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Growth of Pseudoscience Harming Australian Universities

wired_parrot writes "The international credibility of Australia's universities is being undermined by the increase in the 'pseudoscientific' health courses they offer, two academics write in a recent article decrying that a third of Australian universities now offer courses in such subjects as homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine, which undermines science-based medicine. 'As the number of alternative practitioners graduating from tertiary education institutions increases, further health-care resources are wasted, while the potential for harm increases.'"

566 comments

  1. Homeopathic by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think people that use homeopathic medicine should be allowed to marry.

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    1. Re:Homeopathic by pe1rxq · · Score: 1

      I wish they would stop breading......
      They seem to pop up everywhere....

      --
      Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
    2. Re:Homeopathic by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think people that use homeopathic medicine should be allowed to marry.

      Maybe just if they promise to use homeopathic fertility enhancements only. The average intelligence of the human race would not be diminished thereby.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    3. Re:Homeopathic by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2, Funny

      Also they should be allowed to offer and receive fertility treatments where they dilute the hell out of the man's sperm for maximum pregnancy potential. This is a great idea.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    4. Re:Homeopathic by vlm · · Score: 1, Funny

      And if the postman knocks her up, the baby only gets hyperdiluted powdered formula. After all, the lower the concentration, the more effective it is!

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    5. Re:Homeopathic by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh you beat me by seconds you bastard! But you included an xkcd so I concede victory to you.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    6. Re:Homeopathic by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Funny

      I wish they would stop breading......

      ...so what if they used a Panko crust instead? Would you be okay with that, or are you one of those traditional grill-only types?

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    7. Re:Homeopathic by vlm · · Score: 5, Funny

      I think people that use homeopathic medicine should be allowed to marry.

      But only in extreme dilution like say 10e-30th of couples per country. After all, from an evolutionary standpoint, assuming they'd pass that "belief" along to their kids, that makes for a stronger ... solution... (oh I love /. puns)

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    8. Re:Homeopathic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      No way. A marriage is between one vaccine refuser and one chiropractic patient.

    9. Re:Homeopathic by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Funny

      Are you crazy???? Hyperdiluted milk would cause them to die of starvation. Have you forgotten the law of opposites? you should only feed them hyperdiluted syrup of ipicac.

    10. Re:Homeopathic by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is how Bush v. Gore should have been decided.

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    11. Re:Homeopathic by Pope · · Score: 2

      Remember: if you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate!

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    12. Re:Homeopathic by Krishnoid · · Score: 4, Funny

      Would you be okay with that, or are you one of those traditional grill-only types?

      I'd be pretty flexible, but I draw the line at grill-on-grill.

    13. Re:Homeopathic by Jimbookis · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah and if they ever have an accident they can go to a homeopathic emergency ward.

    14. Re:Homeopathic by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Just a little sex goes a long way.

    15. Re:Homeopathic by ArsonSmith · · Score: 4, Funny

      Two Grills. One Cup....of BBQ sauce.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    16. Re:Homeopathic by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

      But you have to let the HOT grill strain the hamburger through it's teeth!

      --
      I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
    17. Re:Homeopathic by formfeed · · Score: 1

      I wish they would stop breading...... They seem to pop up everywhere....

      No, you got it wrong. You see, it is the other way around: the fewer there are, the more it affects you.
      The fact that you notice them everywhere means there are almost none of them.

    18. Re:Homeopathic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The situation is much worse than this article indicates Contrary to the belief in science much of modern medicine is suggestion based on no science at all. This is especially true in mental health services. Begun the the late 40's the DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Illness, has no science involved at all. It is all opinion that is voted in by the membership at conventions.
      VisionAndPsychosis.Net

    19. Re:Homeopathic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While Traditional Chinese Medicine Schools in the west are not very rigorous scientifically, this is not true for China. Curiously (or not) few westerners are willing to go to mChina to study, partly because it is so rigorous and partly because you have to learn Chinese first. (and not just conversational Chinese). My wife is one of the few. She is studying at the Nanjing University College of Traditional Chinese Medicine in a Masters degree program that requires a reviewed and supervised thesis.
      Now, having said that, reality being what it is she and I both know that the Chinese have not really understand the full breadth of what reviewed research is really about. They are, however, learning quickly. The recent scandals together with having visiting scholars questioned about their "original research" has made them aware that they either avoid coming to the west where they might be challenged, or to seek it out as a way to grow in their understanding. Scholars are going both ways for many different reasons. Don't judge them yet, please.
      So, putting TCM in the same boat as homeopathy is somewhat reasonable if you don't look at places like China (and, I believe, Japan, Hong Kong, Korea and Indonesia) but instead look at the places that pad out a "curriculum" with classes in Chinese health exercises (tao yin and qigong), feng shui, and related fillers.

