digitalman
Just because you fail to understand the concept of homeopathy it does not mean that it doesn't work. There are numerous studies done on homeopathy but the general population (aka you) is lead by the "balls and rods" "scientific" community into believing that homeopathy cannot be more efficient than the placebo effect. The placebo effect of homeopathy gets demystified by it's brilliancy in treating animals where placebo effect is not inducible.
The common skepticism on homeopathy is the result of relying on faulty scientific principles which fail to bridge many concepts - FDA and Pharmaceutical companies are built on these shaky foundations, but are thriving because of your lack of self driven education. I do give you props for at least trying to convince yourself that homeopathy is mumbo jumbo.
Homeopathic hospitals in Europe would not be in business if there was no clinical benefits - hell, what government would pump so much money into these hospitals if homeopathy was worthless? It's the first hand contact with this modality that usually helps make the patient a believer.
Perhaps you should prove to yourself that it doesn't work - I would encourage you to try any homeopathic remedy of your choosing that has been potentiated to 100M or more. At this potency, avogadros number is long, long gone, so there is nothing but water and ethanol, and according to your theory, this should be a useless solution that does not trigger any physiological effect -
The beauty of homeopathy is the simplicity of it - you don't have to pump massive quantities of a chemical to force the body to do something. All you need is to imprint the vibrational frequencies of a compound into water by potentiation, and you will trigger a physiological response without the side effects that are caused by the physical portion of the compound itself.
There are many studies done on homeopathy and the link below lists hundreds of them.
http://www.similima.com/guna.pdf
Mike