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The Science of Homeopathy – page 139

by means of this their power of altering man’s state of health by the production of peculiar symptoms; and that, therefore, we have only to rely on the morbid phenomena which the medicines produce in the healthy body as the sole possible revelation of their in-dwelling cura- tive power, in order to learn what disease-producing power, and at the same time what disease-curing power, each individual medicine possesses.
 

Thus, we see that the purpose of conducting a proving of a remedy is to record the totality of morbid symptoms produced by that sub- stance on healthy individuals; and that totality will then be the cura- tive indications upon which is to be prescribed the curative remedy in the sick individual.

It is likely to be a new concept to many people that literally any substance can have a wide and varied spectrum of highly individual- ized symptoms. Because we have the possibility of varying the dosage of the substance, this spectrum of symptoms can become evident by sufficiently careful testing. The fact that substances do indeed produce specific reactions is stated clearly by Hahnemann in Aphorism 30:
 

The human body appears to admit of being much more powerfully affected in its health by medicines (partly because we have the regula- tion of the dose in our own power) than by natural morbid stimuli – for natural diseases are cured and overcome by suitable medicines.
 

Indeed, it is possible to poison an organism with any substance whatsoever if given in sufficient quantity. This is true whether the sub- stance is a poison or even a food. Something as ordinary as table salt, if given in large doses daily for a long time, can generate a variety of symptoms in relatively healthy people. If we give a test substance in great enough quantity, it will disturb the vital force sufficiently to mobilize the defense mechanism, which in turn generates a group of symptoms which are entirely peculiar to the substance being tested.

When a substance is administered and the resulting symptoms are noted down, we are recording the specific manifestations of the defense mechanism – which is the only way we have of identifying the resonant frequency of the action of the remedy. Similarly, when we note down the symptoms of the patient, we are recording the peculiar manifesta- tions representing the resonant frequency of the defense mechanism. By matching the symptom-picture of the remedy to the symptom-picture of the patient, we match their resonant frequencies, thereby accomplish- ing cure by strengthening the defense mechanism at its weakest point.