  2. Homie Opethie by negRo_slim · · Score: 1, Interesting

    How does something like homeopathy even find it's way into a traditional school?

    --
    On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
    1. Re:Homie Opethie by idontgno · · Score: 5, Funny

      It doesn't take much. Just a tiny, tiny, tiny bit. Diluted well. It's more effective that way.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    2. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $$$

    3. Re:Homie Opethie by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 2

      I have this bookmark that I keep in my browser just for circumstances like this. This is it. The disappointing thing is, I don't even listen to Pink Floyd.

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    4. Re:Homie Opethie by forkfail · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Just part of our decent into a post-industrial dark age, where technology is magic to most folks.

      And since it's magic, why shouldn't other forms of magic work?

      --
      Check your premises.
    5. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not like the teaching materials cost a lot.

    6. Re:Homie Opethie by Qubit · · Score: 1

      This is it. The disappointing thing is, I don't even listen to Pink Floyd.

      No, This is it. And why do you mention Pink Floyd? Did they do a cover or something?

      --

      coding is life /* the rest is */
    7. Re:Homie Opethie by KiloByte · · Score: 1

      Update that link, it doesn't work anymore. Blocked by the MAFIAA.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    8. Re:Homie Opethie by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 2

      I have this bookmark that I keep in my browser just for circumstances like this. This is it. The disappointing thing is, I don't even listen to Pink Floyd.

      Youtube says "This video contains content from EMI, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds." Sod them.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    9. Re:Homie Opethie by Baloroth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The same way a course in "Star Trek" makes its way into Georgetown University. Or "Art History" or "Golf Management" or dozens of other courses at dozens of other universities. Because higher education stopped being about actual education and more about a) making money and b) making the students feel good about themselves.

      Probably started around the time Philosophy classes stopped reading and teaching Neitzsche, Bacon, Aristotle, and Kant, and started being about... well, slacking off, wondering randomly about whatever, and getting high. Biggest contributing factor, IMO, was when people started to feel they need college degrees, but weren't smart enough or dedicated enough to actually study seriously. So, colleges started making up stupid courses people could take, without requiring them to actually do any work. This allows everyone to get a degree, but makes half of them worthless. But hey, now most people at least have a college degree, right?

      --
      "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
    10. Re:Homie Opethie by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      In the last 10-20 years, a lot of universities have been offering pop courses at the lower levels in an attempt to generate more undergraduate interest. My old university started offering courses with titles like "A History of Comic Books," "Gender Roles in Reality Television," and "The Science of Science Fiction," with some controversy surrounding the idea, obviously. Generally, they were restricted to the 100 and 200 level (though, as I've been out of the academic game for some time now, this may have changed). It was just an obvious attempt to increase enrollment and keep bored students from dropping out, though I never saw much evidence that it was particularly effective in either regard.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    11. Re:Homie Opethie by vlm · · Score: 2

      Just part of our decent into a post-industrial dark age, where technology is magic to most folks.

      And since it's magic, why shouldn't other forms of magic work?

      Next thing you know, we'll be engraving our coinage with trust in religious beings. Maybe that'll fix the economy?

      The problem is we're trying homeopathetic treatment on the inflation adjusted median midle class family income. After all, the lower the income, the more effective each dollar is, right?

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    12. Re:Homie Opethie by alphatel · · Score: 1

      And why do you mention Pink Floyd? Did they do a cover or something?

      Pink Floyd does covers?

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    13. Re:Homie Opethie by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Just part of our decent into a post-industrial dark age, where technology is magic to most folks.

      So long as it's like Zardoz, I can live with that.

    14. Re:Homie Opethie by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 1

      Still got it in Canada. I'll find another one for future reference, though. :)

      --
      Bio questions? Ask me to start a Q&A journal. Computer analogies available for most topics!
    15. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd have a point if a "traditional education" didn't include bullshit like Ancient Greek. There is more diversity in the filler, but that's about it.

