Samuel Hahnemann

Samuel Hahnemann

Samuel Hahnemann
Born 10 April 1755(1755-04-10)
Died 2 July 1843(1843-07-02) (aged 88)
Nationality German
Fields Homeopathy

Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann (10 April 1755[1] – 2 July 1843), a German physician, created an alternative medicine practice called homeopathy.

Contents

Early life

Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann was born in Meissen, Saxony. His father, along with many other family members, was a painter and designer of porcelain, for which the town of Meissen is famous.[2]

As a young man, Hahnemann became proficient in a number of languages, including English, French, Italian, Greek and Latin. He eventually made a living as a translator and teacher of languages, gaining further proficiency in "Arabic, Syriac, Chaldaic and Hebrew".[3]

Hahnemann studied medicine for two years at Leipzig. Citing Leipzig's lack of clinical facilities, he moved to Vienna, where he studied for ten months.[4] After one term of further study, he graduated MD at the University of Erlangen on 10 August 1779, qualifying with honors. His poverty may have forced him to choose Erlangen, as the school's fees were lower.[5] Hahnemann's thesis was titled Conspectus adfectuum spasmodicorum aetiologicus et therapeuticus. [A Dissertation on the Causes and Treatment of Cramps][6][7]

Medical practice

In 1781, Hahnemann took a village doctor’s position in the copper-mining area of Mansfeld, Saxony.[8] He soon married Johanna Henriette Kuchler and would eventually have eleven children.[3] After abandoning medical practice, and while working as a translator of scientific and medical textbooks,[9] Hahnemann travelled around Saxony for many years, staying in many different towns and villages for varying lengths of time, never living far from the River Elbe and settling at different times in Dresden, Torgau, Leipzig and Köthen (Anhalt) [10] before finally moving to Paris in June 1835.[11]

Creation of homeopathy

Hahnemann claimed that the medicine of his time did as much harm as good:

My sense of duty would not easily allow me to treat the unknown pathological state of my suffering brethren with these unknown medicines. The thought of becoming in this way a murderer or malefactor towards the life of my fellow human beings was most terrible to me, so terrible and disturbing that I wholly gave up my practice in the first years of my married life and occupied myself solely with chemistry and writing.[3]

After giving up his practice around 1784, Hahnemann made his living chiefly as a writer and translator, while resolving also to investigate the causes of medicine's alleged errors. While translating William Cullen's A Treatise on the Materia Medica, Hahnemann encountered the claim that cinchona, the bark of a Peruvian tree, was effective in treating malaria because of its astringency. Hahnemann believed that other astringent substances are not effective against malaria and began to research cinchona's effect on the human body by self-application. Noting that the drug induced malaria-like symptoms in himself, he concluded that it would do so in any healthy individual. This led him to postulate a healing principle: "that which can produce a set of symptoms in a healthy individual, can treat a sick individual who is manifesting a similar set of symptoms."[3] This principle, like cures like, became the basis for an approach to medicine which he gave the name homeopathy. He first used the term homeopathy in his essay Indications of the Homeopathic Employment of Medicines in Ordinary Practice, published in Hufeland's Journal in 1807.[12]

Development of homeopathy

Hahnemann tested substances for the effect they produced on a healthy individual and tried to deduce from this the ills they would heal. From his research, he initially concluded that ingesting substances to produce noticeable changes in the body resulted in toxic effects. He then attempted to mitigate this problem through exploring dilutions of the compounds he was testing. He claimed that these dilutions, when prepared according to his technique of succussion (systematic mixing through vigorous shaking) and potentization, were still effective in alleviating the same symptoms in the sick.

