Originally posted by MrGongGong
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If only the debate were really over
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThought it wouldn't take long for a topic on everyday liberal/secular naivety and irrationality to swiftly and conveniently deflect to the old religious bogeyman.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Post- I guess all priests, mullahs rabbis etc, like the pharmicists in OP, need to make a living by exploiting creduility
try "http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/mar/13/john-gray-steven-pinker-wrong-violence-war-declining" which touches on some relevant points and reaches IMO a quite pessimistic conclusion re rationality in homo sapiens
But leaving aside the unconnected soft-target for non-believers which was suddenly and predictably raised here, I think we should stick to the topic which is alternative medicine. We could all cite countless examples of secular politicians, and others with powerful positions in society, spouting the most arrant nonsense. People should be free to believe exactly what they wish, even if that clearly infuriates Mr GongGong.
Sadly, it is also true to state that conventional methods of treatment sometimes kill patients, All medicines can have side-effects, some serious. Sick people quite naturally wish to get better and will try anything in the hope of finding a cure, especially if more scientific treatments fail. Nothing shocking or even 'irrational' in that, particularly if they have heard the 'quack methods' are alleged to have worked for others?
Many doctors will admit in private that it is impossible to tell what treatment is likely to work for individual patients and the process is often one of 'trial and error', as I'm sure some here will know from personal and often bitter experience.
In short, if Naive Gullibility (often based on desperate hope) works for some who are others to deride it? It is most assuredly a better bet than its polar opposite, Constant Cynicism, which is most unlikely to work for anyone!
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhat is the point of your post here? - i.e. what do you think is wrong / inappropriate about this? A belief system is a belief system, surely? - and that's what's under discussion here!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View Post... People should be free to believe exactly what they wish, even if that clearly infuriates Mr GongGong. ..
...Sadly, it is also true to state that conventional methods of treatment sometimes kill patients, All medicines can have side-effects, some serious. Sick people quite naturally wish to get better and will try anything in the hope of finding a cure, especially if more scientific treatments fail. Nothing shocking or even 'irrational' in that, particularly if they have heard the 'quack methods' are alleged to have worked for others?...
...Many doctors will admit in private that it is impossible to tell what treatment is likely to work for individual patients and the process is often one of 'trial and error', as I'm sure some here will know from personal and often bitter experience...
...In short, if Naive Gullibility (often based on desperate hope) works for some who are others to deride it? It is most assuredly a better bet than its polar opposite, Constant Cynicism, which is most unlikely to work for anyone!
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostPeople should be free to believe exactly what they wish,
But some people live for longer because of alternative medicine. Sir Francis Chichester should have died, and was close to death, when following a regime of conventional medicine. By adopting Nature Cure, he recovered from cancer and went on to do several great sea voyages. On the other hand, when athlete Lilian Board tried to do the same thing, she deteriorated rapidly and died very soon afterwards. There's no simplistic answer.
You getting an entry in early?
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostOops, sorry, ahinton ... and here's silly old off-topic me gullibly believing that this thread would be all about Homoeopathy!Last edited by ahinton; 16-03-15, 12:18.
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Originally posted by ahinton View Postthe benefits of which there is no scientific proof.
It is interesting who wrote it
but "believers" will twist away and make spurious connections
(actually before the invention of the VCS3 there were very few cases of Ebola so its obvious that this disease was caused by the introduction of electronic sounds to popular music)
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Actually what interests me is how much discussion there is about an absolutely tiny NHS spend on Homeopathy, (.004% of NHS budget), compared to the amount of discussion on other areas of NHS mispending.
I'm much more concerned about routine mis -prescribing of things like oral retinoids for very minor skin conditions, which is costly and dangerous, rather than allowing a tiny number of people to have the choice to access a treatment which is in fact only available on the say so of fully qualified Doctors and healthcare professionals.
but thats just an opinion, I guess, and doesnt fit a certain narrative.
But maybe the OP title is right. perhaps if the anti homeopathy lobby let the issue go, the debate would be over, the spend still miniscule, and discussion could move on to much more important NHS spending and care issues.Last edited by teamsaint; 16-03-15, 08:43.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI cannot comment on your silliness, gllibility or otherwise but the thread is about homoœopathy; it is hardly "off-topic" to raise the issue of belief systems when homœopathy so obviously fits into the belief system of those who advocate and trust in it, especially given that it is also something for the benefits of which there is no scientific proof.
There have been countless examples in history of patients with terminal illnesses making remarkable recoveries, baffling medical scientists in the process. If the patients themselves put these recoveries down to the power of prayer or homoeopathic treatments, whether others believe it or not is completely irrelevant. 'It' has worked for them (or so they believe) and that is all the proof they will need!
So it might seem rather arrogant and indeed silly for others to insist they are wrong when they have just jumped out of their sick-beds ... ?
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostThere is no 'scientific proof' of lots of things which, in the context of the Universe, are probably infinite. Lack of scientific proof does not necessarily mean something is false, though in the absence of such proof at least a degree of scepticism is wise.
There have been countless examples in history of patients with terminal illnesses making remarkable recoveries, baffling medical scientists in the process. If the patients themselves put these recoveries down to the power of prayer or homoeopathic treatments, whether others believe it or not is completely irrelevant. 'It' has worked for them (or so they believe) and that is all the proof they will need!
So it might seem rather arrogant and indeed silly for others to insist they are wrong when they have just jumped out of their sick-beds ... ?
About 5 years ago I spent a day in Lourdes with two companions after a few days walking in the Pyrenees - we were due to catch the TGV to Paris early the next morning. Fascinating from an anthropological perspective
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostActually what interests me is how much discussion there is about an absolutely tiny NHS spend on Homeopathy, (.004% of NHS budget), compared to the amount of discussion on other areas of NHS mispending.
I'm much more concerned about routine mis -prescribing of things like oral retinoids for very minor skin conditions, which is costly and dangerous, rather than allowing a tiny number of people to have the choice to access a treatment which is in fact only available on the say so of fully qualified Doctors and healthcare professionals.
but thats just an opinion, I guess, and doesnt fit a certain narrative.
But maybe the OP title is right. perhaps if the anti homeopathy lobby let the issue go, the debate would be over, the spend still miniscule, and discussion could move on to much more important NHS spending and care issues.
What is important though is that people aren't fooled into thinking that something that does' t work is effective because one CAN get it on the NHS.
So it's not the money that's the most important thing but the issue of legitimacy.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostActually, the two are closely related.
Homeopaths like to try and confuse people with spurious connections when all they are selling is faith healing (without the fine wines you get in Lourdes)
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