    16. Re:Homie Opethie by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Hell, I'd be happy if they just re-introduced Rhetoric and Logic as required courses. That alone would knock out at least half of the garbage we have to put up with in both media and society...

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    17. Re:Homie Opethie by ackthpt · · Score: 0

      $$$

      Fight it. Fight money with money.

      Hire some slock lawyers to sit around and wait for the calls after you run some adverts:

      "Have you been injured, maimed, cheated, lied to or nearly killed by a false healer? Call Dewey, Skrewum & Howe, we specialise in dismantling fake healthcare!"

      Enough of them feel the pinch and maybe there will be fewer willing to go into the field.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    18. Re:Homie Opethie by oodaloop · · Score: 1

      Then you're supposed to shake it. Or something.

      --
      Tic-Tac-Toe, Global Thermonuclear War, and relationships all have the same winning move.
    19. Re:Homie Opethie by jackbird · · Score: 4, Informative

      Whoa, whoa wait a second. Art history is a non-serious field, on par with a course on Star Trek? Having you been smoking the straw man teaching your philosophy class?

    20. Re:Homie Opethie by MrNemesis · · Score: 1

      To be effective, it usually needs to be combined with aquamarine quartz.

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMGIbOGu8q0

      --
      Moderation Total: -1 Troll, +3 Goat
    21. Re:Homie Opethie by Joce640k · · Score: 2

      How does something like homeopathy even find it's way into a traditional school?

      How do you even "study" homeopathy? The text book can't be more than a single sheet of paper....

      --
      No sig today...
    22. Re:Homie Opethie by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Problem: They aren't licensed as medical facilities, they aren't regulated as healthcare, and they specifically claim no guarantees. So they can just say 'Sorry, we provided a service, and you used the service. The rest is your problem.'

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    23. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still got it in Canada. I'll find another one for future reference, though. :)

      Are you obese?

    24. Re:Homie Opethie by WillAdams · · Score: 1

      Except that if one reads the article, while some of them are innocuous:

      Australian Catholic University: Introduction to Complementary Nursing Therapy

      (which is presumed to be so that nurses understand the consequences and interactions of patients using such alternative therapies)

      some our outright degrees:

      Canberra Institute of Technology: Advanced Diploma of Naturopathy

      --
      Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
    25. Re:Homie Opethie by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      All their covers are brilliant, they got a great artist..

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    26. Re:Homie Opethie by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't mind the fluff being taught. What I object to is the teaching of outright falsehoods. Teaching homeopathy as medicine is akin to teaching a history course in which France was founded by Kiss after they'd defeated the Samoans by destroying their Deathstar.

      Courses must be rigorous to be accredited - not three years spent wankibg for course credits.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    27. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does an apostrophe even find its way into a possessive pronoun? I wish you'd just dilute that apostrophe away....

    28. Re:Homie Opethie by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      Ancient Greek is great. You could write a sequel to the bible and call it: Holy Bible 2 - the Resurrected Lives Amongst Us

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    29. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Star treck is part of art history, jerk.

    30. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That would be easy to solve with a new law. You aren't allowed to practice regular medicine without a license, after all, and then claim no guarantees and refuse all regulation. If you perform an operation on someone and they die, you can easily be sued for malpractice, and if you're not licensed you go to jail for practicing medicine without a license. The government specifically regulates normal medicine fields, but has looked the other way with things like chiropractic for a century now.

    31. Re:Homie Opethie by jiteo · · Score: 0

      Next thing you know, we'll be engraving our coinage with trust in religious beings.

      You mean like "In God we trust"?

    32. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, no kidding. No, art history doesn't offer you a direct career path, but neither does Philosophy, and that's been a pretty important component of university curriculum for a long time, as have many other liberal arts fields like anthropology, sociology, etc.

    33. Re:Homie Opethie by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      > So long as it's like Zardoz, I can live with that.

      But can you live with Sean Connery dressed like THAT again?

    34. Re:Homie Opethie by sorak · · Score: 1

      I have this bookmark that I keep in my browser just for circumstances like this. This is it. The disappointing thing is, I don't even listen to Pink Floyd.

      Youtube says "This video contains content from EMI, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds." Sod them.

      You are a fricken genius. If anybody can stop the spread of homeopathy, it's the RIAA. Now, let's just hope The Pirate Bay stays out of this one.

    35. Re:Homie Opethie by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 1

      Or "Art History" or "Golf Management" or dozens of other courses at dozens of other universities.

