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The Science of Homeopathy – page 94

the symptom manifestation of the patient and the symptom manifesta- tion of the remedy are matched, thus enabling the principles of reso- nance to excite and strengthen the defense mechanism of the patient and bring about cure.

 

The Proving of Remedies

 

During a proving, we introduce into the organism a substance suf- ficiently high in concentration to disturb the organism and mobilize its defense mechanism. The defense mechanism produces a spectrum of symptoms on all three levels of the organism; this spectrum of symptoms then characterizes the peculiar and unique nature of the substance. In a similar way, we note down the symptoms of the pa- tient, recording the peculiar way in which his organism reacted to the morbific stimulus on the dynamic plane. In both cases, the exciting cause must be strong enough to mobilize the defense mechanism, so that symptoms are produced. This occurs only if the agent is strong enough, or if the person is sufficiently sensitive to the vibratory fre- quency of the substance.

Fortunately for the science of therapeutics, it happens that the symp- tom pictures of remedies match quite accurately the symptom pictures of virtually all illnesses in existence, in all their variety. Today, there are hundreds of remedies which have been proved in this way and which cover the major part of all possible disturbances in the human being.

In order to be able to say that a drug has been fully proved, however, it should first be tried on the healthy person in toxic, hypotoxic, and highly diluted and potentized doses (potentization will be discussed in the next chapter). Second, the symptoms produced by the drug on all three levels must be noted down. Third, the substance’s action must be completed by observing the symptoms which have disappeared from the patient after the remedy has produced a cure.

If the symptoms of a proving are recorded only on the physical level, the proving is still incomplete. It is for this reason that simple toxicology described in medical schools is insufficient. The symptoms have been recorded in too gross a form, without adequate individual- izing information, and they record almost exclusively actions on the physical level.

In Chapter 10, further elaboration will be provided on the specific techniques for conducting a proving, and one of Hahnemann’s original provings will be presented as an example of the specific detail with