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The Science of Homeopathy – page 140

If a substance is given in poisonous or toxic doses, virtually every organism will react to it, but the reaction will be too gross to be of value in homeopathy. Symptoms such as coma, convulsions, vomiting, or diarrhea will be recorded, but subtle, fine distinctions will not be evident. If small, even minute and potentized, doses are used, however, a wide variety of highly refined and specific symptoms will be pro- duced, particularly on the mental and emotional planes. This is why homeopathy emphasizes testing upon healthy human beings who are capable of lucidly describing even very subtle changes. The allopathic method, by contrast, tests drugs first upon animals and then upon sick human beings. Animal testing, of course, is inadequate for any truly therapeutic purpose because the only symptoms which can be record- ed are the crudest of physical symptoms. For homeopathic purposes, testing drugs on sick human beings is also inadequate, because disease symptoms can easily be mixed together with drug effects. In any case, it is obvious that allopathic drugs are tested merely for their ability to palliate specific symptoms or syndromes, and not for their effect upon the general health of the patient.

When a substance is administered to an organism, there are two phases of response. The primary effect occurs immediately, within a few hours, or within a few days; this represents the “excitation phase” of reaction and is usually somewhat dramatic. The organism, in its at- tempt to reestablish equilibrium, then compensates with a secondary effect. This usually occurs after a reaction time approximately twice that of the primary reaction. The symptoms generated in this second- ary phase can be opposite to those of the primary phase. In any prov- ing, it is important to record symptoms from both phases, even though they appear to be contradictory. Each phase represents a characteristic manifestation of the action of the defense mechanism and therefore must be accorded equal importance.

Homeopathic remedies are derived from plant, mineral, animal, and disease products (or from allopathic drugs which are potentized), and they are all highly standardized in their preparation. In countries most active in homeopathy, the strict quality of remedies is assured by conforming to very detailed homeopathic Pharmacopoeias which are used as universal standards.

In addition, the technique of the proving itself must be careful, thorough, precise, and standardized. Once a remedy has been gath- ered from a particular geographic location and then proven there, that specific preparation must be the one used by all homeopaths prescrib- ing on the basis of that proving. The remedy Pulsatilla, used by all homeopaths, must be the exact species used in the original provings;