Well actually I dont really have a dog in this fight having never tried homeopathy and I have neer really bothered about it except to dismiss it as quackery as you seem to...
However I have been surprised by how well it worked for some friends and relatives who were initially skeptical and along with these Nobel Prize winners now having a closer look at it, find it somewhat interesting and possibly a new scientific field that could be opened up/clarified with some effective medical treatments...
You always get those people who are determined to remain ignorant of any new developments that they dont and maybe cant understand, especially if they have a financial vested interest in not understanding...
I guess you didnt bother to read any of that article I posted which while is not an answer, does provide some rather interesting snippets...
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dana-ullman/luc-montagnier-homeopathy-taken-seriously_b_814619.html
"Skeptics of homeopathy also have long asserted that homeopathic medicines have "nothing" in them because they are diluted too much. However, new research conducted at the respected Indian Institutes of Technology has confirmed the presence of "nanoparticles" of the starting materials even at extremely high dilutions. Researchers have demonstrated by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM), electron diffraction and chemical analysis by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Atomic Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-AES), the presence of physical entities in these extreme dilutions. (24) In the light of this research, it can now be asserted that anyone who says or suggests that there is "nothing" in homeopathic medicines is either simply uninformed or is not being honest.
Because the researchers received confirmation of the existence of nanoparticles at two different homeopathic high potencies (30C and 200C) and because they tested four different medicines (Zincum met./zinc; Aurum met. /gold; Stannum met./tin; and Cuprum met./copper), the researchers concluded that this study provides "concrete evidence."
Although skeptics of homeopathy may assume that homeopathic doses are still too small to have any biological action, such assumptions have also been proven wrong. The multi-disciplinary field of small dose effects is called "hormesis," and approximately 1,000 studies from a wide variety of scientific specialties have confirmed significant and sometimes substantial biological effects from extremely small doses of certain substances on certain biological systems."
read the rest at the link...