https://www.uncoverdc.com/2022/12/02/urgent-action-fda-plans-to-ban-homeopathic-medicines/
If it poses any threat to the mainstream narrative, the FDA and Big Pharma want it shut down. Years ago I attended some lectures on the subject, but I stopped going because it sounded too much like Hogwarts. The dilution factors often exceeded Avogadro's number, and it was hard to understand (or at least validate) its therapeutic efficacy. Like acupuncture, it's been around a long time, and there seems to be virtually no harm in trying these agents. The fact the FDA wants to ban them automatically makes me wonder if there is more to them than originally thought.
So, does that mean treating with a minuscule amount of a pharmaceutical drug?
You need to look up how they actually make this stuff. The point is to dilute out any trace of the original substance. With an allopathic medicine, you can take the dose, put it into a mass spectrometer and detect the medicine. With a homeopathic preparation, you're supposed to only retain the "essence" of the source plant.
If you do the math, they do enough serial dilutions in some cases to achieve dilutions higher than Avogadro's number. That means the solution is so diluted, there is not a single molecule of source material left in the water. It's quite literally just water.
No. Miniscule is huge compared to the amounts in homeopathic medicine. There might be one molecule in a dose. You've heard of chicken soup that tasted like they just waved the chicken over the pot?