Homeopathy
Homeopathy is a medical healing method developed by the physician and professor of surgery Dr Samuel Hahnemann (1755–1843). With few exceptions, homeopathic remedies are made from natural substances such as plants, minerals, or animal products.
Through a working process defined by Hahnemann—trituration and succussion of the base substances—a specific form of energy is produced and administered in the form of globules or drops. The experience of the effectiveness of these energies is based on many healing successes as well as on conducted provings of homeopathic remedies.
Dr Hahnemann discovered the principle underlying the effectiveness of homeopathic medicines in 1780 through his well‑known experiment with cinchona bark against malaria. A large number of provings of homeopathic preparations were carried out by him and by other homeopathic physicians, giving us today knowledge of more than 4,000 remedies.
Homeopathic treatment is based on the assumption that illness represents a specific form of energy which, like a disruptive frequency, penetrates the healthy human vital force and can hinder it on various levels (physical, emotional, mental).
The task of the homeopathically practising physician is to recognise this energy and assign it to a corresponding, known homeopathic energy pattern.
Dr Hahnemann demanded:
“To cure gently, quickly, certainly and permanently, choose in every case of illness a remedy which is capable of producing a similar ailment to the one it is meant to cure.”


