Homeopathy in Organic Livestock Production

Glen Dupree, DVM

Written for both organic farmers and homeopaths, this book is a comprehensive and indispensiable guide for the application of homeopathy on sustainable livestock farms.
Learn more

Subscriber

Selected Published Homeopathy Articles PDF  | Print |  E-mail

RETHINKING KENT’S OCTAVES
Glen Dupree, DVM, CVH and Susan Beal, DVM
Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy
Vol. 93 No. 2 Summer 2000 pg. 89-93

When scientists and mathematicians speak of an “elegant system”, they are referring to a system with simple and clearly defined precepts which provides answers or results in a straight forward manner, without having to alter these precepts to address any contingency in the given field. Truly elegant systems are beautiful in their simplicity, yet awe-inspiring in their vastness.
Read More

A Different Look at the Law of Similars
Glen Dupree, DVM
Homeopathy Today
2005

Similia similibus curentur - the credo of the homeopath, the directive of the homeopathic practice, the homeopath’s sustaining motto for 200 plus years, the ultimate medical truth – or a huge misconception?

R.E. Dudgeon raises similar questions in his writings: Is the Law of Similars truly the law of cure? Or is it simply a tool to lead us to the curative principle? If homeopaths don’t cure by the Law of Similars, then by what means is cure achieved?
Read More


Concerning the Trends and Patterns of Disease
Glen Dupree, DVM
Susan Beal, DVM
American Journal of Homeopathic Medicine
Vol. 98 No. 4 Winter 2005 pg. 255-258

One of the great controversies of 20th century physics concerns the nature of light. There is evidence that the basic unit of light is the photon, a discrete packet of light. There is equally good evidence which suggests that the basic unit of light is a wave, a continuum. There is also a classic experiment which suggests both are true.
Read More


A Graphic Representation of the Workings of Homeopathy
Glen Dupree, DVM
Susan Beal, DVM
American Journal of Homeopathic Medicine
Vol. 99 No. 1 Spring 2006 pg. 73-77

Since the earliest days of Homeopathy, efforts have been made to explain the phenomena of Homeopathy according to the science of the day. (1) Never have these explanations been adequate because our understanding of the subtleties of nature are imperfect. Nevertheless continued attempts to form a physical working model to explain the phenomena of Homeopathy have been made through the years because there is a segment of the Homeopathic community which is not satisfied with just knowing that Homeopathy works (by whatever mechanism), who are more comfortable with physical constructs than theoretical ephemera, and/or who simply like to explore those grey areas of the unknown/unknowable.
Read More


A Model for Homeopathy Within Allopathic Medicine and Conventional Science
Glen Dupree, DVM
Susan Beal, DVM
American Journal of Homeopathic Medicine
Vol. 99 No. 2 Summer 2006 pg. 144-148

Perhaps the largest obstacle in the acceptance of Homeopathy by mainstream science is that the thoughts, philosophy, and action of Homeopathy fall outside the common experience of conventionally trained scientists. The current experiments designed to increase Homeopathy’s acceptance among mainstream scientists seem doomed to fail for the same reason.
Read More


SRP: “Strange, Rare, and Peculiar” or “Symptoms, Remedies, and Probability”?
Glen Dupree, DVM
Susan Beal, DVM
American Journal of Homeopathic Medicine
Vol. 98 No. 3 Autumn 2005 pg. 172-173

Great advances in discovery and understanding have historically occurred when thinkers and philosophers have looked at common things in uncommon ways. Consider the course of events initiated when Sir Isaac Newton took a fresh look at a falling apple and decided there must be a force causing the action; or, when Charles Darwin looked at the diversity of species and speculated that there must be a reason why they developed as they had; or, when Samuel Hahnemann looked at the action of medicines and decided they could cure because they could cause. All common, everyday occurrences which took on historical significance because someone looked at them in a new and different way.
Read More