Additional Resources
1 Reveal, James, Origin, Evolution and Diversity of the Flowering Plants (Magnoliophyta): The “Sneaky
Herbs” Hypothesis, Lecture Notes, Norton-Brown Herbarium, University of Maryland, 17 March 1997, downloaded
6 October 2004 from: www.life.umd.edu/emeritus/reveal/pbio/pb250/sneaky.html. Genetic
analyses suggest that a dicotyledonous water lily may have been the first flowering
plant, however. See www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/1999/12.16/angiosperms.html.
2 The statements made in this paper regarding remedy plants taxonomic classification
are supported by the current International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.
3 When the homeopathic and scientific names of a remedy plant are the same, I have
followed the scientific convention of italicizing the genus and species names.
4 Sankaran, Dr. Rajan, ‘An Insight Into Plants, Volume I’, Homoeopathic Medical Publishers,
Mumbai: 2002, second page of Note to the Reader.
5 In fact, some alternative contemporary taxonomic schemes would regard the Pinopsida
as its own separate division. For a more exclusionary view of gymnosperm taxonomy,
see www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/seedplants/seedplantssy.html and www.botit.botany.wisc.edu/courses/systematics/Phyla/Phylum_directory.
html.
6 ‘An Insight Into Plants, Volume II’, p. 920.
7 An extensive list of Cucurbitaceae plants, including twenty that have apparently
been potentised is given in Stallinga, Erna, The gourd or pumpkin family: Some botanical
facts about the Cucurbitaceae, Homoeopathic Links, Volume 12 (5/99): 280.
8 Cruciferae (or Brassicaceae) and Ericaceae sensations are given in Sankaran's Schema.
9 Even according to Wichmann's taxonomy, the Hamamelidae remedies represent a widely
spread grouping: nine families and five orders which would need the subclass taxon
to encompass the grouping.
10 ‘An Insight Into Plants, Volume I’, p. 364. Arthur Cronquist (1919 - 1992) was a
pioneer in botanical classification, publishing the landmark work, ‘An Integrated
System of Classification of Flowering Plants' in 1981. However, he was unwilling to
make major changes to his system to reflect new information. For a critical review
of Cronquist's last major work, ’The Evolution and Classification of Flowering Plants',
published in 1988, see: www.sasb.org.au/Cronquist.
Julia Schiller
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Glendowie, Auckland
New Zealand
Email: julia@avalor.com