Just because I (or others pro-homeopathic thinkers) go away for a time does not mean that we are "broken" (your word); it is because I (we) have a life and have more things to do than to respond to the narrow fundamentalist thinking that pervades this site.
I will be curious which ones of you will be smart enough to formally apologize for your antagonism to homeopathy, though many flat-earthers died believing in their silly beliefs.
I had previously alerted you to some forthcoming research on homeopathy, and it has now been published. Poor
Ben Goldacre has decried that he doesn't have access to the journal ("Homeopathy") that is published by Elsevier, but heck, such is the catch 22 when skeptics insist that we publish in peer-review journals and then bemoan the fact that they cannot access them without going to a proper library to read them.
If you wish to read the FREE and available writing of one of the author's in this journal, check out the work of Martin Chaplin...he serves as "guest editor" of this special issue.
Dr. Martin Chaplin's website and its info on homeopathy and water: This review of research on water includes reference to over 1,200 (!) published articles on water (needless to say, if you think that you know more about water than he does, put up or shut up):
http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/homeop.html
http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/memory.html
--these are but two short sections on homeopathy and the memory of water.
Entire table of contents for Chaplin's website:
http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/index2.html
To learn about who Dr. Chaplin is:
http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/chaplin.html
Professor of Applied Science
Water and Aqueous Systems Research
Head of the Food Research Centre
London South Bank University
You will find that Chaplin is a straight-shooter. He is not an advocate or an antagonist to homeopathy, and yet, he finds that the body of evidence for the making of homeopathic medicines and the therapeutic effects of these medicines is consistent with modern scientific thinking about the structure of water and how it can influence biological systems.
Below is a press release sent out by Elsevier:
A special issue of the journal Homeopathy, journal of the Faculty of Homeopathy and published by Elsevier, on the “Memory of Water” brings together scientists from around the world for the first time to publish new data, reviews and discuss recent scientific work exploring the idea that water can display memory effects. The concept of memory of water is important to homeopathy because it offers a potential explanation of the mechanism of action of very high dilutions often used in homeopathy.
Guest editor Professor Martin Chaplin of the Department of Applied Science at London South Bank University, remarks: “There is strong evidence concerning many ways in which the mechanism of this ‘memory’ may come about. There are also mechanisms by which such solutions may possess effects on biological systems which substantially differ from plain water.”
The concept of the memory of water goes back to 1988 when the late Professor Jacques Benveniste published, in the international scientific journal Nature, claims that extremely high ‘ultramolecular’ dilutions of an antibody had effects in the human basophil degranulation test, a laboratory model of immune response. In other words, the water diluent ‘remembered’ the antibody long after it was gone. His findings were subsequently denounced as ‘pseudoscience’ and yet, despite the negative impact this had at the time, the idea has not gone away.
In this special issue of Homeopathy (
http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623042/description#description), scientists from the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, USA as well as the UK present remarkably convergent views from groups using entirely different methods, indicating that large-scale structural effects can occur in liquid water, and can increase with time. Such effects might account for claims of memory of water effects.
Commenting on the special issue, Professor Chaplin said: “Science has a lot more to discover about such effects and how they might relate to homeopathy. It is unjustified to dismiss homeopathy, as some scientists do, just because we don’t have a full understanding of how it works.” In his overview he is critical of the “unscientific rhetoric” of some scientists who reject the memory of water concept “with a narrow view of the subject and without any examination or appreciation of the full body of evidence.”
Professor Chaplin and Dr Peter Fisher, editor-in-chief of the journal, agree that the current evidence brings us a step closer to providing an explanation for the claims made for homeopathy and that the memory of water, once considered a scientific heresy, is a reality. “These discoveries may have far reaching implications and more research is required,” comments Dr Fisher.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/14754916
--the table of contents of a special issue on "the memory of water" in the journal, HOMEOPATHY, published by Elsevier.