Upvote Upvoted 2 Downvote Downvoted
1 2
Homeopathy?
posted in Off Topic
1
#1
0 Frags +

My dad brought some homeopathic medicine home so I did a quick search to find out what it was. I showed this video to my dad and hopefully he'll never buy it again.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8cA_oGiNTOk

Anyone hear of this stuff before? Apparently it's a huge industry. It's ridiculous that people buy into this shit.

My dad brought some homeopathic medicine home so I did a quick search to find out what it was. I showed this video to my dad and hopefully he'll never buy it again.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8cA_oGiNTOk[/youtube]

Anyone hear of this stuff before? Apparently it's a huge industry. It's ridiculous that people buy into this shit.
2
#2
1 Frags +

It's up there with "prayer for cure" and psychics.

Placebooosssss

It's up there with "prayer for cure" and psychics.

Placebooosssss
3
#3
6 Frags +

Homeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.

Homeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.
4
#4
6 Frags +

dont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision

dont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision
5
#5
0 Frags +

I guess people resort to it when normal medicine isn't working for them or if they're allergic. Hopefully people try it once and realize it's just fucking water.

I guess people resort to it when normal medicine isn't working for them or if they're allergic. Hopefully people try it once and realize it's just fucking water.
6
#6
2 Frags +

i have some land for you in florida

i have some land for you in florida
7
#7
10 Frags +

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvH1TnzYch4

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvH1TnzYch4[/youtube]
8
#8
-1 Frags +

I'll have you know I am actually the foremost bridge salesmen in Chicago

I'll have you know I am actually the foremost bridge salesmen in Chicago
9
#9
5 Frags +

http://i.imgur.com/cZrWD.jpg

[img]http://i.imgur.com/cZrWD.jpg[/img]
10
#10
8 Frags +

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H8mYywI1yv4/T8k1j0cK2gI/AAAAAAAAADo/FSlhzPUwj44/s1600/power-balance-bracelet-black.jpg

[img]http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-H8mYywI1yv4/T8k1j0cK2gI/AAAAAAAAADo/FSlhzPUwj44/s1600/power-balance-bracelet-black.jpg[/img]
11
#11
1 Frags +

http://i.imgur.com/CRAgB.jpg

[IMG]http://i.imgur.com/CRAgB.jpg[/IMG]
12
#12
3 Frags +

ey man who u callin a homo ah ah ah ah thx gang

ey man who u callin a homo ah ah ah ah thx gang
13
#13
0 Frags +
Rickdont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision

Pinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.

[quote=Rick]dont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision[/quote]
Pinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.
14
#14
1 Frags +

Just as bad are those who refuse all pills because they're not 'natural'. I live with a family friend who is big on finding cures and refuses any treatment that is not a straight-up cure. He tries to sell me the idea that doctors are in it for the money and will prescribe you poison if it means they get paid.

Poor bastard has a cold at the moment and refuses to take fever reducers.

I'm grinning.

Just as bad are those who refuse all pills because they're not 'natural'. I live with a family friend who is big on finding cures and refuses any treatment that is not a straight-up cure. He tries to sell me the idea that doctors are in it for the money and will prescribe you poison if it means they get paid.

Poor bastard has a cold at the moment and refuses to take fever reducers.

I'm grinning.
15
#15
0 Frags +

http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/dilution.png

http://xkcd.com/765/

[img]http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/dilution.png [/img]
http://xkcd.com/765/
16
#16
0 Frags +
brownymasterRickdont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your visionPinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.

I know there are studies where the certain condition myopia can be improved through pinhole glasses.. but most homeopathic people believe it cures everything

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4bSP6RMQKA

[quote=brownymaster][quote=Rick]dont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision[/quote]
Pinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.[/quote]

I know there are studies where the certain condition myopia can be improved through pinhole glasses.. but most homeopathic people believe it cures everything

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4bSP6RMQKA
17
#17
1 Frags +
RickbrownymasterRickdont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your visionPinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.
I know there are studies where the certain condition myopia can be improved through pinhole glasses.. but most homeopathic people believe it cures everything

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4bSP6RMQKA

That made me cringe.

