enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Homeopathy (journal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeopathy_(journal)

    It is the official journal of the London-based Faculty of Homeopathy. The journal was established in 1911 as the British Homoeopathic Journal, resulting from a merger between the British Homoeopathic Review and the Journal of the British Homoeopathic Society. [5] [6] It uses its current name since 2001 [7] and the editor-in-chief is Robert Mathie.

  3. William Boericke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Boericke

    He became a surgeon and a published several articles in medical journals on homeopathic medicine. Garth's middle name was from James John Garth Wilkinson, a Swedenborgian writer and close friend of William Boericke. [18] [19] Charles Caleb Boericke, MD (1897–1965), was a physician, surgeon, and influential exponent of homeopathic medicine.

  4. Homeopathy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeopathy

    Homeopathic preparations are referred to as "homeopathic remedies". [82] Practitioners rely on two types of reference when prescribing: Materia medica and repertories. A homeopathic materia medica is a collection of "drug pictures", organized alphabetically.

  5. James Tyler Kent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Tyler_Kent

    James Tyler Kent (1849-1916) James Tyler Kent (1849–1916) was an American physician best remembered as a forefather of modern homeopathy.In 1897 Kent published a massive guidebook on human physical and mental disease symptoms and their associated homeopathic preparations entitled Repertory of the Homeopathic Materia Medica, which has been translated into a number of languages.

  6. History of alternative medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../History_of_alternative_medicine

    The history of alternative medicine covers the history of a group of diverse medical practices that were collectively promoted as "alternative medicine" beginning in the 1970s, to the collection of individual histories of members of that group, or to the history of western medical practices that were labeled "irregular practices" by the western medical establishment.

  7. Wilhelm Heinrich Schüßler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Heinrich_Schüßler

    Wilhelm Heinrich Schüßler — also spelled Schuessler, particularly in English-language publications — (21 August 1821 – 30 March 1898) was a German medical doctor in Oldenburg who searched for natural remedies and published the results of his experiments in a German homeopathic journal in March 1873, leading to a list of 12 so-called "biochemic cell salts" that remain popular in ...

  8. Samuel Hahnemann - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Hahnemann

    The Organon of the Healing Art (1810), a detailed delineation of what he saw as the rationale underpinning homeopathic medicine, and guidelines for practice. Hahnemann published the 5th edition in 1833; a revised draft of this (1842) was discovered after Hahnemann's death and finally published as the 6th edition in 1921.

  9. Joseph Hippolyt Pulte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Hippolyt_Pulte

    The Science of Medicine (Cleveland, 1852) The Woman's Medical Guide (Cincinnati, 1853) Civilization and its Heroes: an Oration (1855) He contributed to various homeopathic journals, was an editor of the American Magazine of Homeopathy and Hydropathy in 1852–54, and of the Quarterly Homeopathic Magazine in 1854.