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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 8

stance which produces symptoms in a healthy person cures those symptoms in a sick person.
This discovery, as well as the fact that he was already very well known, attracted to Hahnemann a number of physicians who, like himself, were looking for the truth. They all started to exper- iment upon themselves by taking different drugs. They continued for six years and kept scrupulously detailed records of the symp- toms produced on each of them by every drug they had taken.
During this time Hahnemann, who had access to a vast medical library and was fluent in Latin, Greek, Arabic, English and French, compiled an exhaustive list of accidental poisonings recorded by different doctors in different countries through centuries of medical history. The symptoms produced by poisons and those produced by experiments done upon Hahnemann’s physician friends were gathered together in detailed volumes.
Hahnemann and his colleagues recognised in these symptom pictures the identical symptomatologies of many illnesses for which medical science had in vain been seeking cures. These medicines were then tried on patients who manifested similar symptoms, and the amazing discovery was made that the drug actually cured so-called ‘incurable’ diseases when prescribed according to this principle. According to the law he had discov- ered, Hahnemann saw that every drug must necessarily cure the set of symptoms it produces in a healthy human organism.
The process by which Hahnemann and his colleagues experimen- tally produced the symptoms of a substance upon their healthy organisms he called ‘proving’. Orthodox medicine (which ho- meopaths term ‘allopathic’, from ‘allo’ meaning ‘other’) also has its process of proving drugs, but with the very important dif- ference that it experiments upon animals.
Animals do not possess the power of speech. They cannot re- port the subtleties of alterations in mood of the different types of pain which can be described by human experimental subjects. In addition, the physiology of animals is considerably different from that of the human being. Hahnemann perceived clearly that any therapeutic system based upon animal experimentation must necessarily be limited. To construct a valid therapy, experimen-