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The Science of Homeopathy – page 138

Chapter 10

 

 

The Birth of a remedy

 

ONCE FUNDAMENTAL HOMEOPATHIC THEORY has been mastered, the next primary concern is the homeopathic remedy itself – the tool by which the process of cure is put in motion. To be ef- fective, such tools must be highly refined in preparation and accurately tested. At the present time, there are literally hundreds of remedies de- rived from minerals, plants, and diseased tissues whose characteristics have been fully delineated through carefully conducted provings, and thousands more which have been at least partially proven. Neverthe- less, as homeopathy continues to advance, it is necessary to perform provings on new remedies so that the therapeutic armamentarium can be further expanded. For this purpose, it is necessary to have clearly defined standards for the actual methods of performing an accurate and thorough proving.

The fundamental theoretical basis for the proving of drugs on healthy persons was enunciated originally by Samuel Hahnemann, as described in Chapter 6. In Aphorism 21, Hahnemann describes the basic principle:

 

Now, as it is undeniable that the curative principle in medicines is not in itself perceptible, and as in pure experiments with medicines conducted by the most accurate observers, nothing can be observed that can constitute them medicines or remedies except that power of causing distinct alterations in the state of health of the human body, and particularly in that of the healthy individual, and of exciting in him various definite morbid symptoms; so it follows that when medicines act as remedies, they can only bring their curative property into play