Dr H
Muse
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2004
- Messages
- 835
. . . bovine dung?
I can sort of imagine how the uneducated, and under-educated in science might fall prey to the notion that homeopathy has something to offer them by way of medical treatment. The field does have all the outward trappings of modern technology: bottles and vials of medicinal-looking potions with mysterious quasi-Latin names; practitioners in white lab coats with official-looking documents hanging on their office walls; clean pharmaceutical preparation centers stocked with modern-looking lab equipment.
You put on a good show, and people will pay to get in.
But does no one who uses these preparations ever look beyond the label on the bottle? I was dismayed to discover that the National Institute of Health has been using tax-dollars -- to the tune of some $2.5 billion, thus far -- to "research" such discredited "alternative" medical practices as Reike, acupuncture, and biomagnetism.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31190909/
But I was encouraged to find that even the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) had given up -- after 5 years and $3.8 million spent -- on studying homeopathy because "the evidence is not there at this point".
http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cach...bandons+homeopathy"&cd=3 &hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
In that frame of mind, and with Homeopathy Awareness Week in full bloom, I set out to improve my mind by perusing some of the more comprehensive online homeopathic pharmacopeia for edification on what the latest in remedies might be from the "provings" field.
I first waded through the usual list of Preparations made from High Dilutes of Disgusting Bodily Fluids:
*Bacterium pyocyanus -- "blue pus bacillus"
*Divya -- Tiger's urine.
*Panthera pardus -- Leopard's urine
*Urini Leopardus pardalis -- Ocelot's urine
Seems like they might want to clean up their terminology a bit here. After all, you wouldn't want to ingest the pee of the wrong feline, accidentally. (Maybe not even on purpose...)
I am not making any of these up; you can find them all -- for sale -- here:
http://www.helios.co.uk/cgi-bin/store.cgi?action=list_remedies
Urine seems to be a very popular homeopathic ingredient, and Helios carries a wide assortment of pee, for all your health needs, including:
*Urina pan troglodytes -- chimpanzee urine
*Urinum Equinum -- horse urine
Last, but not least I found:
*Semen humanum
...which was not specifically described, but I think I can figure it out.
Now you would think -- or at least I would think -- that this list of ingredients from a Medeival witch-doctor's cupboard would be sufficient to put most people off homeopathy, but apparently not; it may even be what attracts some of them in the first place.
Then I found what I might call "Homeopathy Lite":
*Fluorescent (Merc Vapour) Light
It was not immediately clear whether this denoted a homeopathic remedy prepared by exposure to a fluorescent light, or whether an actual ground fluorescent light tube was used to prepare a "mother tincture" which was then diluted out of existence, as is de rigueur for homeopathic preps. But after I found the following, I decided it was probably the former:
*Luna - prepared by exposing lactose to moonlight
*Sol Britannic - prepared by exposing lactose to British sunlight
(which I admit is probably rare)
*Sol Australis - the lactose is exposed to Australian sunlight
(more common than the British variety, and apparently also "different")
*Spectrum - prepared by exposing lactose(?) to the light of a rainbow
I am not making any of these up, either; Helios stocks them all.
Next I gleaned a couple of interesting entries in what I call the "What the Hell?" group:
*Mucor mucedo -- "the mushroom"
What I found interesting about this one is the complete lack of specificity in the description.
Nothing is said about what kind on mushroom is to be used as the starting material, despite their being some 10,000 known varieties of mushroom (ranging from gourmet edibility to deadly), and an estimated similar number yet to be classified.
This vagueness is fascinating when considered in comparison with the very specific detail that is given concerning preparation of the dog poop remedy. (Yes, I did say "dog poop."):
*Excrementum canium -- "The faeces of a dog that has been fed with cow entrails (mother; german Shepard, father a mixture between a Hungarian shepard dog and a Setter.)"
You can find these fine medications, and their descriptions, here:
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Mucor-mucedo-Nos/a959.html
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Excrementum-canium/a2500.html
I guess anyone that isn't put off by being given dog poop pills by their "doctor" -- even really diluted dog poop pills -- is probably willing to, um, swallow pretty much anything.
