Organon Paragraph 42
Posted: Wed Feb 26, 2003 11:39 pm
Does anyone have any actual examples of two or more natural dissimilar
diseases coexisting in the same body at the same time. Is he alluding to
chronic disesases or also to acutes or even miasms in this paragraph?
42
Nature herself permits, as has been stated, in some cases, the simultaneous
occurrence of two (indeed, of three) natural diseases in one and the same
body. This complication, however, it must be remarked, happens only in the
case of two dissimilar diseases, which according to the eternal laws of
nature do not remove, do not annihilate and cannot cure one another, but, as
it seems, both (or all three) remain, as it were, separate in the organism,
and each takes possession of the parts and systems peculiarly appropriate to
it, which, on account of the want of resemblance of these maladies to each
other, can very well happen without disparagement to the unity of life.
Thanks for any comments
diseases coexisting in the same body at the same time. Is he alluding to
chronic disesases or also to acutes or even miasms in this paragraph?
42
Nature herself permits, as has been stated, in some cases, the simultaneous
occurrence of two (indeed, of three) natural diseases in one and the same
body. This complication, however, it must be remarked, happens only in the
case of two dissimilar diseases, which according to the eternal laws of
nature do not remove, do not annihilate and cannot cure one another, but, as
it seems, both (or all three) remain, as it were, separate in the organism,
and each takes possession of the parts and systems peculiarly appropriate to
it, which, on account of the want of resemblance of these maladies to each
other, can very well happen without disparagement to the unity of life.
Thanks for any comments