2 I know not,
therefore, how it was possible for physicians at the sick-bed to allow
themselves to suppose that, without most carefully attending to the
symptoms and being guided by them in the treatment, they ought to seek and
could discover, only in the hidden and unknown interior, what there was to
be cured in the disease, arrogantly and ludicrously pretending that they
could, without paying much attention to the symptoms, discover the
alteration that had occurred in the invisible interior, and set it to
rights with (unknown!) medicines, and that such a procedure as this could
alone be called radical and rational treatment. Is not, then, that which is cognizable by the senses in diseases through the phenomena it displays, the disease itself in the eyes of the physician, since he never can see the spiritual being that produces the disease, the vital force? nor is it necessary that he should see it, but only that he should ascertain its morbid actions, in order that he may thereby be enabled to cure the disease. What else will the old school search for in the hidden interior of the organism, as a prima causa morbi, whilst they reject as an object of cure and contemptuously despise the sensible and manifest representation of the disease, the symptoms, that so plainly address themselves to us? What else do they wish to cure in diseases, but these? |