As a longtime user of homeopathy, I have watched with amusement a scientific studies have been published recently purporting to prove that homeopathy does not work. I know from my direct experience that it works, so if science is finding something different, there must be something wrong with its premises. What we call science is actually just another religion that hold there is a world "out there" separate from the observer that can be experimented upon and manipulated to learn its secrets. Sciences believes one part can be split off and controlled or tested without affecting or being affected by the whole. Since homeopathy is holistic, perhaps this is why its power and effectiveness is beyond the grasp of science.
Personally, I think science could do much better if the orthodox mindset embraced the full implications of the Heisenberg uncertainty principal, but of course there would still be the problem of money dictating what gets studied and what the acceptable (orthodox) outcomes are. We have been seeing a tremendous arrogance and overreach on the part of science, which is providing to be particularly impotent when it comes to what one might reasonably refer to as "health". How much difference is there really in Science saying vaccines are "safe and effective" and homeopathy "effective", then forcing its views on the rest of humanity (by forcing vaccination and outlawing homeopathy,) and the Catholic Church imposing any of its doctrines by force? Anyone with a bit of humility would do well to pause and reflect on this.
We know the human body to be quite competent in healing itself and maintaining its own health, which is actually acknowledged on the face of the pharmaceutical drug trial protocol in form of the "placebo". I guess another way of looking at it is this: who gets to decide if a medication is effective? If I believe and have observed its effectiveness as part of a holistic approach to health and I am willing to spend my money on it, why should I be unable to do that? The attitudes that would say I should not are so very similar to those traditionally "religious" prohibitions we have seen for so many centuries.