from mother
tinctures to CM & beyond and each practitioner seems to have his
favorite potency based upon his own evolution as a homoeopath.
While this is true for most of us there is no reason to be
dogmatic and fixed in a narrow range of potency. Some sway by
the low potency, some by middle and some by higher and highest
potencies. This is often very confusing for students and
beginners in their practice. So are there any guidelines
according to scientific homoeopathic principles as to when
certain potency could best be used? In other words, can this
situation of potency selection be standardized, and not remain
essentially controversial?
Dr. Ajit’s book is
an attempt and a very laudable attempt to build up the entire
subject of posology on some pivotal components. I shall briefly
deal with the contents of the book. My advice is that each
reader should go through this book at least three times and keep
it handy on his consulting table.
The author begins
with 12 points of what essentially is Dynamis i.e. it is a form
of energy, invisible force, creativity, and that its only
attachment with matter that makes it visible to us. Essentially
it is an aspect of the infinitesimal that holds the infinite. He
then goes on to deal with definitions of posology and potency
and standardization and then goes on to deal with the historical
background of potency selection. Further on, he has briefly
talked about the concept of minimum dose, Arndt Schultz Law,
Potentization, the law of potency, as enunciated by the French
physician Mauperitius. He talks about the state of homeostasis
and has in one paragraph rightly pointed out the fact that the
minimum dose should not be confused with the infinitesimal dose.
Dr. Kulkarni
presents essential ideas of authorities in the form of Box
brackets, wherein he gives adequate quotes of those masters like
William Boyd, Stuart Close, Hahnemann and others. On page – 10
he has given 27 prescribing methods of how a homoeopathic
physician can deal with his patient – adding that every
homoeopathic physician should know them thoroughly as each
prescribing method has its own scope and limitations. He
emphasizes that a physician must cater to the needs of each
individual in determining the selection of a remedy.
Unfortunately, I understand this is a very tall order and not at
all easy for an average homoeopath.
Page -11
deals with components of potency selection divided into 9
categories:
1. Disease potential
2. Sensitivity
3. Susceptibility
4. Etiological factors
5. Miasmatic assessment
6. Similarity; degree and level
7. Suppression
8. Type of patient and
9. Nature of vitality.
He then goes on to
elaborate on these 9 points with a bewildering array of
schematic presentation described in the form of bracketed boxes
that makes the reader feel that he should go over this
background very carefully. The vexed question of sensitivity and
susceptibility which is not understood by many students is then
dealt with from page 22 onwards and makes interesting reading.
Wherever possible the author has given examples to clarify this
difficult subject so as to give the readers a better mental
understanding of these two topics.
He next deals with
the etiological factors, the four miasmatic constitutions and
then goes on the talk about level and degree of similarity, the
various types of suppression, the type of the patient like
childhood, adolescence, adulthood and old age and the nature of
vitality which is essentially a store house of energy. He
illustrates this through materia medica. Flouric acid and
Calc-flour are good reservoirs of energy, Medorrhinum remains
plump and well nourished despite long suffering, Psorinum has an
inherited debilitated state and hence is unreacting and
Carcinocin comes from a poor hereditary stock with the
constitutional peculiarity of being depraved.
A susceptibility
chart has been portrayed on page 39 which is nutshell gives
total information on all points of susceptibility from page 41
onwards, the aspect of repetition of doses is dealt with and
goes on to give the impressions of the stalwarts of the past to
the present era from those who favoured frequent repetition and
those who favoured infrequent repetitions. Dr. Ajit then deals
with what, how and why of repetition which means assessing what
is happening to the system as a whole, how it is happening after
the remedy, meaning whether the patient’s system is following
Hering’s Law or deteriorating, thirdly why the system is
slipping back and not responding i.e. in other words what are
the obstacles either to the similimum or from the miasmatic
force or from the pathology. He then goes on to deal with points
that tell us when not to repeat and when the repeat. These
points must be read carefully by the reader, though I confess
that it will be very difficult to remember all these points when
the patient is before us.
Page -51
deals will the views of stalwarts of the past era from
Hahnemann, Boiennghausen, Kent, Hering and Elizabeth Hubbard.
Pages 53 to 59 give the guidelines for potency selection and
repetition wherein Dr. Ajit has given 20 points to the reader
followed by indications for low potency with its
contraindications, medium potency, high potency with its
contraindications, and the 50 millisimal scale and its
indications. The same points he has presented on pages 60 and
61, but I feel he could have well omitted these two pages
because too much of information can dull the brains of those
readers who are beyond 50, including this reviewer.
The last part of
the book contains 6 brief cases giving practical implications
and I wish Dr. Ajit would give in future editions more cases of
this type. The author’s conclusion comes on page 67 and 68 and
then there are 15 references given both of books and journals
which he has read for this treatise.
If I were to
summarize the impressions of this book, I would feel that it is
in a short scope of 72 pages packed with the most intense and
useful information about this aspect of posology which I feel is
as vast as an ocean, as the ocean of case taking, remedy
selection and the second prescription. The author has dedicated
this book to me and I feel a little bit humble that he has done
so because it seems that in 1996 I asked him to write down the
points that he had selected in a conference at Ahmednagar. The
book is excellently published, and very reasonably prized, the
print is very easy to read and with my editorial eye I could
hardly point out any printing mistakes. |