      I don't know what kind of money an Art History major makes, but there is a lot of actual science involved in Golf Management/Turfgrass, and people in these careers can make a lot of money.

      --
      Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
    36. Re:Homie Opethie by forkfail · · Score: 1

      You only need a few words from that page in each book to make it effective...

      --
      Check your premises.
    37. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 2

      If you look at all the homeopathic remedies available, there's an enormous number of them out there. Obviously, it's total BS, but its practitioners have made a real pseudoscience out of it, with tables of ailments and which corresponding remedy to try (the remedies themselves being some item, perhaps a poisonous substance, diluted so much into water that there's probably none left in the vial of water you're buying).

      It's very much like Phrenology, a pseudoscience where bumps on the head were thought to indicate peoples' personalities and other mental properties. The practitioners of phrenology had a very complex system devised, with all kinds of charts and such, though it was all eventually proven bogus.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrenology

    38. Re:Homie Opethie by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 2

      The problem is in writing a law that doesn't also apply to day-spas or grandma's chicken soup.

      Also, your example shows part of the problem as well: Chiropractors have some value as specialists for specific problems. (Where the problem is actual bone-alignment related, as basically a form of specialty medicine.) But they tend to over-state what they can solve, and generally it's hard to curtail that unless someone makes a complaint. This happens with GP's as well, which is part of the reason for the encroachment of red tape in the healthcare system. Which then has it's own costs.

      But I agree: Good regulation would help.

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    39. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Whoosh!!!

      Hold on. I'll go grab you a step ladder so you can climb up and see the sarcasm...

    40. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Nothing gets by you, eh swifty?

    41. Re:Homie Opethie by blackicye · · Score: 1

      What? no 100 Underwater Basket Weaving??

    42. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh wow. Thanks for explaining that one. I TOTALLY didn't understand the joke until you explained it for us all.

    43. Re:Homie Opethie by jackbird · · Score: 1

      True, but it doesn't merit a semester the way, say Southern Europe during the Renaissance might.

    44. Re:Homie Opethie by slasho81 · · Score: 1

      Money. Lots and lots of money. Schools are a business nowadays.

    45. Re:Homie Opethie by lgw · · Score: 4, Funny

      I dunno, I always found "applied phrenology" quite effective at behavioral modification.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    46. Re:Homie Opethie by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

      You'd have a point if a "traditional education" didn't include bullshit like Ancient Greek. There is more diversity in the filler, but that's about it.

      What do you know about Ancient Greek literature? Seriously? I would learn Attic Greek just to be able to read Plato and Aristotle in the original. How can you write off the civilization that gave us private property, money, justice and the rule of law? Or did I miss your subtle sarcasm.

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    47. Re:Homie Opethie by Rogue+Haggis+Landing · · Score: 5, Interesting

      If you look at all the homeopathic remedies available, there's an enormous number of them out there. Obviously, it's total BS, but its practitioners have made a real pseudoscience out of it, with tables of ailments and which corresponding remedy to try (the remedies themselves being some item, perhaps a poisonous substance, diluted so much into water that there's probably none left in the vial of water you're buying).

      Homeopathy has been around since the early 19th century, and has been a fairly organized practice for almost the entire time, which has meant that it's been able to iterate and refine itself enough to have developed a very complex and mature (though not effective) set of doctrines.

      One thing that's interesting, and surprising at first, is that homeopathy's success in the 19th century was due in large part to the fact that it worked better than many other medical practices, in that patients treated by homeopathic remedies often had better outcomes than patients treated by other methods. This seems to be at odds with the known fact that homeopathy doesn't work, but if you think about it for a bit it makes sense. Remember that ancient practices like bloodletting survived until well into the 19th century, and that scientific medicine was very immature -- the common use of anesthesia dates to the 1850s, and germ theory wasn't generally accepted until fairly late in the century. Both traditional and scientific medical practices were often harmful to the patient -- going to the doctor could kill you.

      Now consider what a homeopathic doctor does. He visits you, gives you a checkup, then gives you a prescription for a lot of water with a few molecules of something else in it. Put another way, his treatment is bed rest, plenty of fluids, a nice placebo, and a little TLC. That regimen won't ever harm you, and for a lot of diseases and conditions it'll always be the preferred method of treatment. Compared with the sometimes incompetent, often misguided, and occasionally murderous regimes of other forms of 19th century medicine, it's no surprise that homeopathy was a popular and successful practice.

