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Health and
Beauty
1882
Medical Essays
- Preface
The character
of the opposition which some of these papers have met with suggests
the inference that they contain really important, but unwelcome
truths. Negatives multiplied into each other change their sign and
become positives. Hostile criticisms meeting together are often
equivalent to praise, and the square of fault-finding turns out
to be the same thing as eulogy.
But a writer
has rarely so many enemies as it pleases him to believe. Self-love
leads us to overrate the numbers of our negative
constituency. The larger portion of my limited circle of readers
must be quite indifferent to, if not ignorant of, the adverse opinions
which have been expressed or recorded concerning any of
these Addresses or Essays now submitted to their own judgment. It
is
proper, however, to inform them, that some of the positions
maintained in these pages have been unsparingly attacked, with
various degrees of ability, scholarship, and good-breeding. The
tone
of criticism naturally changes with local conditions in different
parts of a country extended like our own, so that it is one of the
most convenient gauges of the partial movements in the direction
of
civilization. It is satisfactory to add, that the views assailed
have also been unflinchingly defended by unsought champions, among
the ablest of whom it is pleasant to mention, at this moment of
political alienation, the Editor of the Charleston Medical Journal.
"Currents and Counter-Currents"
was written and delivered as an
Oration, a florid rhetorical composition, expressly intended to
secure the attention of an audience not easy to hold as listeners.
It succeeded in doing this, and also in being as curiously
misunderstood and misrepresented as if it had been a political
harangue. This gave it more local notoriety than it might otherwise
have attained, so that, as I learn, one ingenious person made use
of
its title as an advertisement to a production of his own.
The commonest mode of
misrepresentation was this: qualified
propositions, the whole meaning of which depended on the
qualifications, were stripped of these and taken as absolute. Thus,
the attempt to establish a presumption against giving poisons to
sick
persons was considered as equivalent to condemning the use of these
substances. The only important inference the writer has been able
to
draw from the greater number of the refutations of his opinions
which
have been kindly sent him, is that the preliminary education of
the
Medical Profession is not always what it ought to be.
One concession he is
willing to make, whatever sacrifice of pride it
may involve. The story of Massasoit, which has furnished a coral,
as
it were, for some teething critics, when subjected to a powerful
logical analysis, though correct in its essentials, proves to have
been told with exceptionable breadth of statement, and therefore
(to
resume the metaphor) has been slightly rounded off at its edges,
so
as to be smoother for any who may wish to bite upon it hereafter.
In
other respects the Discourse has hardly been touched. It is only
an
individual's expression, in his own way, of opinions entertained
by
hundreds of the Medical Profession in every civilized country, and
has nothing in it which on revision the writer sees cause to retract
or modify. The superstitions it attacks lie at the very foundation
of Homoeopathy, and of almost every form of medical charlatanism.
Still the mere routinists and unthinking artisans in most callings
dislike whatever shakes the dust out of their traditions, and it
may
be unreasonable to expect that Medicine will always prove an
exception to the rule. One half the opposition which the numerical
system of Louis has met with, as applied to the results of treatment,
has been owing to the fact that it showed the movements of disease
to
be far more independent of the kind of practice pursued than was
agreeable to the pride of those whose self-confidence it abated.
The statement, that medicines
are more sparingly used in physicians'
families than in most others, admits of a very natural explanation,
without putting a harsh construction upon it, which it was not
intended to admit. Outside pressure is less felt in the physician's
own household; that is all. If this does not sometimes influence
him
to give medicine, or what seems to be medicine, when among those
who
have more confidence in drugging than his own family commonly has,
the learned Professor Dunglison is hereby requested to apologize
for
his definition of the word Placebo, or to expunge it from his Medical
Dictionary.
One thing is certain.
A loud outcry on a slight touch reveals the
weak spot in a profession, as well as in a patient. It is a doubtful
policy to oppose the freest speech in those of our own number who
are
trying to show us where they honestly believe our weakness lies.
