Critique . THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL PRESCRIBING. Letters to a Young Homeopath.—Letter No. 7. The Exact Mope of Preparation of the Indicated Remedy. (Copyrighted May, ipio. All Rights Reserved.) Y DEAR DOCTOR: In perusing my previousIV^ letters in this series, you may have concluded thatI am radical and plain-spoken, but I shall nowproceed to skin a little deeper. The truth always occupies radical now approach a most vital part of ourtheme: Mode of preparation of the indicatedremedy/ Prior to the advent of homeopathy thiswas not a difficult process, nor hard to under-stand. To possess th


Critique . THE KEY TO SUCCESSFUL PRESCRIBING. Letters to a Young Homeopath.—Letter No. 7. The Exact Mope of Preparation of the Indicated Remedy. (Copyrighted May, ipio. All Rights Reserved.) Y DEAR DOCTOR: In perusing my previousIV^ letters in this series, you may have concluded thatI am radical and plain-spoken, but I shall nowproceed to skin a little deeper. The truth always occupies radical now approach a most vital part of ourtheme: Mode of preparation of the indicatedremedy/ Prior to the advent of homeopathy thiswas not a difficult process, nor hard to under-stand. To possess the extract or the tincture was to havethe preparation complete. All that then was lacking wasthe coniponnding. But Hahnemann introduced a new phase as to the prep-aration of the indicated remedy, one which sought theinner nature, the spirit, the immaterial substance of the drug,and wholly eliminated the material, sensible elements. But it is heart-sickening to observe some professedhomeopaths playing tag w


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