      That says nothing about it's place in the 21st century, of course.

    48. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's "descent", Einstein, and the world's never been different. You're just growing up.

    49. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure they CAN make a lot of money, but I doubt there's much in that program that isn't watered-down biology.

      Just like "Sports Science" graduates can make a lot of money. It doesn't matter that their degree is for kids who didn't have the grades to get into a real science or medicine degree.

    50. Re:Homie Opethie by forkfail · · Score: 1

      Real decent of you to point out my descent into near-homophone spelling confusion.

      Always nice to see folks adding substance to the discussion and providing gentle yet enlightened and firm guidance on such critical and pertinent matters.

      --
      Check your premises.
    51. Re:Homie Opethie by Pstrobus · · Score: 2

      Plato? Aristotle? Morons.

      Give me Aristophanes any day, the first person to figure out that people liked to laugh when they went to the "move-ies." He also managed to write political satire in the ancient world and not get killed for it (the audience was laughing too hard to try).

      And yes, it is better in Attic because you get all the puns.

      --
      "The conduct of neither [party], if strictly examined, will be irreproachable." -Elizabeth Bennet
    52. Re:Homie Opethie by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

      What about these "pop-culture" psychology PhD's I've encountered? How can you NOT get this doctorate? All you need to do is pay for the courses, do the time and write some dribbling, self indulgent, narcissistic bullshit!

      --
      I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
    53. Re:Homie Opethie by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      While it does seem a stretch to offer an entire degree in something like "Naturopathy", some of this stuff really needs to be taught. Alternative medicine isn't really that popular as an alternative to effective, standard treatments, but rather for people with rare or untreatable diseases, after they have been told "Well, sorry, but there is no patented, FDA-approved treatment for your illness, and it's so rare no drug company is willing to invest the millions of dollars in finding one, so please go home and die." This happens more frequently than people realize.

      The issue is separating the wheat from the chaff. There are those that study alternatives that show benefits, but will never get millions of dollars for a study to prove it since the compounds can't be patented, and then there are snake oil salesmen that sell ... well, snake oil because they know they have a desperate audience looking for any hope and prayer to avoid their prognosis.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    54. Re:Homie Opethie by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      My philosophy classes were about robots, computers, brains, and logic. Never had to read Nietzsche, Bacon, Aristotle, or Kant. Still managed to get a major in it (and computer science, guess which one I actually use). That's what I get for doing philosophy at an engineering college.

    55. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, no kidding. No, art history doesn't offer you a direct career path, but neither does Philosophy, and that's been a pretty important component of university curriculum for a long time, as have many other liberal arts fields like anthropology, sociology, etc.

      I agree with you, but Sociology and Anthropology are social sciences, not liberal arts.

    56. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My sister say's it is the most quackish part of Naturalpathy. Naturalpathy covers things from chiropractic care to acupuncture, to traditional Chinese medicine, to homeopathy, to nutrition. ND's can do anything a MD can do, and good ones won't trump up homeopathy or Chinese medicine over drugs when only drugs can solve it (eg you're not going to use a Homeopathy replacement for cancer drugs, but you might to relieve secondary symptoms where there is no drug interaction.)

      Naturalpathy solutions are not going to make you pregnant, not going cure your cancer, and not going regrow a limb or get you out of a wheelchair. If you can't do it with drugs or surgery, you're not going to do it with acupuncture and Chinese medicine. It's not faith healing (which is even more BS than Homeopathy.) It's not magic. If you don't believe in Homeopathy, it won't work for you... which is again why it's no better than a placebo. Herbal medicine is not Homeopathy either.

    57. Re:Homie Opethie by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      Except that if one reads the article, while some of them are innocuous:

      Australian Catholic University: Introduction to Complementary Nursing Therapy

      (which is presumed to be so that nurses understand the consequences and interactions of patients using such alternative therapies)

      some our outright degrees:

      Canberra Institute of Technology: Advanced Diploma of Naturopathy

      Just to clarify: Some ARE outright degrees.

      Thank you for introducing relevant facts.