Vast as are the advances of our Science and Art, may it not possibly
prove on examination that we retain other old barbarisms beside
the use of the astrological sign of Jupiter, with which we endeavor
to insure good luck to our prescriptions? Is it the act of a friend
or a foe to try to point them out to our brethren when asked to address
them, and is the speaker to subdue the constitutional habit of his
style to a given standard, under penalty of giving offence to a
grave assembly?
Homoeopathy
and its Kindred Delusions " was published nearly twenty years
ago, and has been long out of print, so that the author tried in
vain to procure a copy until the kindness of a friend supplied him
with the only one he has had for years. A foolish story reached
his ears that he was attempting to buy up stray copies for the sake
of suppressing it. This edition was in the press at that very time.
Many of the arguments
contained in the Lectures have lost whatever
novelty they may have possessed. All its predictions have been
submitted to the formidable test of time. They appear to have stood
it, so far, about as well as most uninspired prophecies; indeed,
some of them require much less accommodation than certain grave
commentators employ in their readings of the ancient Prophets.
If some statistics recently
published are correct, Homoeopathy has
made very slow progress in Europe.
In all England,
as it appears, there are hardly a fifth more Homoeopathic practitioners
than there are students attending Lectures at the Massachusetts
Medical College at the present time. In America it has undoubtedly
proved more popular and lucrative, yet how loose a hold it has on
the public confidence is shown by the fact that, when a specially
valued life, which has been played with by one of its agents, is
seriously threatened, the first thing we expect to hear is that
a regular practitioner is by the patient's bed, and the Homoeopathic
counsellor overruled or discarded. Again, how many of the ardent
and capricious persons who embraced Homoeopathy have run the whole
round of pretentious novelties;--have been boarded at water-cure
establishments, closeted with uterine and other specialists, and
finally wandered over seas to put themselves in charge of foreign
celebrities, who dosed them as lustily as they were ever dosed before
they took to globules! It will surprise many to learn to what a
shadow of a shade Homoeopathy has dwindled in the hands of many
of its noted practitioners. The itch-doctrine is treated with contempt.
Infinitesimal doses are replaced by full ones whenever the fancy-practitioner
chooses. Good Homoeopathic reasons can be found for employing anything
that anybody wants to employ. Homoeopathy is now merely a name,
an unproved theory, and a box of pellets pretending to be specifics,
which, as all of us know, fail ignominiously in those cases where
we would thankfully sacrifice all our prejudices and give the world
to have them true to their promises.
Homoeopathy
has not died out so rapidly as Tractoration. Perhaps it was well
that it should not, for it has taught us a lesson of the
healing faculty of Nature which was needed, and for which many of
us have made proper acknowledgments. But it probably does more harm
than good to medical science at the present time, by keeping up
the delusion of treating everything by specifics,--the old barbarous
notion that sick people should feed on poisons [Lachesis, arrow-
poison, obtained from a serpent (Pulte). Crotalus horridus,
rattlesnake's venom (Neidhard). The less dangerous Pediculus capilis
is the favorite remedy of Dr. Mure, the English 'Apostle of
Homoeopathy." These are examples of the retrograde current
setting towards barbarism] against which a part of the Discourse
at the beginning of this volume is directed.
The infinitesimal globules
have not become a curiosity as yet, like
Perkins's Tractors. But time is a very elastic element in Geology
and Prophecy. If Daniel's seventy weeks mean four hundred and ninety
years, as the learned Prideaux and others have settled it that they
do, the "not many years" of my prediction may be stretched
out a generation or two beyond our time, if necessary, when the
prophecy will no doubt prove true.
It might be fitting to
add a few words with regard to the Essay on
the Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever. But the whole question I
consider to be now transferred from the domain of medical inquiry
to
the consideration of Life Insurance agencies and Grand Juries. For
the justification of this somewhat sharply accented language I must
refer the reader to the paper itself for details which I regret
to
have been forced to place on permanent record.
BOSTON, January, 1861.
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