Author:
Jan Scholten
Book:
Qjurious
Type:
Info
Chapter:
Source homeopathy
Conclusion of the chapter evaluations and Metauntsuchungen
According to our analyzes, the Scholten periodic table provides a very well-established basis for prescriptions of elements, salts, rocks and conglomerates when the patient's symptoms indicate a drug from inanimate nature.
Perfect Match - Perfect Materia Medica and Rubric Cases
The patient's report is exactly the same as the drug proving and the Materia Medica. It is anamnesis, which cover exactly and comprehensively with the rubrics of very good provings to the smallest details. The perfect match is rarely possible, according to our results, because
It takes a sophisticated anamnesis technique to accurately and accurately record the patient's symptoms and overall condition
The medicine must already have been tested very well
This very accurate proving must be easy to find.
source Regulations
According to our findings, the most reliable compass on the way to the source is the fine peculiarity in the flow of the patient's words. The seemingly irrelevant peculiarity. The therapist only needs to recognize them in the narrative and to reflect the patient back. If both of them share the same peculiarity as a waymarking in the unknown, dense forest, the punctuation of the patient becomes more and more striking. These markings lead to a pathway that is becoming ever more enigmatic to the therapist, but strangely familiar to the person affected, through different levels of consciousness of the patient to the source topic.
The source method is based on the observation that the knowledge about the most effective remedy lies in the patient and that he can describe or name it exactly. Not the knowledge of the homeopath in the field of materia medica and rubrics are the last resort. However, the classic reference works remain the most important homeopathic reference systems for the necessary review of the agent by the therapist. Another characteristic of a true source case is that the
scientific knowledge coincide with the inner images of the source. Interestingly, in my experience, these also agree when the patient has never been botanically, zoologically or chemically concerned with this source.
The most reliable information for an exact prescription appears to be found in the knowledge that patients themselves carry in their consciousness and, above all, in their subconscious.
So the question of the one structure in the cosmos that corresponds to all the peculiarities that the individual says experiences.
It is important to wait until the striking irregular aspects are on the table, a pattern usually difficult to understand, but apparently completely consistent for the patient becomes recognizable and emerges out of a mist.
Then one can ask where exactly in the universe one finds an animated or inanimate structure, which exactly corresponds to this inner experience.