Caspar Hauser (4 results)

- Softcover
Seller: Sigrun Wuertele buchgenie_de, Altenburg, GermanySigrun Wuertele buchgenie_de
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Condition: Sehr gut - gebraucht. Broschiert Sehr guter Zustand, ohne Namenseintrag Zustand: 2, Sehr gut - gebraucht, Broschiert bb Aufbau-Verlag , 1987 , Caspar Hauser oder Die Trägheit des Herzens, Caspar Hauser.
More imagesPublished by Ansbach, C. Brügel und Sohn, 1881. Erste und wohl einzige Ausgabe., 1881
- Softcover
- First Edition
Seller: Antiquariat Carl Wegner, Berlin, B, GermanyAntiquariat Carl Wegner
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Softcover. 8° ( 20,7 : 13,0 cm). Original-Broschur mit Deckelillustration. Der Umschlag etwas braunfleckig und mit kleinem Signaturschild am Buchrücken unten. Frontispiz, VI, 157 Seiten. Im Innenbereich etwas randgebräunt. Sonst sauber und fest in der Bindung. Seite für Seite genau überprüft. Durchaus gutes Exemplar. -- Bitte Po…rtokosten außerhalb EU erfragen! / Please ask for postage costs outside EU! / S ' il vous plait demander des frais de port en dehors de l ' UE! // Bitte beachten Sie auch unsere Fotos! / Please also note our photos! / Veuillez noter nos photos -- Ob Sonnenschein oder warmer Regen: mit einem interessanten Buch kommen Sie immer gut durch den Tag. -- Wir kaufen Ihre werthaltigen Bücher! M09899-317712/MusiVit1.
- Softcover
Seller: Antiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com, Marburg, GermanyAntiq. F.-D. Söhn - Medicusbooks.Com
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Arch. homöopath. Heilk., 11/2. - Leipzig, Carl Heinrich Reclam, 1831, 8°, 172 pp., Broschur. Nach den theils schon im Druck erschienen, theils aber noch ungedruckten Mittheilungen seines Erziehers, des Hrn. Prof. Daumer zu Nürnberg, bearbeitet v. seinem Arzte Dr. Preu, Königl. Baierschen Stadtgerichtsarzte. Paul Sigismund Carl P…reu "(geb. Nürnberg 177?, starb im December 1832 im 59 Jahre) zu Nürnberg, Med. Dr. Altdorf 1795, Kgl. Bairischer Stadtgerichtsarzt." Callisen, Med. Schriftsteller-Lexicon XV: p.207; XXXI: p.301; N. Nekrolog d. Deutschen, Jahrg. 10. 1832. Thl. 2. 1834 Sensitives. The case of Casper Hauser. It may seem to some that the mass of symptoms contained in the Homoopathic Materia Medica must be due to the imaginations of the provers. That some may be such need not be denied. But there is always this check in homoopathy-the provings can be tested in practice. Attempts have been made to criticise the provings, and these have always ended by confirming his observations, and adding to, instead of detracting from, the body of symptoms available for use. Some experimenters have endeavoured to apply a more rigorous test. They have sought to apply the test of numbers to the provings. They have given a remedy to a number of different persons, and have rejected all symptoms which have not been manifested in more than one or tow provers. This method leaves out of account the existence of sensitives. I have mentioned above that in illness a person becomes in an exaggerated degree sensitive to the action of the remedy which is homoopathic to his condition. But there are some persons who are naturally sensitive to stimuli of all kinds. Hahnemann and a number of his provers were undoubtedly of this class, and their symptoms are of much greater value than those who organisms react but little to any kind of drug. Perhaps the most remarkable example of extreme sensitiveness to medicines is the case of the mysterious and unfortunate Casper Hauser, who was found by the police aimlessly wandering about the streets of Nuremberg in the spring of 1828. Dr. Dudgeon has told his story in the Homoopathic World, of October, 1897. From this we learn that he was placed under the care of Professor Daumer who taught him to speak, and gradually elicited from him that he had hitherto lived in a dark, underground cellar, had been fed on black bread and water, and had been deprived of all intercourse with his follow-creatures. At first he had no more intelligence than a baby ; but he learned rapidly. For a long time he was painfully affected by bright light and loud noises. He could distinguish colours in the dark, and felt acutely the slightest blow or touch. Perfumes would bring on convulsive attacks. For long he would not eat anything but black bread on which he had been reared. He was very subject on convulsive attacks, and become seriously ill. In his illness he was under the care of Dr. Preu's article -published in the eleventh volume of the Archiv für die homoopatische Heilkunst- that Dr. Dudgeon's account is taken. Casper Hauser was sensitive in many ways. His vision was so acute that he could the berries on a bunch of elderberries at a distance of one hundred paces. He could distinguish colours in total darkness, and he saw best in twilight. He was clairvoyant, and had many premonitions. He foretold his attempted assassination of the 17th of October, 1829. (He was actually assassinated a few months later.) The special interest to homoopathists in the historic case of Caspar Hauser lies in the fact that he exemplifies a sensitiveness to remedies which occurs in many persons to a degree only somewhat less exaggerated than his. And the reason I here refer to the case is to show that strength of dose, in the allopathic sense, he not necessarily anything to do with either the causation or the cure of conditions. An attempt is sometimes made to explain homoopathic action on the hypothesis that remedies "have .

- Signed
Seller: Herbst-Auktionen, Detmold, GermanyHerbst-Auktionen
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E.Albumblatt (1 S. 8° schmal quer, 9,5 x 20 cm) in Tinte mit lateinischem E.ZITAT, Ort, Datum, Unterschrift und Titeln D. CASPAR ACHATIUS BECKIUS Professor Publ. Extr. signiert Acad. Jenensis (Jena), 13.IX 1720 "Pietate erga Deum, erga homines Justitia, nostra stabilienda est felicitas.".