Hahnemann began practicing this new technique, which attracted other doctors c.1792. He first published an article about the homeopathic approach in a German language medical journal in 1796. Following a series of further essays, he published in 1810 'Organon of the Rational Art of Healing,' followed over the years by 4 further editions titled: The Organon of the Healing Art, the first systematic treatise and containing all his detailed instructions on the subject. A 6th Organon edition, unpublished during his lifetime, and dating from February 1842, was only published many years after his death. It consisted of a 5th Organon containing extensive handwritten annotations (A reading of each will demonstrate the extent of the revision and experience based additions) .[13] The Organon is widely regarded as a remodelled form of an essay he published in 1806 called "The Medicine of Experience," which had been published in Hufeland's Journal. Of the Organon, Dudgeon states it "was an amplification and extension of his "Medicine of Experience," worked up with greater care, and put into a more methodical and aphoristic form, after the model of the Hippocratic writings." [14]

The coffee theory

Around the start of the 19th century Hahnemann developed a theory, propounded in his 1803 essay On the Effects of Coffee from Original Observations, that many diseases are caused by coffee.[15] Hahnemann later abandoned the coffee theory in favour of the theory that disease is caused by Psora, but it has been noted that the list of conditions Hahnemann attributed to coffee was similar to his list of conditions caused by Psora. The coffee theory has been described as "a good example both of Hahnemann's superior mental powers and of his occasional tendency to make up a grand theory from scant evidence".[16]

Later life

In early 1811[17] Hahnemann moved his family back to Leipzig with the intention of teaching his new medical system at the University of Leipzig. In accordance with the university statutes, he became a faculty member by submitting and defending a thesis on a medical topic of his choice. On 26 June 1812, Hahnemann presented a Latin thesis, entitled "A Medical Historical Dissertation on the Helleborism of the Ancients."[18] Hellebore, a number of species of poisonous flowering plants, related to Buttercup and Magnolia.

Hahnemann continued practicing and researching homeopathy, as well as writing and lecturing for the rest of his life. He died in 1843 in Paris, at 88 years of age, and is entombed in a mausoleum at Paris's Père Lachaise cemetery.

Descendants

While there are a few living descendants of Hahnemann’s older sister Charlotte (1752–1812)[19], there is only one known living descendant of Hahnemann himself, Mr Charles Tankard-Hahnemann (7th generation descendant of Dr Samuel Hahnemann)[20]

His father, Mr William Herbert Tankard-Hahnemann (1922–2009), the great, great, great grandson of Samuel Hahnemann died on 12 January 2009 (his 87th birthday) after 22 years of active patronage of the British Institute of Homœpathy [21]. As a young boy, William remembered his mother telling him of her visits to her ‘grand-dad Leo’ at Ventnor, Isle of Wight. Later William Hahnemann knew that this was Dr Leopold Süβ-Hahnemann, Dr Samuel Hahnemann’s grandson, the only son of his favourite daughter Amelie (1789–1881). Dr Süβ-Hahnemann was the only member of the Hahnemann family to be present at Samuel Hahnemann’s funeral, apart from Hahnemann’s second wife Mélanie, in Paris in 1843 and at his subsequent re-burial in the Père Lachaise Cemetery in east Paris, where only persons of truly notable distinction are interred. Subsequently Leopold emigrated from France to England where he practised homœopathy in London. He retired to the Isle of Wight and died there at the outbreak of World War I in 1914. Dr Leopold Süβ-Hahnemann’s youngest daughter, Amalia had two children, Winifred (born 1898) and Herbert. Mr William Tankard-Hahnemann was Winifred’s son. Apart from serving as the patron of the British Institute of Homœopathy, he also had a distinguished career in the City of London and was honoured by being appointed as a ‘Freeman of the City of London’.

A Daguerrotype of the elderly Samuel Hahnemann in 1841. Hahnemann is notable for being one of the earliest-born people to be immortalised like this.
Hahnemann's mausoleum at the Père Lachaise cemetery, Paris, France

Writings

Hahnemann Memorial at Scott Circle, Washington, D.C.

