Books

The Science of Homeopathy – page 155

and pestle for a total of three hours. The method is highly specific and has not changed since Hahnemann’s first description (see Annotated Bibliography).

As we know, such a first-level preparation enables the energetic po- tential of material substances to be liberated, but it also has purely chemical effects which are difficult to comprehend. Again, Hahnemann describes this effect:
 

Not only, as shown elsewhere, do these medicinal substances there- by develop their powers in a prodigious degree, but they also change their physico-chemical demeanor in such a way, that if no one before could ever perceive in their crude form any solubility in alcohol or water, after this peculiar transmutation they become wholly soluble in water as well as in alcohol – a discovery invaluable to the healing art… What can 1 say of the pure metals and of their sulphurets, but that all of them, without any exception become by this treatment equally soluble in water and in alcohol, and every one of them develops the medicinal virtue peculiar to it in the purest, simplest manner and in an incredibly high degree? 3

 

Standard Preparation

 

Once the remedy has been prepared in a soluble form to the 6X potency the typical method of potentization described in Chapter 7 is used. One drop is diluted in a certain amount of solvent (either 9, 99, or 50,000 drops), and the resulting solution is shaken forcefully for a defi- nite number of successions. One drop of this solution is then diluted and succussed similarly, and the process is continued indefinitely.


The dilution and succussion may be done either by hand or by ma- chine. Nowadays, it is more efficient to use machines which can per- form the process rapidly and tirelessly. Even with machines, however, a high potency remedy often takes as many as three months to make. A variety of machines have been devised to perform the succussions. The important point is that the number of succussions should be stan- dardized; experiences shows that there should be between 40 and 100 succussions at each potency level. Also, the force of each succussion should be equivalent to or greater than the force that a man’s arm can deliver when striking the hand-held vial forcefully against a firm surface (such as a leather-bound book, as described by Hahnemann). Machines must be monitored carefully as to the number and force of succussions, so that no mechanical errors can enter into the standard-

3. Hahnemann, Chronic Diseases, p. 145.