My conclusion was and is that there must always be a man / woman behind and before a machine.
A machine can be a mean but can never be an end.
Syed Mohsin Rizvi
http://www.homoeohelpline.netfirms.com
Rosemary C Hyde PhD wrote:
This discussion is reminding me of when I got my first Radar program, after a little over a year of homeopathic training. I was ecstatic, thinking my prescribing would suddenly, miraculously, get much more accurate. I plugged in rubrics for the first case, and the remedies that came up had nothing to do with the patient's illness. It was the most beautiful -- and humbling -- illustration of the GIGO (garbage-in-garbage-out) principle I'd ever seen. So it was back to the books and classes for a few more years!

The programs provide a fantastic library of homeopathic writings -- from many more sources than anyone -- well maybe not Julian

Often, I find with the Repertory software that less is MUCH more. If I can find two relatively unusual symptoms that are important in a case, and combine them in the software, it gives me a clue for a relatively unknown remedy that can be right on -- where none of the polychrests or well known remedies seems to fit exactly.
Rosemary