Tuesday, 12 July 2022

Homeopathic Remedies as the Pharmacological Means of Informational Medicine | Chapter 4 | Challenges and Advances in Pharmaceutical Research Vol. 4

Homeopathy, a type of complementary medicine, employs potentized compounds known as remedies that transmit information and concentrates on correcting incorrect perceptions and repairing negative energy signals. It also adheres to the principle of similarity. A theoretical model to explain their effects is lacking, despite the fact that there is some empirical data and some academic study.

In homoeopathy, generalised entanglement occurs twice: once between the remedy and the original material (the potentiation principle) and once between the specific symptoms of the patient and the overall symptoms of the remedy image (similarity principle). The homoeopathic approach is also intertwined between the patient's symptoms and the therapeutic ingredient, in addition to the medicine itself. The absence of the homoeopathic cure causes it to act as a type of container that "absorbs" symptoms. The overall pattern of symptoms makes sense.

Homeopathic medicine works on an intellectual level, but there is still no physical justification for the way in which energy shifts take place. A physical explanation for the effectiveness of homoeopathy may be found in quantum physics. In order to explain the therapeutic mode of homoeopathic action, bio-molecular processes, such as the memory of water and "non-local" macro-entanglement, and patient-practitioner-remedy (PPR) interactions in terms of quantum matter-type fields, must be used. Homeopathy and quantum theory may have similarities that make them valuable for describing the homoeopathic process because quantum qualities can be physical even when they are not visible. The pharmacological means of proof for informational medicine might be thought of as homoeopathic medicines.


Author (s) Details:

Mordeniz Cengiz,
Department of Anesthesiology, Intensive Care and Pain Medicine, Medical Faculty, Namik Kemal University, Turkey.

Please see the link here:
https://stm.bookpi.org/CAPR-V4/article/view/7506

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