[quote=Rick][quote=brownymaster][quote=Rick]dont forget to pick up a pair of pinhole glasses too- they cure all imperfections to your vision[/quote]
Pinhole glasses are actually pretty interesting. I never knew people tried to pass them off as vision cures though.[/quote]

I know there are studies where the certain condition myopia can be improved through pinhole glasses.. but most homeopathic people believe it cures everything

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4bSP6RMQKA[/quote]
That made me cringe.
18
#18
0 Frags +

This is a lecture on homeopathy given by some retard who should be charged with fraud for calling herself a doctor.

Watch at your own risk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0c5yClip4o

This is a lecture on homeopathy given by some retard who should be charged with fraud for calling herself a doctor.

Watch at your own risk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C0c5yClip4o
19
#19
-8 Frags +
TrekkieHomeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.

edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.

[quote=Trekkie]Homeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.[/quote]

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.


edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.
20
#20
2 Frags +
svejkTrekkieHomeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.

edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.

No one has proved homeopathy to be anything more than what it is - water. The Paranormal Challenge has offered, since 1996, 1 million dollars to the guys that can demonstrate the effectiveness of homeopathic medicine. No one has won it, and a similar contest has been going on since the '60s without a winner.

I don't think anyone here held science up as perfect. Newton's theories were right for the most part, and were used to get us to the Moon, not Einstein's equations. They were in no way wrong, but just did not explain what happens at high velocities relative to the speed of light. Science indeed builds upon existing knowledge and improves, and only does so when good evidence is put forth.

All that said, we have to figure out truth somehow, and so far, homeopathy has yet to show that it's nothing more than a scam. All papers I could find on the matter are not peer-reviewed, their experiments do not follow any sort of reliable procedure, all of it is dodgy. It is, at best, a placebo, and at worst, a hole in your pocket.

[quote=svejk][quote=Trekkie]Homeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.[/quote]

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.


edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.[/quote]

No one has proved homeopathy to be anything more than what it is - water. The Paranormal Challenge has offered, since 1996, 1 million dollars to the guys that can demonstrate the effectiveness of homeopathic medicine. No one has won it, and a similar contest has been going on since the '60s without a winner.

I don't think anyone here held science up as perfect. Newton's theories were right for the most part, and were used to get us to the Moon, not Einstein's equations. They were in no way wrong, but just did not explain what happens at high velocities relative to the speed of light. Science indeed builds upon existing knowledge and improves, and only does so when good evidence is put forth.

All that said, we have to figure out truth somehow, and so far, homeopathy has yet to show that it's nothing more than a scam. All papers I could find on the matter are not peer-reviewed, their experiments do not follow any sort of reliable procedure, all of it is dodgy. It is, at best, a placebo, and at worst, a hole in your pocket.
21
#21
-3 Frags +
RigelsvejkTrekkieHomeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.

edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.

No one has proved homeopathy to be anything more than what it is - water. The Paranormal Challenge has offered, since 1996, 1 million dollars to the guys that can demonstrate the effectiveness of homeopathic medicine. No one has won it, and a similar contest has been going on since the '60s without a winner.

I don't think anyone here held science up as perfect. Newton's theories were right for the most part, and were used to get us to the Moon, not Einstein's equations. They were in no way wrong, but just did not explain what happens at high velocities relative to the speed of light. Science indeed builds upon existing knowledge and improves, and only does so when good evidence is put forth.

All that said, we have to figure out truth somehow, and so far, homeopathy has yet to show that it's nothing more than a scam. All papers I could find on the matter are not peer-reviewed, their experiments do not follow any sort of reliable procedure, all of it is dodgy. It is, at best, a placebo, and at worst, a hole in your pocket.

