So why do we homeopaths insist on water dilution? What's the point in using liquid dosing? Until recently water was seen as a mere solvent facilitating biochemical processes and a fluid used to transport substances throughout the body. It was deemed to have a passive role and an overall neutral charge (it has the same number of protons and electrons).
However, the electric charge in a molecule of water is not distributed evenly—the oxygen atom has a partial negative charge while the two atoms of hydrogen have a partial positive charge. This differential in the inner polarities promotes a bonding with amino acids, a well-documented function of enzymes.[1] Molecules of water arrange in clusters that can be very large and reorganize, with transfers of electrons amplifying the capacity of clusters to retain information. Upon examination, physicists found that the arrangement of the water molecules could become polarized at room temperature when in contact with certain hydrophilic materials, due to their bonding with the hydrogen molecules.
A thick layer of negatively polarized molecules of water clusters rapidly, becoming H3O2—three atoms of hydrogen bonding to two atoms of oxygen, also dubbed ‘EZ water’[2]. That cluster takes the form of nanocrystals that can store information electromagnetically. Its storage capacity even vastly surpasses that of silicon dioxide, which is currently the main component for semiconductors in computers and cellphones.
The EZ water is reorganized water at the molecule level, akin to a jellified substance with properties allowing it to interact and bond in human cells. Many tissues in the body are hydrophilic, for instance mucus membranes and endothelium—the interior surface of the blood vessels. The EZ water polarization may explain how fluids can move smoothly within tiny capillaries far away from the heart.
The process of producing homeopathic remedies involves many steps of dilution and vigorous succussions. The serial succussion and dilution may produce nanostructures in water that become lastingly imprinted once dried on the surface of lactose pellets. Also, Hahnemann, the father of homeopathy recommended administering remedies as a water solution, better able to expose a large area of tissues to the remedy. This approach was only established in his later work (the 6th Organon, written in 1842 but published in 1921).
[1] Enzymes use the amino acids to push and pull electrons, thereby commanding the charges of surrounding molecules. The presence of water creates a pool of available electrons for the reactions.
[2] EZ water stands for ‘Exclusion Zone’ water, referring to the capacity of H3O2 to polarize. The term was coined by Pr. Gerald Pollack, who found that EZ water had specific properties, including higher viscosity than water, and a fluorescent response in the UV region at 270 nm.