Origins of Disease
Louis Klein is one of the leading homeopaths worldwide. His latest book on miasms and nosodes is a ground-breaking pioneer work in the field of homeopathy.
On the basis of his broad clinical experience, Louis Klein attributes many known remedies to miasmatic states. A miasmatic state becomes the core idea around which similar remedies are grouped. For example the Tetanus miasm comprises not only Tetanus nosode but also remedies like Hypericum, Angustura, Helodrilus and Tellurium. It is clinically linked also with tetanic syndromes, spasms or even convulsions. This new classification of miasmatic remedies is highly practical and opens a new chapter in homeopathy, demystifying and redefining the existing miasms, while adding several important new ones. It also introduces new remedies like Johneinum and Helodrilus, which he has proved extensively. So Louis Klein’s work on miasms and nosodes is indeed a homeopathic milestone.
In this first volume Louis Klein presents in-depth information on Burkholderiales including the Pertussis miasm; Clostridiales including the Tetanus miasm; Corynebacteria including the Diphtheria miasm; Mycobacteria including the Tubercular and Leprosy miasms, plus the newly proven remedy Johneinum, linked to the Crohn’s disease miasm; Enterobacteriales including the Bach Bowel Nosodes, the Typhoid and Yersinia miasms; and Parasitic Protozoa and Parasitic miasms including the Malaria and Toxoplasmosis miasms.
All this practical information is illustrated throughout with excellent case examples from two decades of homeopathic practice, which speak for themselves. This book is in a class of its own. As Rajan Sankaran is known for plant remedies and Jan Scholten for the periodic table, Louis Klein will be known for miasms and nosodes.
“Nosodes have the aspect of being vague, not precisely defined. Lou Klein has the capacity to work with this vagueness very effectively. He knows how to extract the essence of the remedy from provings, from natural history and especially from patients. He is able to make the vague more exact. This book is the first to do this successfully in homeopathy. I see this book as a must for every homeopath.”
Jan Scholten
"This book is a must for every homeopath who wants a deeper understanding of the state of patients and practical guidelines for case management beyond the first simillimum. Congratulations Louis, Homeopathy owes you!" Harry van der Zee, Homeopathic Links 2009
- Author: Louis Klein
- ISBN: 9783939931683
- 526 pages
- Hardback
- Published in 2009
- Printed in Germany
Reprinted with the permission of The Society of Homeopaths, from 'The Homeopath' Journal, Autumn 2009 edition. Reviewed by Francis Treuherz.
I began a review of Louis Klein's Clinical Focus Guide (2003) that he 'has written and published what I am sure will become a modern classic'. This applies again; our descendants will be studying this great book one hundred years from now.
He devotes 50 pages to the history and philosophy of miasms and nosodes, immediately clarifying obscure concepts. The rest of the book is intensely practical. Louis Klein discusses a range of miasms and nosodal families. Each remedy picture follows a pattern, the various synonyms, a description, the scientific and other names and meanings, a lengthy commentary where we learn what Klein knows from his vast and deep experience of prescribing these remedies, and source notes - the conventional disease knowledge. There follows a Clinical Focus Guide - an account of the symptoms in the usual schema order, and then selections from traditional homeopathic sources, and relationships of remedies if any. The strongest parts, and there are many of these, are his descriptions of the disposition of the remedy and the patient, with subtle and useful detail. There are full bibliographies and an index.
I cannot list all the technical names for the families of miasms and nosodes so will mention just a few: clostridiales - Botulinum, and Tetanus; the plague -Yersinia; parasites - Malaria and Toxoplasmosis; tuberculosis and leprosy - Leprominium and ]ohneinum. This last remedy is Crohn's disease in cattle transformed into a nosode for us, through a full proving detailed in the book. This is a real breakthrough for homeopathy.
There is the remarkable synchronicity which can occur in homeopathy: Johneinum dreams of toilets as you might have expected, but there are also strong feelings of persecution, in a disease which is prevalent in (but not confined to) populations of Ashkenazi Jews - and the prover who experienced this was not Jewish. Toxoplasmosis dreams of cats; the picture in humans often follows proximity to cats.
Yersinia patients are seen as a pest.
The book brings to life and sorts out what has become the mythology of our well-known remedies, repeated from one author to the next, like Pertussin and the Tuberculinum nosodes, so that we can study them afresh. With each remedy, old and new, there is detail, subtle detail, but organised in such a way as to be clear, memorable, and easily found again.
The remedies described in this book are those that the author has prescribed, not just studied in earlier material medica, and reproduced for us; that is the strength of this book. I have read it 3 times and will have to be restrained from taking it on holiday. I look forward to Volume 2.
Reprinted with the permission of The Homeopathic Links Journal, Volume 22, Winter 2009. Reviewed by Harry van der Zee, MD, Netherlands.
Miasms and Nosodes both represent topics in homeopathy that are of particular interest. Initially a homeopath will work with some of the better known nosodes and use them in the same way as any other remedy: a possible simillimum for a patient - e.g. "a Medorrhinum patient" or "a Sulphur patient".
If the derangement of health were a one-dimensional state asking for a single remedy response, homeopathy would be a lot more simple than reality shows. Even if the hypothesis to which some adhere, holds true, that one single remedy could solve everything for each and every patient, this remains a theoretical possibility that often offers others the opportunity to find new openings in "stuck" cases.
To be able to find a nosode, including the ones we have less experience with, as a next step in a treatment it is clear that the totality of symptoms will usually not be of help. So one needs to know what to look for, and for that this book is a great help.
The book starts with an interesting history of miasms in homeopathy showing how the concept and understanding of miasms has changed over time. On each nosode the book starts with a description, a general commentary on the nosode and source notes. After that the author provides a Clinical Focus Guide, divided in two parts: 1) Mind and Disposition and 2) Physical Focus. This for me is the core of each chapter as it contains the condensed experience of the author.
Information from provings, published cases and other homeopathic sources is also included as are also cases by the author himself. In the case of Johneinum, notes of a proving conducted by the author are presented.
In the commentary on Malaria the author also goes beyond the individual symptoms of the malaria miasm and discusses its collective expression.
"Many of the personal feelings of hostility, persecution and even homicide (genocide) ... can be seen in a larger socio-political way. This is especially true where the individual or group needing help from remedies in this miasm are living in a town, society or country where they are being taken care of, but not allowed independence. This can be especially seen in refugees, principally those living in a refugee camp." (p. 468)
Of course besides the nosodes remedies belonging to the particular miasm are also listed.
Nosodes discussed in this volume 1 are: Burkholderiales (Hippozaeninum, Pertussinum), Clostridiales (Botulinum, Clostridium perfringens, Tetanus), Corynebacterium (Diphterinum, Propionibacterium acnes), Mycobacterium (Tubercular nosode remedies e.g. Kent, Bacillinum, Tuberculinum bovinum, Tuberculinum aviaire, Leprominium, Johneinum), Enterobacteriales (Bach bowel nosodes, Proteus, Colibacillinum, Eberthinum [Typhoid], Yersinia pestis, Yersinia enterocolitica, [and Rattus]), Parasitic protozoa (Malaria compound, Toxoplasmosis). More will follow in volume 2.
Conclusion: this book is a must for every homeopath who wants a deeper understanding of the state of patients and practical guidelines for case management beyond the first similimum. Congratulations Louis, Homeopathy owes you!