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Notes Notes Introduction 1. Andrew Weil, Health and Healing (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1983), 113-15. 2. See K. R. Pelletier, A. Marie, M. Krasner, and W. L. Haskell, “Current Trends in the Integration and Reimbursement of Complementary and Alternative Medicine by Managed Care, Insurance Carriers, and Hospital Providers,” American Journal of Health, 12 (1997), 112-23; M. S. Wetzel, D. M. Eisenberg, and T. J. Kaptchuk, “A Survey of Courses Involving Complementary and Alternative Medicine in the United States Medical Schools,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 280 (1998), 784-87; B. B. O’Connor, Healing Traditions, Alternative Medicines and the Health Professions (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1995); D. M. Eisenberg, R. C. Kessler, C. Foster, et al., “Unconventional Medicine in the United States—Prevalence, Costs, and Patterns of Use,” New England Journal of Medicine, 328 (1993), 246-52; J. A. Astin, “Why Patients Use Alternative Medicines,” Journal of the American Medical Association, 279 (1998), 1548-53; Mike Saks, “Medicine and the Counter Culture,” in Roger Cooter and John Pictstone (eds.), Medicine in the Twentieth Century (Australia: Harwood Academic Publishers, 2000), 122. Chapter 1 1. Daniel Cook and Alain Naudé, “The Ascendance and Decline of Homeopathy in America: How Great Was Its Fall?” Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy , 89 (1996), 126-39. See also Anne T. Korschman, “Making Friends for ‘Pure’ Homeopathy: Hahnemannianism and the Twentieth Century Preservation and Transformation of Homeopathy,” in Robert D. Johnston (ed.), The Politics of Healing (New York: Routledge, 2004), 29-53. 2. Julian Winston, “Keeping It Alive: Homeopathy Through the First Half of the Century,” Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy, 92 (1999), 215-16. See also John S. Haller, Jr., A Profile in Alternative Medicine: The Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, 1845-1942 (Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1999), 79-82; Julian Winston, The Faces of Homeopathy: An Illustrated History of the First 200 Years (Tawa, New Zealand: Great Auk Publishers, 1999), 226-29. 3. Winston, “Keeping it Alive: Homeopathy Through the First Half of the Century,” 217. 153 4. “Minutes of the Sixty-Eighth Session,” Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy, 5 (1912-13), 166. 5. Stuart M. Close, “A Century of Homeopathy in America,” Homeopathic Recorder, 40 (1925), 509. 6. Alonzo C. Tenney, “Homeopathy,” Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy, 4 (1911), 35-38. 7. Close, “A Century of Homeopathy in America,” 513. 8. Quoted in Henry D. Paine, “Proceedings of Societies,” American Homeopathic Review, 1 (1859), 467-68. 9. Quoted in Bushrod W. James, “History of the American Institute of Homeopathy ,” Homeopathic Recorder, 17 (1902), 248-49. See also Carroll Dunham, Homeopathy , the Science of Therapeutics: A Collection of Papers Elucidating and Illustrating the Principles of Homeopathy (Calcutta: Haren and Brother, 1973). 10. Quoted in Charles Francis Ring, “Some Thoughts on a New Remedial Source,” Homeopathic Recorder, 2 (1887), 7. 11. Arthur G. Allen, “Specialties, from a Homeopathic Standpoint,” Medical Advance, 22 (1889), 366-67. 12. Interestingly, the International Hahnemannian Association faced its own schism in 1895 when a group of Hahnemannians decided that the association was not pure enough and split off forming the Society of Homeopathicians. See Martin Kaufman, Homeopathy in America: The Rise and Fall of a Medical Heresy (Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 1971), 121. 13. Plumb Brown, “The President’s Message,” Homeopathic Recorder, 46 (1931), 549. 14. A. G. Allen, “Post-Graduate School of Homeopathics,” Medical Advance, 27 (1891), 371-74. 15. “Editorial,” Medical Advance, 37 (1900), 345-46. See also Winston, The Faces of Homeopathy, 528-33. 16. “Miscellany,” Medical Advance, 30 (1893), 26. 17. “Annual Announcement, 1901-1902,” Medical Advance, 39 (1901), 339, 342-43; “Hering Medical College Department,” Medical Advance, 37 (1899), 206-207. 18. “Homeopathic Retrogression,” Homeopathic Recorder, 35 (1920), 575-76. 19. “The Organization of Three State Boards of Medical Examiners Under the New York Law of 1890,” Medical Advance, 27 (1891), 133. 20. J. A. Streets, “Medical Legislation,” Medical Advance, 23 (1889), 9-11. 21. C. E. Walton, “Presidential Address: Ohio State Society,” Medical Advance, 23 (1889), 15. 22. H. M. Paine, “New York Medical Examiners,” Medical Advance, 27 (1891), 135-36. 23. “The American Institute of Homeopathy,” Medical Advance,39 (1901),324-25. 24. Harvey Farrington, “Symptomatic versus Pathologic Prescribing,” Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy, 34 (1941), 586. See also Harris L. Coulter, Divided Legacy: A History of the Schism in Medical Thought. Vol. III. Science and Ethics in American Medicine, 1800-1914 (Washington, D.C.: Wehawken Book...

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