What
is homeopathy?
Homeopathy is
a system of medicine that is based on the Law of Similars.
The truth of this law has been verified experimentally and
clinically for the last 200 years.
Let's look at
an example: If your child accidentally ingests certain poisons,
you may be advised to administer Syrup of Ipecac to induce
vomiting. Ipecac is derived from the root of a South American
plant called Ipecacuanha. The name, in the native
language, means "the plant by the road which makes you throw
up." Eating the plant causes vomiting.
When a group
of healthy volunteers took this substance to determine the
effects of this drug, they found that the drug induced other
symptoms as well. The mouth retained much saliva. The tongue
was very clean. There was a cough so severe that it led
to gagging and vomiting. There was incessant nausea. While
it is expected that vomiting would usually relieve the nausea,
this was not the case.
Such an experiment,
using healthy volunteers, is called a proving, and
it is the homeopath's source of information about the action
of a drug.
Of what use could
this plant be? If a person were suffering from a gagging
cough after a cold, or a woman were experiencing morning
sickness with incessant nausea that is not relieved by vomiting,
then Ipecacuanha, administered in a minute dose,
especially prepared by a homeopathic pharmacy in accordance
with FDA approved guidelines, can allay the "similar" suffering.
Samuel Hahnemann
described this principle by using a Latin phrase: Similia
Similibus Curentur, which translates: "Let likes cure
likes." It is a principle that has been known for centuries.
Hahnemann developed the principle into a system of medicine
called homeopathy, and it has been used successfully for
the last 200 years. |