Which brings me to my favorite group of homeopathic nostrums, the "Physics 'R' Us" group,
which includes:
*Plutonium nitricum -- homeopathinc plutonium
*Californium(249) Nitricum -- homeopathic Californium
Now I don't know how things are in other countries, but in the USA you don't just walk down to your local chemical supply house, Radio Shack, or True Value Hardware store and buy transuranic isotopes, so this raises the question in my mind as to where the homeopaths are getting the Plutonium and Californium to make the "mother tinctures" for these preparations. Are they fooling themselves even more than homeopathic "physicians" are fooling their patients?
Or have I stumbled on a case of someone pulling a fast one? E.g., someone is selling fake isotopes to homeopathic pharmacists from which they then make their remedies -- a case of quacks pulling one over on another group of quacks?
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Plutonium-nitricum/a2954.html
Well, no matter, because I haven't even gotten to the best stuff yet. One of the latest in modern homeopathic remedies is:
*Positronium
Yes folks, that's right: homeopathic antimatter. You can read all about the interesting philosophy behind this one, here:
http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2...epage&utm_medium=link&utm_content=channellink
This might well seem the ultimate pinacle of the homeopathinc art, but ever-industrious homeopathic researchers have gone even further into arcane physics with:
*Magnetis polus arcticus -- "north pole of the magnet"
Homeopathic pharmacists, using only shaken bottles of water, alcohol, and milk-sugar have suceded accomplishing what the world's greatest physicists, with multimillion dollar accelerators have failed at: they have isolated magnetic monopoles -and- potentized them!
http://www.remedia.at/homeopathy/Magnetis+polus+arcticus.html?arzneinr=3066
But even that vast accomplishment pales in the glow of what must truly represent the epotome of homeopathic -- and prehaps con artist -- achievement. I had to save the best for last:
*Vaccuum
You read that right: vacuum is now available as a homeopathinc remedy. You mix NOTHING with solvent, shake it up, and sell it.
And, it's available in 3 (that's three) potencies!
I had to look a little further in to this one, and it appears to be legit (as legit as anything in homeopathy is legit, anyway). The person who has done the "proving" on this one has a website, and for a mere $43.00 you can purchase his/her book explaining how this amazing cure for ... um, for nothing, I guess... was discovered:
http://www.minimum.com/b.asp?a=eising-proving-vacuum
I ask you: does it get any better than this?
I can sort of imagine how the uneducated, and under-educated in science might fall prey to the notion that homeopathy has something to offer them by way of medical treatment. The field does have all the outward trappings of modern technology: bottles and vials of medicinal-looking potions with mysterious quasi-Latin names; practitioners in white lab coats with official-looking documents hanging on their office walls; clean pharmaceutical preparation centers stocked with modern-looking lab equipment.
You put on a good show, and people will pay to get in.
But does no one who uses these preparations ever look beyond the label on the bottle? I was dismayed to discover that the National Institute of Health has been using tax-dollars -- to the tune of some $2.5 billion, thus far -- to "research" such discredited "alternative" medical practices as Reike, acupuncture, and biomagnetism.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31190909/
But I was encouraged to find that even the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) had given up -- after 5 years and $3.8 million spent -- on studying homeopathy because "the evidence is not there at this point".
http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cach...bandons+homeopathy"&cd=3 &hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us
In that frame of mind, and with Homeopathy Awareness Week in full bloom, I set out to improve my mind by perusing some of the more comprehensive online homeopathic pharmacopeia for edification on what the latest in remedies might be from the "provings" field.
I first waded through the usual list of Preparations made from High Dilutes of Disgusting Bodily Fluids:
*Bacterium pyocyanus -- "blue pus bacillus"
*Divya -- Tiger's urine.
*Panthera pardus -- Leopard's urine
*Urini Leopardus pardalis -- Ocelot's urine
Seems like they might want to clean up their terminology a bit here. After all, you wouldn't want to ingest the pee of the wrong feline, accidentally. (Maybe not even on purpose...)
I am not making any of these up; you can find them all -- for sale -- here:
http://www.helios.co.uk/cgi-bin/store.cgi?action=list_remedies
Urine seems to be a very popular homeopathic ingredient, and Helios carries a wide assortment of pee, for all your health needs, including:
*Urina pan troglodytes -- chimpanzee urine
*Urinum Equinum -- horse urine
Last, but not least I found:
*Semen humanum
...which was not specifically described, but I think I can figure it out.
