Homeopathy
- all the idiocy that fits
Of all the things called "alternative medicine" the most
ridiculous must be homeopathy. It's even sillier than iridology.
For those unfamiliar with the origins and principles of
homeopathy, it was invented in the late 18th century by Samuel
Hahnemann. It had no less success than the conventional medicine
of the time and probably saved the lives of many people, simply on
the basis that people get better from many illnesses without any
intervention, so doing nothing (which is essentially what
homeopathy is) could often produce better outcomes than bleeding,
purging, cauterisation and amputation. The difference is that
medicine has moved on and no longer does those things (or does
them differently and for different reasons).
Homeopathy still relies on the principles set out at its
invention. One of these principles is the Law of Similarities,
which says that something which produces symptoms in large doses
will be useful to treat diseases that have those symptoms. To
determine what can be used for what, various things are subject to
"proving" where they are administered in increasing
doses until a reaction is observed. This reaction is then
recorded, and when a patient presents with the same signs the
homeopath can use a preparation of the cure to fix things.
Jalapeno peppers would be a candidate for the treatment of
excessive sweating and cat hair has potential as a treatment for
hay fever. Presumably cyanide would provide a useful treatment for
death.
To avoid the obvious problem, a second principle is invoked:
the Law of Infinitesimals. This states that the more dilute a
substance is, the better it will work against the
"proved" symptoms. There are two sorts of dilution in
common use - X and C. To make an X dilution, you take one tenth of
the sample and mix it with nine parts of diluent. To make a 10X
preparation, the dilution process is carried out ten times, each
time taking one tenth of the mixture and diluting it. At each
stage, the mixture is "succussed", which means hit in a
certain fashion. Sometimes succussion requires the container to be
tapped against a particular object, such as a leather-bound book.
Preparations can be made at 6X, 10X etc. More powerful
preparations can be made using the C method, where the dilution is
one in a hundred each time. I have heard of M preparations where
the factor is one thousand, but I assume these could only be
handled by very experienced laboratories.
The folly of traditional homeopathy can be illustrated to even
the simplest of minds, a fact that does not seem to deter those
with "minds" coming in under the "simplest"
score. As an example, someone suggested to me recently that a
daily dose of 5 grams of some calcium salt could be taken in 6X
homeopathic form to treat some condition or other. A simple
calculation showed that this would require the patient to consume
49,995.995 kilograms of lactose per day to get the recommended
dose of calcium. This weight of tablets will not fit into the back
of your average semi-trailer, and would therefore require at least
two truckloads of pills per day. Every day. (The same person had
said that 30X preparations were so powerful that they should only
be taken when under the care of a fully-qualified homeopath. To
get 5 grams out of a 30X preparation, the daily weight of tablets
would be just under the mass of the Earth. Every day.)
Faced with situations like this where the choice was either to
eat the weight of forty small cars per day, drink a volume of
liquid equivalent to one and a half petrol tankers or to take a
manageable quantity of medicine that could not possibly contain
any measurable amount of medication, the homeopaths have sought
desperately for a resolution of the dilemma.
What they came up with was the memory of water. I assume
lactose has a similar memory, but nobody seems to be talking about
it. The memory of water voodoo says that water remembers things
that it has been in contact with even after all traces of the
substance have been removed. Strangely, however, it doesn't
remember the bottles or bladders it has been stored in, or the
chemicals that may have come into contact with its molecules, or
the other contents of the sewers it may have been in at one time,
or the cosmic radiation which has blasted through it. It just
remembers the one thing that the "researcher" wants it
to remember.
Then they tell us they can transmit this memory by email, but
that's a story for another time
Water has a whole lot of special chemical and physical
properties that nothing else seems to have. The molecules in
liquid water keep grouping and ungrouping, combining and
recombining into tiny crystals and patterns. This has a lot to do
with the way life looks on earth and why water is essential for
life. It also has a lot to do with why water is an almost
universal solvent. What it hasn't anything to do with is the
idiocy of homeopathy.
Homeopaths have adopted this "memory of water"
nonsense in an attempt to recover from the disaster that arises
whenever anyone who can think thinks about the ramifications of
continuous dilution. In order to explain how something can
continue to act even after all of its molecules have disappeared,
it was necessary to invent the concept of "memory of
water". Despite there being severe logical, philosophical and
scientific reasons why any "memory of water" is a
vacuous idea, and despite the fact that nobody has even come up
with any even remotely feasible way of testing the concept, the
homeopaths have simply willed it into existence. They then refer
back to the weird way water molecules react with each other to say
"see, some of these temporary structures could code for
molecules that they have seen before".
The real problem for them is that, even if "memory of
water" was both possible and proven, it would not make
homeopathy any less ridiculous. You see, homeopaths go further by
claiming that they can selectively control what it is that water
remembers. We have the situation where they are claiming to do the
impossible while working with something that does not even exist
in the first place.
Let's look at making a typical homeopathic remedy. I have
randomly chosen a treatment for cholera, which simply consists of
a 30X preparation of human excrement. I won't bore you with the
procedure because it just consists of successive dilutions and
succussions. It's the final product I'm interested in.
How does the preparer ensure that only the excrement is
remembered and nothing else? Remember how I mentioned that water
is an almost universal solvent? How was the preparation controlled
to eliminate the possibility that the water remembered any of the
non-excremental molecules that it might have come in contact with?
For example, if it had instead remembered the molecules in the
glass preparation vessel, we might have ended up with a treatment
for silicosis. What if the preparer had breathed out through her
mouth and the air above the preparation vessel had become
contaminated by mercury vapour coming off her fillings. Some of
this could have become dissolved in the water and then we might
have come up with a treatment for _____ (fill in whatever mercury
in fillings is causing this week). If she smoked, we might get a
cure for lung cancer. If some of the nitrogen in the lab air had
got into the water, a cure for the bends might have resulted, and
a tiny fragment of asbestos blown in from a nearby demolition site
might have been remembered and a treatment for mesothelioma been
produced. None of these would be of any use to the poor person
sitting outside waiting for a cure for diarrhoea (well, sometimes
sitting, sometimes hurrying to sit elsewhere).
If it were to be proved conclusively tomorrow that water can
retain molecular structures related to other molecules that had
been near the water ones, homeopathy would still be a stinking
crock. Diluting it by a factor of
1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 would not make it more
powerful or make it smell less.
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This article by Peter Bowditch appeared in the June 2001
edition of
The Skeptic, the journal of the Australian
Skeptics |
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