The reading similia similibus curentur was officially adopted as the correct reading of the sentence by the American Institute of Homoeopathy at its session held in Atlantic City, N.
The distinctive system of therapeutics which bears the name of homoeopathy is based upon the law similia similibus curentur,[1] the originator of which was S.
At length, while travelling in Europe, he became a convert to the theory, similia similibus curantur, and renouncing his earlier notions, gave himself up to the study of it.
Hahnemann discovered the Law of ~similia similibus curantur ~accidentally, while investigating the effects of quinine on the human organism.
Similia similibus curantur~ is only another way of stating the fundamental Law of Nature Cure: "Every acute disease is the result of a cleansing and healing effort of Nature.
All of any note agree that the law Similia similibus is the only fundamental principle in medicine.
Taking nothing for truth that could not be proved by experiment, he, by careful and untiring observation, obtained from Nature the answer that Similia Similibus Curantur was the law of cure, the only scientific law to heal disease.
First, it was the Similia similibus curantur (like cures like), of the homeopathists, which the Academy of Medicine has termed quackery.
He tested other remedies in the same way and finally announced his law "Similia Similibus Curantur.
If you ask me," said the Bish in his booming chest notes, "I'd say it was just a case of similia similibus curantur.
Similia similibus curantur is the maxim of homoeopathy; and whatever success this healing principle may obtain with bodily ailments, I have little doubt of its efficacy in affections of the heart.
Similia similibus curantur" was not original with him, as it long before had been formulated by Hippocrates, and later by Paracelsus.
The witch period also shows us the germs of a medical system, the Homeopathic, supposed to be of modern origin, in similia similibus curantur.
In this book he transfers to similars what Euclid had said of equals, and he formulates this axiom: Si similibus addas similia, tota sunt similia.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "similibus" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.