This paper proposes a geometric-temporal mechanism of possibility for homeopathic potentization within the OUXSPACE framework. The work does not aim to prove the clinical efficacy of homeopathy, nor does it define therapeutic protocols or claim the action of specific remedies. Instead, it asks whether a homeopathically potentized aqueous medium could interact with the human organism through a non-magical, physically conceivable mechanism. In the proposed model, the organism is treated not only as a chemical system, but as a water-structural regime in which hydration layers, membranes, proteins, DNA, ions, and interfaces participate in biological compatibility. Homeopathic potentization is interpreted not as amplification of a chemical dose, but as serial dilution and succussion that may reconfigure the structural-dynamic ensemble of water. The central hypothesis is that succussion can disrupt large water domains and increase the relative role of small, mobile, interface-readable water motifs. Such motifs are not understood as fixed or permanent “memory objects,” but as short-lived or statistically reproducible structural-dynamic states. In this sense, the model does not reject water memory as a possibility, but reformulates it as process-dependent structural bias rather than static storage. The proposed mechanism does not establish homeopathy as a clinical practice. It makes a more limited claim: within OUXSPACE, homeopathic potentization can be formulated as a physically conceivable process of water-structural reconfiguration, interface readability, and selector compatibility with the living organism. This record includes both the English and Bulgarian versions of the manuscript.
Balevsky et al. (Mon,) studied this question.