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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 179

"Now the diseases are nothing more than alterations in the state of health of the healthy individual which express themselves by morbid (i.e., disease-producing) signs, and the cure is also only possible by a change to the healthy condition from the state of health
of the diseased individual; it is very evident that medicines could never cure diseases if they did not possess the power of altering man’s state of health which depends upon sensations and functions: indeed, that their curative power must be owing solely to this power they possess of altering man’s state of health."
Preparation of Homeopathic remedies
Once Hahnemann felt he had proven enough remedies, he began prescribing them in the accepted dosages of the time; but although the patient was invariably cured, the drug often caused such a severe initial aggravation of symptoms that patients and doctors alike became alarmed. Such aggravation was to be expected since the drug itself was producing symptoms similar to those of the patient. Hahnemann wanted to test some of the drugs in common use at that time—drugs such as mercury and arsenic; but, of course, he could not give such toxic substances to healthy people.
So he reduced the dose to one-tenth of its customary amount. The patient was still cured but the aggravation though lighter, remained. Hahnemann diluted the remedy still further, each time prescribing only one-tenth of the previous dose, and presently reached a dilution that had essentially no more medicine left in it.
Precisely at this most critical juncture, Hahnemann made another amazing discovery. To this day, it is not exactly known how Hahnemann came upon the procedure. In any case, he simply submitted each dilution to a series of vigorous shakes (or "succussions" as he called them) and discovered that progressive dilutions became not only less toxic but also more potent!
Hahnemann had found a solution to the problem that had occupied medical men throughout history. He had beaten the problem of the "side effects" of drugs!
Hahnemann says that the efficacy of a remedy thus processed is increased because "the powers, which are, as it were, hidden and
dormant in the crude drug, are developed and roused into activity to an incredible degree."
Hahnemann first considered that distilled water, alcohol, and lactose were medicinally inert, so he diluted the medicines in these substances. If the remedy was diluted in water or alcohol, he mixed one part of the substance with ninety-nine parts of the liquid and submitted the mixture to one hundred vigorous succussions. This dynamized solution he called the "first centesimal potency". Then he mixed one part of this first potency with ninety-nine parts of water or alcohol and again succussed the dilution one hundred times to produce the second centesimal potency. The third step in the process, of course, diluted the initial substance to one part in a million, the fourth step to one part in a hundred million, and so on. He repeated it up to thirty times and