Dear Soroush,
Drinking whole bottle and taking a teaspoon are not
the same. Dose is as important (and may be much more
important) as potency.
In hyposensitive cases and in cases who have not been
given a simillimum, this difference is not apparent.
But in moderate sensitivity and hypersensitive cases a
large dose may cause severe aggravation and may also
hurt the patient.
As in provings usually the prover is not taking his
simillimum, we need higher doses for the attachment of
the medicinal disease. But we should be careful. If
the prover is a sensitive person or he is taking his
simillimum per chance, the proving may cause
irreversible injury to the person.
Quality and quantity are both important in our
prescriptions. It was Kent's view that remedies work
only qualitative. Maybe if he knew the quantitative
aspect of the remedies, he wouldn't hurt himself in
his provings the way he did.
Regards,
Ardavan
--- Finrod wrote: >
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Life is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way.
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