The point I was making was that Trekkies arguments of
1. Homeopathy violates physics and chemistry
2. Anything that violates physics and chemistry is bad
c. therefore homeopathy is bad
is invalid, something I am sure we can agree on.

Also 'right for the most part' doesn't really cut it under the best systems analysis for laws. Feel free to use newtonian physics with subatomic particles travelling close to the speed of light to see how wrong it truly is. If you think this argument is trivial, keep in mind the macrophysical supervenes on the microphysical.

Also, people underestimate how vastly effective a placebo can be (note how it is still widely used in Germany and other places http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/8376919/How-a-simple-sugar-pill-from-the-doctor-may-not-be-a-thing-of-the-past.html).
There seems to be an attitude of "you're getting better, but you're not doing it my way, so you're doing it wrong and I want you to stop getting better". I can understand that it can be used for profiteering, but that is always going to happen. A fool and his money are easily parted. This is not going to change overnight, and this cynical marketing is a hydra that will sprout two heads for each one you chop off.

[quote=Rigel][quote=svejk][quote=Trekkie]Homeopathy is in direct violation of the known laws of chemistry and physics

There are people I know who buy this shit and I just want to yell at them for being so dumb.[/quote]

Dogmatically believing science is almost as bad as dogmatically believing homeopathy. If you are going to have an opinion, at least make sure it is informed by reading some academic papers. Not suggesting you haven't, but the vast majority of people who bash homeopathy don't really know what they're talking about.

Also holding science up as a perfect model is dangerous. Before the 20th Century people would have had the same view of Newtonian physics, but Einstein came along and showed them that they were wrong. Physics and chemistry are by no means perfect systems, that can be improved upon constantly (see the collapse vs non-collapse theories of quantum physics - an area which is really up for grabs). Just because it doesn't fit the current system doesn't make it wrong.


edit: I should clarify, I am not supporting homeopathy. Just inductive reasoning.[/quote]

No one has proved homeopathy to be anything more than what it is - water. The Paranormal Challenge has offered, since 1996, 1 million dollars to the guys that can demonstrate the effectiveness of homeopathic medicine. No one has won it, and a similar contest has been going on since the '60s without a winner.

I don't think anyone here held science up as perfect. Newton's theories were right for the most part, and were used to get us to the Moon, not Einstein's equations. They were in no way wrong, but just did not explain what happens at high velocities relative to the speed of light. Science indeed builds upon existing knowledge and improves, and only does so when good evidence is put forth.

All that said, we have to figure out truth somehow, and so far, homeopathy has yet to show that it's nothing more than a scam. All papers I could find on the matter are not peer-reviewed, their experiments do not follow any sort of reliable procedure, all of it is dodgy. It is, at best, a placebo, and at worst, a hole in your pocket.[/quote]
The point I was making was that Trekkies arguments of
1. Homeopathy violates physics and chemistry
2. Anything that violates physics and chemistry is bad
c. therefore homeopathy is bad
is invalid, something I am sure we can agree on.

Also 'right for the most part' doesn't really cut it under the best systems analysis for laws. Feel free to use newtonian physics with subatomic particles travelling close to the speed of light to see how wrong it truly is. If you think this argument is trivial, keep in mind the macrophysical supervenes on the microphysical.

Also, people underestimate how vastly effective a placebo can be (note how it is still widely used in Germany and other places http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/8376919/How-a-simple-sugar-pill-from-the-doctor-may-not-be-a-thing-of-the-past.html).
There seems to be an attitude of "you're getting better, but you're not doing it my way, so you're doing it wrong and I want you to stop getting better". I can understand that it can be used for profiteering, but that is always going to happen. A fool and his money are easily parted. This is not going to change overnight, and this cynical marketing is a hydra that will sprout two heads for each one you chop off.
22
#22
-3 Frags +

No I'm pretty sure trekkie's point was that it violates physics and chemistry based on entirely contrived notions that defy modern science (and the Socratic method for that matter).

