Dana Ullman, Copyright 2005 (Version April 18,
2005 – this article will be updated occasionally. For the most
up-to-date version, go to: www.homeopathic.com)
Introduction
The Wisdom of Symptoms—The Underlying Basis of Modern Physiology
and Homeopathy
· Medicines That Respect the Wisdom of the Body
· Determining What a Medicine Can Cure
· Homeopathic Medicine: Nano-doses, Powerful Results
· The Clinical Evidence for Homeopathy
· Possible Explanations for Nano-Doses
· Quantum Medicine
· Resources to Learning
about Homeopathy
· References
OPENING REMARKS:
Many people confuse homeopathic medicine with
herbal remedies or with the broad field of alternative or natural
medicine. As you will learn from this article, homeopathic medicine
has its own sophisticated system of using substances from the
plant, mineral, chemical, and animal kingdoms. This article will
describe--in a modern and even futuristic fashion--this fascinating
and powerful method of strengthening the body’s own defense system.
In the spirit of wishing to inform as many people
as possible about homeopathy, you are welcome to send this article
to anyone you wish (as long as the article is not changed in any
way, except with permission from the author). Please note this
article may be updated from time to time, and it may be worthwhile
to read and download the most recent version of this article by
going to www.homeopathic.com and looking under “Intro
to Homeopathy.”
Printed publications (magazines, newspapers, websites)
can also obtain permission to reprint all or part of this article
by emailing their request to mail@homeopathic.com
Introduction
The word “homeopathy” is derived from two Greek words: homoios
which means “similar” and pathos which means “suffering.”
Homeopathy’s basic premise is called the “principle of similars,”
and it refers to recurrent observation and experience that a medicinal
substance will elicit a healing response for the specific syndrome
of symptoms (or suffering) that it has been proven to cause when
given to a healthy person in overdose.
The beauty of the principle of similars is that it not only initiates
a healing response, but it encourages a respect for the body's
wisdom. Because symptoms represent the best efforts of our body
in its defenses against infection or stress, it makes sense to
utilize a medicine that helps and mimics this defense rather than
that inhibits or suppresses it. The principle of similars may
be one of nature's laws that, when used well, can be one of our
most sophisticated healing strategies.
It is important to note that immunizations and allergy treatments
are two of the very few applications in modern medicine today
that actually stimulate the body’s own defenses in the prevention
or treatment of specific diseases, and it is NOT simply a coincidence
that both of these treatments are derived from the homeopathic
principle of similars.
Homeopathic medicine is so widely practiced by physicians in
Europe that it is no longer appropriate to consider it “alternative
medicine” there. Approximately 30% of French doctors and 20%
of German doctors use homeopathic medicines regularly, while over
40% of British physicians refer patients to homeopathic doctors,
and almost half of Dutch physicians consider homeopathic medicines
to be effective. The fact that the British Royal Family has used
and supported homeopathy since the 1830s reflects its longstanding
presence in Britain’s national health care system.
Homeopathic medicine also once had a major presence in American
medical care and in American society. In 1900 there were 22 homeopathic
medical schools in the US, including Boston University, University
of Michigan, New York Medical College, Hahnemann University, University
of Minnesota, and even the University of Iowa. Further, many
of America’s cultural elite were homeopathy’s strongest advocates,
including Mark Twain, William James, John D. Rockefeller, Susan
B. Anthony, Louisa May Alcott, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Henry
David Thoreau, and Harriett Beecher Stowe, amongst many others.
(For a more extensive list of famous people past and present who
are known advocates of homeopathy, click here.)
In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book The Social Transformation
of American Medicine,
Paul Starr noted, "Because homeopathy was simultaneously
philosophical and experimental, it seemed to many people to be
more rather than less scientific than orthodox medicine."
This article will present a strong case for homeopathy in light
of the most recent developments in science and medicine. That
said, I want to apologize to those people who have an open mind
about homeopathy but who have been introduced to it by individuals
who have not adequately explained this science and art in a clear
and convincing fashion. It is hoped that both skeptics and
those open-minded but inadequately informed people will benefit
from this overview of the homeopathic system.