Still Deluded After All These Years
Someone recently challenged me to try homeopathy so that I can be convinced
that it works. I have been given a bottle of tiny pills (called "pillules")
which are labelled as a 200C preparation of belladonna, and I am supposed
to place one of these things under my tongue every hour until I feel the
effect. For those not familiar with homeopathy terminology, 200C means that
the preparation has been diluted to 1 part in a hundred, one percent of
the resulting solution has been taken and diluted in the same ratio again,
and this has been repeated 200 times. The proportion of active ingredient
in the final mixture has 400 zeroes to the right of the decimal point, which
is equivalent to a single molecule not just in our own universe but in 1
followed by over 300 zeroes universes. Homeopathy is based on the idea that
infinite division of a measure of a substance is possible and that there
is no limit to dilution. 200C might sound like a joke, but even higher dilutions
have been suggested as having effect.
So did homeopathy ever make sense? Well, it probably did when Samuel
Hahnemann invented the idea in about 1796. At that time real doctors
relied on a lot of people getting better just because diseases ran their
course, so doing nothing (which is what homeopathy is) probably did less
damage than purging, bloodletting and cauterisation. Even in 1811 when
Hahnemann published his Materia Medica it might have still made a sort of sense.
But that’s when science took over and homeopathy bogged itself in the past.
Let’s look at what was going on in real science at this time. While
Hahnemann was writing Organon of the Healing Heart and Materia Medica, John Dalton
was writing that matter was made up of molecules and that a molecule was
the smallest unit of existence of a substance and Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac
was coming up with the idea that there was a relationship between volumes
of gasses at a constant temperature and pressure. In 1811, Amedeo Avogadro
suggested that equal volumes of gasses at equal temperatures and pressures
contained equal numbers of molecules. What was Robert Brown seeing in 1828
when he observed pollen particles being bumped around by unseen forces?
All of these observations and theories directly contradicted any theory
which was based on infinite division, and all should have been nails in
homeopathy’s coffin.
The problem was that it was a very big coffin and, as I said above, once
a form of quackery has been invented it is very difficult to uninvent it.
You might think that nobody noticed that homeopathy made no sense at the
time, but in 1842 Oliver Wendell Holmes presented two lectures to the Boston
Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge using the title "Homeopathy
and Its Kindred Delusions". Avogadro’s theory might have been obscure, but
in 1858 Stanislao Cannizaro used it to determine accurate atomic weights.
If there are such things as atomic weights then surely those atoms can’t
be divided. As I said, it is a very large coffin and needs a lot of nails.
Fast forward to 1905, when Einstein published his paper on Brownian Motion.
Here was the foremost scientist of his time (and most other times according
to some people) and he was showing evidence for the existence of corpuscles
of matter. By 1908 the work of Albert Einstein and Paul Langevin had produced
not just nails for homeopathy’s casket but duct tape, wire ties and a welded
outer box.
Or had they?
The Holy Grail of homeopathy is evidence that dilution beyond Avogadro’s
Number is meaningful. In 1999, Dr Jacques Benveniste wrote to me to inform
me of his progress in demonstrating that substances could have an effect
even when diluted to extremes. He said "Our experiments have been recently
reproduced in a major American University and several labs in France. We
should be launching momentarily the international replication by 10-15 other
labs worldwide. ... Upon completion of the present replication job, a scientific
report will be submitted to a major journal".
Unfortunately, Dr Benveniste died in 2004, and I am still waiting for
the results to be published. I hope someone goes through his notes and gets
his work into a form where it can be released to overthrow the current paradigms
of physics and chemistry. Dr Benveniste is no longer eligible for a Nobel
Prize, as these are only awarded to the living, but I am going to suggest
to the appropriate authorities that he be immortalised by the concept of
Benveniste's Number. This is Avogadro's Number raised to the power of Avogadro's
Number, and represents a limit to dilution which could make even the most
ardent homeopath start to think about what is possible.
This article by Peter Bowditch was published as the Naked Skeptic
column in the July 2006 edition of
Australasian
Science
