The most respected medical journals have published some remarkable studies, but you won’t hear about them from your local physician or scientists who have an embarrassingly uninformed view. Presentation by Cambridge Professor Emeritus Brian Josephson at the conference “New Horizons in Water Science—The Evidence for Homeopathy?” (July 14, 2018), introduction by Lord Kenneth Ward-Atherton.
By: Dana Ullman, MPH, CCH, and Lionel Milgrom, Ph.D., RHom, MARH
STORY AT-A-GLANCE A major research conference at London’s Royal Society of Medicine confirmed the therapeutic effects of extremely small doses (nanodoses) of homeopathic medicines.
Two Nobel Prize-winning scientists and other esteemed researchers from across the world presented compelling evidence that medicinal agents not only persist in water, but they retain therapeutic effects in these nanodoses.
Our bodies’ hormones and cell-signaling systems also operate at this super small nanodose level.
Professor Vladimir Voeikov asserted [that] Russian scientists had known for decades that tiny doses of medicines have dramatic effects on biological systems.
Professor Jerry Pollack of the University of Washington is one of the leading experts on water who reported on his research, which confirms water has the capacity to store huge amounts of medicinal information, enabling homeopathic nanodoses to fully impact a person’s physiology. Editor’s Note: This article is a reprint. It was originally published Oct. 31, 2018, on Mercola.com…
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