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The Science of Homeopathy – page 153

any practitioner to learn. Fortunately, this has all been compiled in standard pharmacopoeias. One of the most widely accepted is the Ho- meopathic Pharmacopoeia of the United States. At the time of this writing, it is currently being updated even further to conform to all modern standards of botany and chemistry, but we will refer herein to quotations from the Sixth Edition. To give an example of the detail involved in the selection of the proper plant for preparation into a medicine, the following is the description provided to Pulsatilla:
 

PULSATILLA. Wind Flower
Natural order. Ranunculaceae.
Synonyms: Latin, Anemone pratensis, Herba venti, Pulsatilla nigri- cans, P. pratensis, P. vulgaris; English, Meadow anemone, Pasque flower, Wind flower; French, Pulsatille; German, Kiichenschelle.

Description: A deciduous, perennial herb, with a spindle-shaped, thick, ligneous, dark-brown, oblique, several-headed root. The stem, 3 to 5 inches high, is simple, erect, rounded. The leaves are radical, petiolate, bi-pinnatifid, with linear segments; at the base surrounded by several ovate, lanceolate sheaths. The flowers, varying in color from dark violet to light blue, appear from March to May, and are bell-shaped, pendu- lous, terminal, reflexed at the apex, surrounded by a distinct sessile involucre, composed of 3 palmately divided and cleft bracts with linear lobes. The plant, clothed with long, silky hairs, is inodorous, but when rubbed exhales an acrid vapor, and has a burning, acrid taste.

Habitat: Open fields and plains, in dry places in many parts of Eu- rope, Russia, and Turkey in Asia. Fig., Flora Horn. II 102; Jahr and Cat. 254; Winkler, 109, 110.

Part used: The fresh plant, when in flower.1

Once a plant (or a portion of plant) has been collected in a correct manner, it is then prepared further to make it amenable to the standard process of potentization. Usually, this involves making a tincture of the plant. Preparation of tinctures is a standard procedure known very well to botanists and herbalists, but for our purposes the standard descrip- tion is given by Hahnemann in Aphorism 267 of the Organon:

 

We gain possession of the powers of indigenous plants and of such

 

1. Committee on Pharmacopoeia of the American Institute of Homeopathy, The Homeopathic Pharma- copoeia of the United States, Sixth Edition, rev. (Boston: Clapp & Son, 1941), p. 475.