You've also completely ignored the point that there are serious ramifications to taking sugar pills on the assumption that they are legitimate medicine. If you bothered to watch the first video here, you couldn't possibly ignore people taking sugar pills as a vaccine for polio.

Alternatively, you might be an apologist for the people that think that vaccines are linked to autism since your defense of placebos can be just as easily applied to that situation.

No I'm pretty sure trekkie's point was that it violates physics and chemistry based on entirely contrived notions that defy modern science (and the Socratic method for that matter).

You've also completely ignored the point that there are serious ramifications to taking sugar pills on the assumption that they are legitimate medicine. If you bothered to watch the first video here, you couldn't possibly ignore people taking sugar pills as a vaccine for polio.

Alternatively, you might be an apologist for the people that think that vaccines are linked to autism since your defense of placebos can be just as easily applied to that situation.
23
#23
-3 Frags +

Also you may want to actually read the articles that you link

German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as stomach upset and low mood. can prove effective as treatments for minor problems and are completely without side effects.
Also you may want to actually read the articles that you link

[quote]German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as [B]stomach upset and low mood.[/B] [/quote]

[quote]can prove effective as treatments for [B]minor problems[/B] and are completely without side effects.[/quote]
24
#24
-2 Frags +
2sy_morphiendAlso you may want to actually read the articles that you link
German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as stomach upset and low mood. can prove effective as treatments for minor problems and are completely without side effects.

I don't understand the problem here. I did read them and it provides evidence that placebos are effective.

Also what is wrong with defying modern science? Non-collapse quantum physics does that and one cannot deny there is a hell of a lot of evidence to suggest that it is a correct theory (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation). This denies temporal asymmetry amongst other things.

Placebos work less well if people don't think they're proper medicine.

In fairness I didn't watch the video because it was twenty minutes plus. I was more reacting to peoples comments on homeopathy. Of course I don't suggest people take it as a vaccine for polio, I am trying to dispel the black and white notion of homeopathy=bad.

It truly doesn't matter what I say though, people are going to minus frag me purely because they disagree with me, rather than providing any cogent argument against me.

[quote=2sy_morphiend]Also you may want to actually read the articles that you link

[quote]German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as [B]stomach upset and low mood.[/B] [/quote]

[quote]can prove effective as treatments for [B]minor problems[/B] and are completely without side effects.[/quote][/quote]
I don't understand the problem here. I did read them and it provides evidence that placebos are effective.

Also what is wrong with defying modern science? Non-collapse quantum physics does that and one cannot deny there is a hell of a lot of evidence to suggest that it is a correct theory (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation). This denies temporal asymmetry amongst other things.

Placebos work less well if people don't think they're proper medicine.

In fairness I didn't watch the video because it was twenty minutes plus. I was more reacting to peoples comments on homeopathy. Of course I don't suggest people take it as a vaccine for polio, I am trying to dispel the black and white notion of homeopathy=bad.

It truly doesn't matter what I say though, people are going to minus frag me purely because they disagree with me, rather than providing any cogent argument against me.
25
#25
1 Frags +

Svejk, Newton developed his theories 400 years ago. You're speaking as if the scientific process hasn't improved since then. Things have to be replicated thousands of times now before scientists conclude that their theories are fact. Proponents of homeopathy claim that their treatments work flawlessly based on no clinical evidence whatsoever.

Svejk, Newton developed his theories 400 years ago. You're speaking as if the scientific process hasn't improved since then. Things have to be replicated thousands of times now before scientists conclude that their theories are fact. Proponents of homeopathy claim that their treatments work flawlessly based on no clinical evidence whatsoever.
26
#26
1 Frags +

I'm sorry, when did we start talking about quantum physics instead of fucking quack job cures? Because last time I checked we were talking about bullshit cures and not physical laws. No shit QM and GR are incompatible, but that's not what we're talking about. We're talking about bullshit cures that are as effective as placebos. They aren't going to vaccinate anybody or fucking cure cancer. I don't get why you're trying to push your "homeopathy is good because placebos" agenda. How would you like it if cancer cures were pushed by drug companies that were placebos? It's just a money grab on dumb/misinformed people. At most it's good for hypochondriacs, but that's more of a mental disorder anyways.

