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The Science of Homeopathy – page 98

weakness of the defense mechanism of the patient is severe enough, however, there will be a relapse. It will then be found that administra- tion of the same herb will produce a less intense effect, or will last less long, than the original prescription. This is because the dynamic action of the herb has not been intensified, whereas the defense mechanism may well have been weakened even further than originally. As men- tioned before, similar observations can be made with accidental cura- tive effects from acupuncture, allopathic drugs, and other therapies.

In order to produce lasting curative results, it is necessary to in- crease the intensity of the electrodynamic field of the therapeutic agent, or in other words, we must liberate the energy contained within the substance in such a way as to make it more available to interaction with the dynamic plane of the organism. This is the point at which Samuel Hahnemann made his second ingenious contribution to medicine by devising the technique of potentization. It is as yet unknown exactly how Hahnemann came upon this technique, whether it arose from his background in chemistry or by sheer divine inspiration. In any case, he developed a very simple method of extracting the therapeutic energy of a substance without altering its vibration rate. Thus, the resulting “ho- meopathic remedy” is a form of intensified energy which can still be administered according to the basic resonance principle of the Law of Similars, but now with enhanced ability to affect the dynamic plane of the organism and thereby produce a lasting cure of the total organism.

As described in the previous chapter, Hahnemann’s first great dis- covery was the importance of “proving” substances on healthy human volunteers in order to acquire a complete description of the symptom- atology of the substance. Unfortunately, however, most potentially use- ful substances are highly toxic in their biological action – substances such as arsenic, mercury, belladonna, snake venoms, etc. Some infor- mation was available from poisonings with these substances, but the symptomatology was not as refined as Hahnemann needed for homeo- pathic prescribing. It was in the process of struggling with this problem that Hahnemann made his discovery.

At first, Hahnemann tried to simply dilute the substances. This, of course, succeeded in reducing the toxicity of the agents, but it also proportionately reduced the therapeutic effect. Somehow, Hahnemann then hit upon the technique of adding kinetic energy to the dilutions through shaking, or “succussion.” This combination of succussion and serial dilution Hahnemann called “potentization” or “dynamization.” The crucial observation was that the more the substance is succussed and diluted, the greater the therapeutic effect while simultaneously nullifying the toxic effect.