Now you would think -- or at least I would think -- that this list of ingredients from a Medeival witch-doctor's cupboard would be sufficient to put most people off homeopathy, but apparently not; it may even be what attracts some of them in the first place.
Then I found what I might call "Homeopathy Lite":
*Fluorescent (Merc Vapour) Light
It was not immediately clear whether this denoted a homeopathic remedy prepared by exposure to a fluorescent light, or whether an actual ground fluorescent light tube was used to prepare a "mother tincture" which was then diluted out of existence, as is de rigueur for homeopathic preps. But after I found the following, I decided it was probably the former:
*Luna - prepared by exposing lactose to moonlight
*Sol Britannic - prepared by exposing lactose to British sunlight
(which I admit is probably rare)
*Sol Australis - the lactose is exposed to Australian sunlight
(more common than the British variety, and apparently also "different")
*Spectrum - prepared by exposing lactose(?) to the light of a rainbow
I am not making any of these up, either; Helios stocks them all.
Next I gleaned a couple of interesting entries in what I call the "What the Hell?" group:
*Mucor mucedo -- "the mushroom"
What I found interesting about this one is the complete lack of specificity in the description.
Nothing is said about what kind on mushroom is to be used as the starting material, despite their being some 10,000 known varieties of mushroom (ranging from gourmet edibility to deadly), and an estimated similar number yet to be classified.
This vagueness is fascinating when considered in comparison with the very specific detail that is given concerning preparation of the dog poop remedy. (Yes, I did say "dog poop."):
*Excrementum canium -- "The faeces of a dog that has been fed with cow entrails (mother; german Shepard, father a mixture between a Hungarian shepard dog and a Setter.)"
You can find these fine medications, and their descriptions, here:
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Mucor-mucedo-Nos/a959.html
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Excrementum-canium/a2500.html
I guess anyone that isn't put off by being given dog poop pills by their "doctor" -- even really diluted dog poop pills -- is probably willing to, um, swallow pretty much anything.
Which brings me to my favorite group of homeopathic nostrums, the "Physics 'R' Us" group,
which includes:
*Plutonium nitricum -- homeopathinc plutonium
*Californium(249) Nitricum -- homeopathic Californium
Now I don't know how things are in other countries, but in the USA you don't just walk down to your local chemical supply house, Radio Shack, or True Value Hardware store and buy transuranic isotopes, so this raises the question in my mind as to where the homeopaths are getting the Plutonium and Californium to make the "mother tinctures" for these preparations. Are they fooling themselves even more than homeopathic "physicians" are fooling their patients?
Or have I stumbled on a case of someone pulling a fast one? E.g., someone is selling fake isotopes to homeopathic pharmacists from which they then make their remedies -- a case of quacks pulling one over on another group of quacks?
http://www.remedia-homeopathy.com/homeopathy/Plutonium-nitricum/a2954.html
Well, no matter, because I haven't even gotten to the best stuff yet. One of the latest in modern homeopathic remedies is:
*Positronium
Yes folks, that's right: homeopathic antimatter. You can read all about the interesting philosophy behind this one, here:
http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2...epage&utm_medium=link&utm_content=channellink
This might well seem the ultimate pinacle of the homeopathinc art, but ever-industrious homeopathic researchers have gone even further into arcane physics with:
*Magnetis polus arcticus -- "north pole of the magnet"
Homeopathic pharmacists, using only shaken bottles of water, alcohol, and milk-sugar have suceded accomplishing what the world's greatest physicists, with multimillion dollar accelerators have failed at: they have isolated magnetic monopoles -and- potentized them!
http://www.remedia.at/homeopathy/Magnetis+polus+arcticus.html?arzneinr=3066
But even that vast accomplishment pales in the glow of what must truly represent the epotome of homeopathic -- and prehaps con artist -- achievement. I had to save the best for last:
*Vaccuum
You read that right: vacuum is now available as a homeopathinc remedy. You mix NOTHING with solvent, shake it up, and sell it.
And, it's available in 3 (that's three) potencies!
I had to look a little further in to this one, and it appears to be legit (as legit as anything in homeopathy is legit, anyway). The person who has done the "proving" on this one has a website, and for a mere $43.00 you can purchase his/her book explaining how this amazing cure for ... um, for nothing, I guess... was discovered:
http://www.minimum.com/b.asp?a=eising-proving-vacuum
I ask you: does it get any better than this?

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