(Full Table of Contents)
VOLUME 1
VOLUME II
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Chapter 1
History as Re-enactment in Imagination
Chapter 2
Hahnemann's Disenchantment with Medicine
Chapter 3
Laying The Foundations of a New System
3.1 Essay on a New Principle
3.1.1 Sources for Materia Medica
3.1.2 Two Types of Disease
3.1.3 Two Principles of Treatment
3.1.4 Two Actions of a Medicine
3.1.5 Actions of a Drug
3.1.6 Link Between Action and Repetition
3.2 Obstacles to Certainty and Simplicity
3.2.1 Regimenal Disease
3.2.2 Geographical Influences
3.3 Antidotes to Heroic Veg. Substances
3.4 A Preface (1800)
3.5 Brown's Elements of Medicine
3.6 Aesculapias in the Balance
3.7 Medicine of Experience
Chapter 4 - Consolidating Heilkunst & Prelude to Dual Remedies
Consolidating Heilkunst
4.1 First Edition of the Organon
4.2 Chronic Miasms
4.3 Contrast of Old and New Systems
4.3.1 Duration of Action of the Remedy
4.3.2 Chemical Action to Dynamic Action
4.3.3 Dual Nature of Living Power
4.4 Dose and Repetition
4.5 Disease Prior to 1833
4.6 Isopathy and Isodes/Nosodes
4.6.1 History of Isopathic Remedies
4.6.2 Hering and Isopathic Remedies
4.6.3 Lux and the Thesis of Equality
4.6.4 The Modest Author
4.6.5 Isopathy and Isopathic Remedies
Chapter 5
Case for Dual Remedies
5.1 Aegidi's Famous Letter
5.2 Boenninghausen's Dual Remedy Case
5.3 Import of Aegidi's Letter
5.3.1 The Kothen Peace Conference
5.4 Dual Remedy Paragraph
5.5 Single Remedy
5.5.1 Hahnemann’s Pillars
5.6 The Paris Period
5.6.1 Two Cases
5.7 Dual Remedy Timeline
Chapter 6
Boenninghausen's Repertory
6.1 History of the Repertory
6.2 Initial Facts
6.3 Section on Concordances
Chapter 7 - Simultaneity of Action versus Ingestion
Alternation and Intercurrent Remedies
7.1 Simultaneity of Action vs. Ingestion
7.2 Continued Use of Dual Remedies
7.3 Polypharmacy and Unipharmacy
7.4 Alternating & Intercurrent Remedies
7.5 Dual Remedy Prescribing
7.6 Receptivity to Dual Remedy Prescribing
Chapter 8
Aegidi and Lutze on Dual Remedies
8.1 Aegidi's Article
8.1.1 Extension of Homeo. Technique
8.2 Lutze's Chapter
8.2.1 Textbook of Homeopathy
8.3 Other Issues Raised by Lutze
8.3.1 Antidotal Relations
8.3.2 Symbiosis
8.3.3 Sexual Potency
8.4 Reaction to Lutze
Chapter 9
Suppression of the Dual Remedy Approach
Chapter 10
The Two Sides After Hahnemann
10.1 Repertories and Sides
10.2 Keynote Prescribing
10.2.1 Origin of the Concept
10.2.2 Characteristic Totality
10.2.3 Vithoulkas and Essence Prescribing
10.2.4 Sankaran's State-based Prescribing
10.2.5 The Red Thread of a Case
10.2.6 The Keynote in Hahnemann
10.2.7 Graph of Keynote Development
10.3 Kent and the Two Sides
10.4 Intercurrent Prescribing
10.5 Nosodes
10.5.1 Continental Tradition
10.5.2 Native English Tradition
10.5.2.1 Burnett
10.5.2.2 Clarke
10.5.3 Minor Key in North America
Chapter 11
Historical Dev't of Dose and Potency
11.1 Dynamization
11.2 Optimal Dose
11.3 Changes in 1837
11.4 LM or Q Potency
11.5 Use: 1796-1816
11.6 Medicated Globules
11.7 Succussion
11.7.1 Succussion and Dilution
11.8 Wet Versus Dry Dose
11.9 Summary
11.10 Repetition of Dose
The Teachings of Heilkunst
Critical Analysis