Hahnemann wrote a number of books, essays, and letters on the homeopathic method, chemistry, and general medicine:

Notes

  1. Though some sources do state that he was born in the early hours of 11 April 1755, Haehl, Richard (1922), Samuel Hahnemann his Life and Works, 1, p. 9, "Hahnemann, was born on 10 April at approximately twelve o'clock midnight." 
  2. Harris Livermore Coulter (1977), Divided Legacy, a History of the Schism in Medical Thought, II, Washington: Wehawken Books, pp. 306, ISBN 0916386023, OCLC 67493911 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Hahnemann Biography, http://www.skylarkbooks.co.uk/Hahnemann_Biography.htm, retrieved 2009-01-13 
  4. Martin Kaufman (1972), Homeopathy in America, the Rise and Fall of a Medical Heresy, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 24, ISBN 0801812380, OCLC 264319 
  5. Haehl, op cit, vol. 1, p.24
  6. Trevor Cook (1981), Samuel Hahnemann Founder of Homeopathy, Wellingborough, Northamptonshire: Thorsons, p. 36, ISBN 0722506899 
  7. Richard Haehl (1922), Samuel Hahnemann His Life and Work, 2, London: Homoeopathic Publishing, pp. 11, OCLC 14558215 
  8. Haehl, op cit, vol. 1, p.26
  9. Bradford, Thomas L, The Life and Letters of Hahnemann, 1895, pp.515-516
  10. Cook, Trevor, Samuel Hahnemann, the Founder of Homeopathy, Thorsons, UK, 1981, pp.83-4,
  11. Cook, p.168
  12. Martin Gumpert, Hahnemann: The Adventurous Career of a Medical Rebel, New York: Fischer, 1945, p.130
  13. Sixth Organon book review
  14. R H Dudgeon, Lectures on the Theory and Practice of Homeopathy, London: Henry Turner, 1853, p.xxxi
  15. Hahnemann S (1803): On the Effects of Coffee from Original Observations, in Hahnemann S, Dudgeon R E (ed)(1852): The lesser writings of Samuel Hahnemann. New York: William Radde, p.391
  16. Morrell, P (1996): On Hahnemann's coffee theory, www.homeoint.org
  17. Thomas Lindsley Bradford (1895 (reprinted 1999)), The Life and Letters of Samuel Hahnemann, Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel, p. 76, OCLC 1489955 
  18. Bradford, op cit, p.93
  19. http://homeoint.org/seror/articles2/famillesh.htm
  20. http://www.britinsthom.com/index.php?option=com
  21. [1]
  22. (in Latin) Fragmenta de viribus medicamentorum positivis, sive in sano corpore humano observatis, 1824, OCLC 14852975, http://www.archive.org/details/fragmentadeviri00hahngoog 
  23. (in German) (PDF) Übersetzung der 'Fragmenta de viribus medicamentorum' von Marion Wettemann, http://www.hahnemann.de/frontend1/media/pdf/fragmenta_leseprobe.pdf 
  24. http://www.homeoint.org/seror/pathohahn/index.htm Fragmenta de viribus and Materia Medica Pura full-text in French
  25. Online etext of Hahnemann's Organon der Heilkunst
  26. Organon of Homeopathy, 6th version English version, full text online
  27. http://www.homeoint.org/books4/organon/ German original] (other format)
  28. http://www.homeopathyhome.com/reference/organon/organon.html English translation
  29. http://www.hpathy.com/materiamedica/hahnemann-materia-pura/index.asp Hahnemann's Materia Medica Pura full-text in English
  30. Rothstein, William G, American Physicians in the Nineteenth Century: from Sects to Science, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1972, p.158
  31. Samuel Hahnemann (1792), The Friend of Health 
  32. Samuel Hahnemann (1831), Asiatic Cholera, http://www.minutus.org/library/article_read.asp?id=13 
  33. Samuel Hahnemann (1796), Description of Klockenbring During his Insanity 
  34. John Henry Clarke (1894), Homoeopathy: all about it; or, The principle of cure, London: Homoeopathic Publishing, OCLC 29160937 
  35. Richard Haehl, Marie L. Wheeler (tr.) and W.H.R. Grundy (tr.) (1922), John Henry Clarke, Francis James Wheeler, ed., Samuel Hahnemann his Life and Work, 1, London: Homoeopathic Publishing, pp. 34, OCLC 222833661, http://www.archive.org/details/samuelhahnemannh01haehuoft , reprinted as ISBN 81-7021-693-1

Bibliography

External links