Polarity Analysis
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2018 5:08 am
Hi,
I am answering Soroush's request for more detail and Elham's comment on protocols.
Polarity Analysis is not a protocol in Elham's sense because it is boring. It will interest only boring homeopaths who are concerned with accuracy in repertorization because of statistical evaluation of reliable rubrics. The tools developed by Dr. Heinner Frie increase the ease, speed and accuracy of repertorization. They backed up by statistical research which is not completely understood by me. (His course gave me the impression that it is scientifically solid.) But to a homeopath and to even a beginner who knows how difficult homeopathy can be, they both can use it and understand the basic ideas. To me, it is exciting because it is based on the work of the most exciting people in homeopathy, Samuel Hahnemann and Clemens Maria Franz von Boeninghausen.
It is a tool for the first sort. What do I mean? When I am sorting a pile of things like clothes, typically, I sort to put all the socks together, then all t-shirts .... until I have everything sorted in a number of piles. Those first piles are the "first sort". Then, I start folding piles for the various people who wear those clothes. That is the next sort. PA is a repertory tool that reduces the piles of the first sort. Unlike my clothes folding techniques, PA seems to be usually good enough on the first sort.
Dr. Heinner Frie has come to the conclusion that we should sort from piles by modalities. Then he has operationalized some insights from Boenninghausen that further reduce the number of piles. (It never works this way when I am folding clothes, but) using his statistical tools (repertorization software) I only have to pay attention to a few piles (socks and t-shirts or remedy 1 and remedy 3). Without the PA, typically my repertorizations bring up too many remedies, so either I know my remedies very well or I have too much research to do before I can choose a remedy. In any case, I use an MM to decide which remedy I will give the patient. So, remedy research and follow-ups must rely on your version of normal classical homeopathy. Basically the number of remedies that I have to choose from after my first sort are drastically reduced so the second sort requires only MM research. Maybe my skills are low, but ordinary repertorization of the PA case leads to the typical too many remedies to choose from scenario. So, I tend to use The Complete Dynamics to research remedies and rubrics in order to compare the PA choices.
Interestingly, because the number of remedies are reduced for very good reasons, the curative remedy is likely to be there in that first sort.
After the first sort, I always need to go back and examine why my remedy came up in the first sort. That description is necessarily technical because you need to understand the details of the PA analysis system. I am working on this description, so tell me if what I am saying is of any interest.
Best,
Ellen Madono
I am answering Soroush's request for more detail and Elham's comment on protocols.
Polarity Analysis is not a protocol in Elham's sense because it is boring. It will interest only boring homeopaths who are concerned with accuracy in repertorization because of statistical evaluation of reliable rubrics. The tools developed by Dr. Heinner Frie increase the ease, speed and accuracy of repertorization. They backed up by statistical research which is not completely understood by me. (His course gave me the impression that it is scientifically solid.) But to a homeopath and to even a beginner who knows how difficult homeopathy can be, they both can use it and understand the basic ideas. To me, it is exciting because it is based on the work of the most exciting people in homeopathy, Samuel Hahnemann and Clemens Maria Franz von Boeninghausen.
It is a tool for the first sort. What do I mean? When I am sorting a pile of things like clothes, typically, I sort to put all the socks together, then all t-shirts .... until I have everything sorted in a number of piles. Those first piles are the "first sort". Then, I start folding piles for the various people who wear those clothes. That is the next sort. PA is a repertory tool that reduces the piles of the first sort. Unlike my clothes folding techniques, PA seems to be usually good enough on the first sort.
Dr. Heinner Frie has come to the conclusion that we should sort from piles by modalities. Then he has operationalized some insights from Boenninghausen that further reduce the number of piles. (It never works this way when I am folding clothes, but) using his statistical tools (repertorization software) I only have to pay attention to a few piles (socks and t-shirts or remedy 1 and remedy 3). Without the PA, typically my repertorizations bring up too many remedies, so either I know my remedies very well or I have too much research to do before I can choose a remedy. In any case, I use an MM to decide which remedy I will give the patient. So, remedy research and follow-ups must rely on your version of normal classical homeopathy. Basically the number of remedies that I have to choose from after my first sort are drastically reduced so the second sort requires only MM research. Maybe my skills are low, but ordinary repertorization of the PA case leads to the typical too many remedies to choose from scenario. So, I tend to use The Complete Dynamics to research remedies and rubrics in order to compare the PA choices.
Interestingly, because the number of remedies are reduced for very good reasons, the curative remedy is likely to be there in that first sort.
After the first sort, I always need to go back and examine why my remedy came up in the first sort. That description is necessarily technical because you need to understand the details of the PA analysis system. I am working on this description, so tell me if what I am saying is of any interest.
Best,
Ellen Madono