Great thinkers know the power of homeopathy! Find out what Johann Goethe and Nobel Prize winner Brian Josephson have to say about the might of the minimum dose...
For more information visit www.homeopathicrevolution.com
Johann Goethe (1749-1832)
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is considered one of the greatest Western literary figures of all time, with works as a German poet, novelist, playwright, courtier, and natural philosopher. Goethe was a German contemporary of homeopathy’s founder, Samuel Hahnemann, MD (1755-1843), and they both were Freemasons. When Goethe was given an amulet containing a very small gold ornament (September 2, 1820), he wrote: “The jewelers of Frankfort must have heard of the Leipsic Dr. Hahnemann’s theory—now certainly a world famous physician—and taken the best of it from their own purposes…now I believe more than ever in this wonderful doctor’s theory as I have experienced…and continue to experience so clearly the efficacy of a very small administration.” And in another letter he strongly proclaims himself a “Hahnemannian disciple.”
Goethe not only espoused the virtues of homeopathy in his letters to friends and colleagues, but even in most famous play Faust, in which his lead character, Mephistopheles, asserts the homeopathic credo, making specific reference to the homeopathic principle of “similars”: “To like things like, whatever one may ail; there’s certain help.”
Brian Josephson, PhD. (1940- )
Professor Brian Josephson is a British physicist who won a Nobel Prize in Physics in 1973 for work that he had completed at the youthful age of 22 years old. He is currently a professor at the University of Cambridge where he is the head of the mind-matter unification project in the Theory of Condensed Matter research group.
Responding to an article in the New Scientist (October 18, 1997), he wrote:
“Regarding your comments on claims made for homeopathy: criticisms centered around the vanishingly small number of solute molecules present in a solution after it has been repeatedly diluted are beside the point, since advocates of homeopathic remedies attribute their effects not to molecules present in the water, but to modifications of the water's structure.
Simple-minded analysis may suggest that water, being a fluid, cannot have a structure of the kind that such a picture would demand. But cases such as that of liquid crystals, which while flowing like an ordinary fluid can maintain an ordered structure over macroscopic distances, show the limitations of such ways of thinking. There have not, to the best of my knowledge, been any refutations of homeopathy that remain valid after this particular point is taken into account.
A related topic is the phenomenon, claimed by Jacques Benveniste's colleague Yolène Thomas and by others to be well established experimentally, known as "memory of water". If valid, this would be of greater significance than homeopathy itself, and it attests to the limited vision of the modern scientific community that, far from hastening to test such claims, the only response has been to dismiss them out of hand.”
Josephson’s remarks on the structure of water have been confirmed by more recent research. Find out the details about new scientific research that has confirmed the biological activity and the clinical efficacy of homeopathic medicines, as well as which other leading physicians, scientists, and cultural heroes have used and/or appreciated homeopathic medicines in Dana Ullman’s Homeopathy Revolution: Why Famous People and Cultural Heroes Choose Homeopathy (available October 2007; published by North Atlantic Books and Random House). See a copy of the Table of Contents, a sample chapter on “Literary Greats,” and a series of supportive quotes for the book from professors at Harvard, Stanford, Georgetown, and others at www.homeopathicrevolution.com