I'm still hoping we might get the homoeopaths' opinions on this.
It reminds me of a thread on H'pathy (probably pruned because of excessive sceptic input, I shouldn't wonder) where the question was, could a homoeopathic remedy induce a miscarriage.
The homoeopaths first declared that no pregnant woman would ever be allowed to take part in a proving. For various reasons, all of which sounded a bit spurious. Then, no, there was no record of anyone involved in a proving having become pregnant during the proving. And even if they ever had, there was positively no evidence that anyone had ever miscarried during a proving.
This was all designed to refute the accusation that homoeopathy was potentially dangerous, because miscarriage might be a proving effect, and might indeed be an unrecognised danger to anyone involved in a proving.
However, despite all this negative proving data, of course homoeopathy could definitely prevent a miscarriage! No doubt about it at all! Why, someone had even had a patient who had had a miscarriage in the past, and she consulted her homoeopath during the second pregnancy, was given the correct remedy, and did not miscarry. Now what more proof do you need? Exactly how the remedy was chosen, without a proving of miscarriage, I couldn't figure. Something about all these homoeopaths drawing on lifetimes of experience or something....
(And is the thread where the Indian homoeopath described a miscarrying woman coming to the homoeopathic hospital still there? He describes the homoeopaths consulting together and being certain they'd got the right remedy and giving it to the woman. Unfortunately the patient then went to her actual gynaecologist, who treated her and told her never to go within a hundred miles of these woo-woos ever again - or words to that effect - so the case was lost to follow-up.)
So, homoeopathy cannot cause a miscarriage, but it can prevent one. What price similia similibus there?
And actual contraception? Well, one relevant factoid is that in an earlier discussion about the lunacies of provings, I was informed that one remedy had in its repertoire "excessive ability to become pregnant". Exactly how this was determined, how many individuals were involved or even the identity of the remedy I don't know. But obviously, this would be the perfect contraceptive!
So long as the magic didn't get the wrong end of the stick and decide you were trying to prove the remedy, I suppose.
Rolfe.