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In Hahnemann’s “Organon,” he provides quite a long series of aphorisms in which the new doctrine is somewhat fully developed. I have transcribed, below, a few of these in order that my readers may be able to learn at first hand just what their author had in mind when he wrote them.[5]

Aphorism 5.—It may be granted that every disease must depend upon an alteration in the inner working of the human organism. This disease can only be mentally conceived through its outward signs and all that these signs reveal; in no way whatever can the disease itself be recognized.

Aphorism 6.—... A thing or a condition demands a first proximate cause only in order to come into existence; where the thing or condition actually exists it requires no further originating, no first and proximate cause, for its continued existence. Thus a disease, once established, endures independently of its proximate, exciting, primal cause: endures without further need of its cause: endures even if its cause no longer exists. How, then, can the removal of the cause be held to be the principal condition of the cure of the disease?

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