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The Science of Homeopathy – page 152

homeopathic medicines, we must first put attention on the initial prep- aration of the plant, mineral, or nosode into a form amenable to poten- tization. Then, the specific standards for potentization must be consid- ered. Finally, to be presented in Chapter 19, the storage, handling, and administration of remedies must be understood and followed.

 

Initial Preparation of Crude Substances

 

Materials of medicinal value occur in Nature in a variety of forms, some of which are chemically easily available for potentization and some of which require initial preparation.

A wide variety of plant species are used in homeopathy. Obviously, the first step involves selecting the correct species, grown under op- timal conditions and collected at the optimal time. This requires the skills of a person highly knowledgeable in botany. Once a particular plant species has been used in a proving, all conditions of collection and preparation of the original plant must be duplicated in every detail in all later medical preparations.

In addition to careful attention to species, it is important to collect only plants found in a particular habitat, under conditions minimizing contamination from soil, water, and air pollutants. For example, a plant grown on a hilltop with plenty of access to sun and rain, free from run- off contamination by pesticides used in neighboring areas, is prefer- able to a plant grown next to a busy roadway, in a valley surrounded by crops which are frequently sprayed by chemicals.

The time of collection may be important. Some plants have much more vitality during certain seasons of the year, and others at different seasons. The season of collection, therefore, should duplicate the con- ditions of the original proving as much as possible; ideally it will occur at the time of greatest vitality of the plant. Usually, the best season would be spring, or secondarily summer, but individual species may peak at unique times of year. Ideally, the plant should be picked during a sunny day following a recent rain; this maximizes the likelihood that there is no contamination. Of course, the plant itself must be healthy, free of mold and free of infestation by bugs.

The provings of plant substances have in some instances included the entire plant and in other instances merely a portion of the plant. Again, one must know clearly which was used in the original proving. If the original proving was done only on the mature flower of a plant, rather than the entire plant, then one must use only the flower.

It would seem that the amount of technical information needed for each of the hundreds of medicines proven would be impossible for