I'm sorry, when did we start talking about quantum physics instead of fucking quack job cures? Because last time I checked we were talking about bullshit cures and not physical laws. No shit QM and GR are incompatible, but that's not what we're talking about. We're talking about bullshit cures that are as effective as placebos. They aren't going to vaccinate anybody or fucking cure cancer. I don't get why you're trying to push your "homeopathy is good because placebos" agenda. How would you like it if cancer cures were pushed by drug companies that were placebos? It's just a money grab on dumb/misinformed people. At most it's good for hypochondriacs, but that's more of a mental disorder anyways.
27
#27
-2 Frags +

I guess I ought to clarify my position again. I am not defending homeopathy, I am defending inductive reasoning over dogmatic acceptance. I would never use homeopathy and if someone asked my advice on whether to take it, I would advise them against it, but to avoid it based on informed reasoning rather that what they are told.

I agree that the scientific process has improved. I disagree that it is perfect and beyond criticism.

Theories about the outside world are never fact, no matter how many iterations there are. Consider Russell's chicken (http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/Russell/chicken.html)

I guess I ought to clarify my position again. I am not defending homeopathy, I am defending inductive reasoning over dogmatic acceptance. I would never use homeopathy and if someone asked my advice on whether to take it, I would advise them against it, but to avoid it based on informed reasoning rather that what they are told.

I agree that the scientific process has improved. I disagree that it is perfect and beyond criticism.

Theories about the outside world are never fact, no matter how many iterations there are. Consider Russell's chicken (http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/Russell/chicken.html)
28
#28
1 Frags +
svejkI guess I ought to clarify my position again. I am not defending homeopathy, I am defending inductive reasoning over dogmatic acceptance. I would never use homeopathy and if someone asked my advice on whether to take it, I would advise them against it, but to avoid it based on informed reasoning rather that what they are told.

I agree that the scientific process has improved. I disagree that it is perfect and beyond criticism.

Theories about the outside world are never fact, no matter how many iterations there are. Consider Russell's chicken (http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/Russell/chicken.html)

Nobody here said it was perfect. There's no reason to not be skeptical of things that have no evidence of being any more effective than a placebo. It's called skepticism, and it's how even the science world works. You don't throw out SUSY until the HLC pushes out more and more evidence it's probably not true, but was "accepted" because it was a theory that could worked before that knowledge. Paradigm shifts happen when they're proven much more true that anything else.

tl;dr You brought up something that has nothing to do with the discussion to try and say "wow you nerds are too narrow minded there's so much we don't know"

[quote=svejk]I guess I ought to clarify my position again. I am not defending homeopathy, I am defending inductive reasoning over dogmatic acceptance. I would never use homeopathy and if someone asked my advice on whether to take it, I would advise them against it, but to avoid it based on informed reasoning rather that what they are told.

I agree that the scientific process has improved. I disagree that it is perfect and beyond criticism.

Theories about the outside world are never fact, no matter how many iterations there are. Consider Russell's chicken (http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/Russell/chicken.html)[/quote]
Nobody here said it was perfect. There's no reason to not be skeptical of things that have no evidence of being any more effective than a placebo. It's called skepticism, and it's how even the science world works. You don't throw out SUSY until the HLC pushes out more and more evidence it's probably not true, but was "accepted" because it was a theory that could worked before that knowledge. Paradigm shifts happen when they're proven much more true that anything else.

tl;dr You brought up something that has nothing to do with the discussion to try and say "wow you nerds are too narrow minded there's so much we don't know"
29
#29
-2 Frags +
brownymasterNobody here said it was perfect. potThings have to be replicated thousands of times now before scientists conclude that their theories are fact.

