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Darwin did some very interesting experiments with Drosera or sundew, a flesh-eating plant, well known today. He discovered that however much he reduced the dose of the substance he used – salt of ammonia prepared according to the homoeopathic method with division and succession – the effects were always visible in the plant.
He was quite astonished by these effects and their consistent appearance with every new dilution. He compared them to phero-mones, which a dog can smell from a great distance in the case of for instance a bitch in heat.
Darwin Puzzled
His frame of reference was the molecule – then the smallest known particle of matter that is able to show particular characteristics. He did not realise that the doses he prepared did no longer have any molecules in them, while still being increasingly active. It stimulated the glands and the plant’s tentacles and caused the plant to turn inward. Avogrado’s limit may have been known to him, but pertained to gases.
In 1903 he wrote to the well-known physiologist Prof F.C. Donders of Utrecht Netherlands that he observed 1/4,000,000th of a grain of the salt had a demonstrable effect on Drosera. Here is what he said about his experiments himself:
“And that the 1/20,000,000th of a grain of the crystallised salt does the same. Now I am quite unhappy at the thought of having to publish such a statement. The reader will best realise this degree of dilution by remembering that 5,000 ounces would more than fill a thirty-one gallon cask or barrel and that to this large body of water one grain of the salt was added – only half a drachm or thirty minims of the solution poured over the leaf. Yet this amount sufficed to cause the inflection of the leaf. My results were for a long time incredible, even to myself and I anxiously sought for every source of error.
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Darwin and Homeopathy
by Vaikunthanath Kaviraj
Experiments with Drosera
Darwin did some very interesting experiments with Drosera or sundew, a flesh-eating plant, well known today. He discovered that however much he reduced the dose of the substance he used – salt of ammonia prepared according to the homoeopathic method with division and succession – the effects were always visible in the plant.
He was quite astonished by these effects and their consistent appearance with every new dilution. He compared them to phero-mones, which a dog can smell from a great distance in the case of for instance a bitch in heat.
Darwin Puzzled
His frame of reference was the molecule – then the smallest known particle of matter that is able to show particular characteristics. He did not realise that the doses he prepared did no longer have any molecules in them, while still being increasingly active. It stimulated the glands and the plant’s tentacles and caused the plant to turn inward. Avogrado’s limit may have been known to him, but pertained to gases.
In 1903 he wrote to the well-known physiologist Prof F.C. Donders of Utrecht Netherlands that he observed 1/4,000,000th of a grain of the salt had a demonstrable effect on Drosera. Here is what he said about his experiments himself:
“And that the 1/20,000,000th of a grain of the crystallised salt does the same. Now I am quite unhappy at the thought of having to publish such a statement. The reader will best realise this degree of dilution by remembering that 5,000 ounces would more than fill a thirty-one gallon cask or barrel and that to this large body of water one grain of the salt was added – only half a drachm or thirty minims of the solution poured over the leaf. Yet this amount sufficed to cause the inflection of the leaf. My results were for a long time incredible, even to myself and I anxiously sought for every source of error.
The observations were repeated during several years. Two of my sons, who were as incredulous as myself, compared several lots of leaves simultaneously immersed in the weaker solutions and in water and declared that there could be no doubt as to the differences in their appearance. In fact, every time that we perceive an odour, we have evidence that infinitely smaller particles act on our nerves. Moreover, this extreme sensitiveness, exceeding that of the most delicate part of the human body, as well as the power of committing various impulses from one part of the leaf to another have been acquired without the intervention of any nervous system.” (Darwin C. The Power of Movement in Plants 1875)
Not Just Any Substance
He also demonstrated that Drosera is not sensitive to just any substance. He tested several alkaloids and other substances that have a powerful effect on the human and animal body, which posses a nervous system, but that had no effect on Drosera. He decided that:
“The power of transmitting an influence to other parts of the leaf causing movement or modified secretion or aggregation does not depend on the presence of a diffused element allied to a nervous system.” (Darwin C. The Power of Movement in Plants 1875)
He thus confirmed the homoeopathic consensus that living systems react only to those substances that are in harmony with their own pattern of energy.
Quote this article on your siteNot Just Any Substance
He also demonstrated that Drosera is not sensitive to just any substance. He tested several alkaloids and other substances that have a powerful effect on the human and animal body, which posses a nervous system, but that had no effect on Drosera. He decided that:
“The power of transmitting an influence to other parts of the leaf causing movement or modified secretion or aggregation does not depend on the presence of a diffused element allied to a nervous system.” (Darwin C. The Power of Movement in Plants 1875)
He thus confirmed the homoeopathic consensus that living systems react only to those substances that are in harmony with their own pattern of energy.
To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.
Preview :
Darwin and Homeopathy
Monday, 18 January 2010
by Vaikunthanath Kaviraj Experiments with Drosera Darwin did some very interesting experiments with Drosera or sundew, a flesh-eating plant,...
Monday, 18 January 2010
by Vaikunthanath Kaviraj Experiments with Drosera Darwin did some very interesting experiments with Drosera or sundew, a flesh-eating plant,...
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