I don't know why you're being so condescending.
The reason I bring these examples up is to argue by analogy, a tactic that is common throughout philosophical argument.
I am sure no scientist champions their theory as fact, all it is a way of rationalising evidence. Proof is used in deduction, all you can do in induction is provide evidence. I am aware there is a large body of evidence suggesting that homeopathy doesn't work. I don't think it works. If that's what you base you decisions on, good. If you discard it based on the fact it isn't coherent with your model of the world, that's problematic.

[quote=brownymaster]
Nobody here said it was perfect. [/quote]
[quote=pot]Things have to be replicated thousands of times now before scientists conclude that their theories are fact.
[/quote]

I don't know why you're being so condescending.
The reason I bring these examples up is to argue by analogy, a tactic that is common throughout philosophical argument.
I am sure no scientist champions their theory as fact, all it is a way of rationalising evidence. Proof is used in deduction, all you can do in induction is provide evidence. I am aware there is a large body of evidence suggesting that homeopathy doesn't work. I don't think it works. If that's what you base you decisions on, good. If you discard it based on the fact it isn't coherent with your model of the world, that's problematic.
30
#30
-3 Frags +
svejk2sy_morphiendAlso you may want to actually read the articles that you link
German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as stomach upset and low mood. can prove effective as treatments for minor problems and are completely without side effects.
I don't understand the problem here. I did read them and it provides evidence that placebos are effective.

Also what is wrong with defying modern science? Non-collapse quantum physics does that and one cannot deny there is a hell of a lot of evidence to suggest that it is a correct theory (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation). This denies temporal asymmetry amongst other things.

Placebos work less well if people don't think they're proper medicine.

In fairness I didn't watch the video because it was twenty minutes plus. I was more reacting to peoples comments on homeopathy. Of course I don't suggest people take it as a vaccine for polio, I am trying to dispel the black and white notion of homeopathy=bad.

It truly doesn't matter what I say though, people are going to minus frag me purely because they disagree with me, rather than providing any cogent argument against me.

Probably because you're using completely unrelated evidence to try and disprove modern medicine. In the 1800s a doctor could prescribe you with a mercury salve for a fever, guess we better not trust medicine ever again huh????

The fact that you admit to not even watching the video and as a result being less informed as to the context and implications of the comments made here throws out most of your argument already. The fact that you even had to extrapolate the situation to quantum physics as opposed to routinely tested medical trials probably should have tipped off someone as high-minded as yourself to realizing that you're full of shit.

[quote=svejk][quote=2sy_morphiend]Also you may want to actually read the articles that you link

[quote]German doctors are happily dishing out placebos to their patients for ailments such as [B]stomach upset and low mood.[/B] [/quote]

[quote]can prove effective as treatments for [B]minor problems[/B] and are completely without side effects.[/quote][/quote]
I don't understand the problem here. I did read them and it provides evidence that placebos are effective.

Also what is wrong with defying modern science? Non-collapse quantum physics does that and one cannot deny there is a hell of a lot of evidence to suggest that it is a correct theory (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Many-worlds_interpretation). This denies temporal asymmetry amongst other things.

Placebos work less well if people don't think they're proper medicine.

In fairness I didn't watch the video because it was twenty minutes plus. I was more reacting to peoples comments on homeopathy. Of course I don't suggest people take it as a vaccine for polio, I am trying to dispel the black and white notion of homeopathy=bad.

It truly doesn't matter what I say though, people are going to minus frag me purely because they disagree with me, rather than providing any cogent argument against me.[/quote]

Probably because you're using completely unrelated evidence to try and disprove modern medicine. In the 1800s a doctor could prescribe you with a mercury salve for a fever, guess we better not trust medicine ever again huh????

The fact that you admit to not even watching the video and as a result being less informed as to the context and implications of the comments made here throws out most of your argument already. The fact that you even had to extrapolate the situation to quantum physics as opposed to routinely tested medical trials probably should have tipped off someone as high-minded as yourself to realizing that you're full of shit.
1 2
Please sign in through STEAM to post a comment.