    58. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'm no expert in this, since as an engineering graduate all that stuff seems like "liberal arts" to me, but I just did a quick Google search and the University of Texas' Liberal Arts college has departments for both Anthropology and Sociology:
      http://www.utexas.edu/cola/resources/offices/

    59. Re:Homie Opethie by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      I actually met two guys in college that were majoring in Professional Golf Management. What you might fail to realize, is that it is a business degree, and just as valid for future career options as any other business degree is. Namely, they have to take intro to accounting and all the other courses that every business major needs to take. They walk out far better prepared to manage a store than anyone graduating with an arts and science degree is.

      Now, I'll leave it up to each individual reader to rate the value of a general business degree... but PGM isn't worth any less than any other business degree.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    60. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where those things came from is interesting for those interested in discovering where they came from, but not necessary to know.

    61. Re:Homie Opethie by snowgirl · · Score: 2

      Yeah, no kidding. No, art history doesn't offer you a direct career path, but neither does Philosophy...

      You do realize that Philosophy is like the closest you coudl get to a "pre-law" degree, yes? Philosophy majors often go on to make really good lawyers, because they understand how to make an argument, how to break apart and understand arguments, and law, and also, according to a brochure I read on the topic at one point, they make good lawyers, because they are "belligerently argumentative."

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    62. Re:Homie Opethie by budgenator · · Score: 1

      Not so hard in a country with a carbon tax as you would think.

      --
      Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
    63. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The less words, the more effective the book is. The really potent books have been diluted enough that there are effectively no letters on the page, but rely on the fact that blank paper has 'memory'.

    64. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This isn't exactly like engineering, where a degree will explicitly qualify you for a job in the field. History majors frequently become politicians, biology major frequently go to med school, etc., but these aren't direct career paths, as I was saying before. A philosophy degree might be a good precursor to law school, but you still have to go to law school, just like biology might be a good precursor to medical school to become a doctor, but you still have to go to med school for another 4 years. A philosophy degree by itself is basically useless, from a career standpoint. Same goes for art history. But continue with your art history education for another 4 years and get a PhD, and you can become a professor of art history, which is a pretty decent career. Not that there's that much demand for that, but someone needs to teach all those art history classes at all those universities, and lots of people take the class as an elective rather than their main field of study, just like lots of people (myself included) take philosophy as an elective even though their major is in something else.

      My point is that art history is not a totally fluff program, like "golf management" (WTF?).

    65. Re:Homie Opethie by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      It' worth remembering that the number of placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies showing homeopathy to be effective, is equal to the number of placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies showing surgery to be effective -- that is, zero. Very little standard medical practice has a firm scientific evidence of effectiveness behind it; "evidence based medicine" is a new term.

      I am often amazed that people who demand placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies of acupuncture, will go under the knife without complaint despite the fact that, so far, in every case where a surgical technique has been tested against a sham procedure, the real surgery was no better than the sham. (That's a comment on evidence, BTW, not on the effectiveness of surgery -- the point is not "surgery doesn't work", it's that "getting good medical evidence is hard, because people are complicated systems.")

      Homeopathy, though, has the problem that not just does it not have evidence for it, but in order to work better than a placebo it requires the universe to behave in a manner contrary to our best scientific evidence. "Cutting and sewing tissue has a direct effect on the body" fits our general knowledge of how the world works. "Sticking needles in people has a direct effect on the body" is not a particularly extraordinary claim. But "this sugar pill not only has a large direct effect on the body, but has a different effect than this sugar pill" pings the WTF meter.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    66. Re:Homie Opethie by ajlisows · · Score: 2

      The thing is, you just made an assumption that a legitimate course (Art History) is somehow a garbage class. There are a lot of things that we learn about history through art. Unless of course you think History itself is a worthless endeavor.

    67. Re:Homie Opethie by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I think the RIAA members have fully embraced homeopathy they have already diluted their talent pool down to immeasurable trace levels.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    68. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going to the doctor or hospital today is still riskier than going to homeopathy. What is wrong is people's prejudice and ignorance instead of checking facts instead of creating their own.

    69. Re:Homie Opethie by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      My point is that art history is not a totally fluff program, like "golf management" (WTF?).

      Another one of my posts addresses this. Professional Golf Management is a business degree. They take all the same general business courses that every business major has to take.

      Fact is, that a person with a PGM bachelors is actually more prepared for a career than someone with an Art History bachelors.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    70. Re:Homie Opethie by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

      Where those things came from is interesting for those interested in discovering where they came from, but not necessary to know.

      The idea of the Middle Class (i.e.. the three class society) came from the Greeks. It is interesting that as we have largely abandoned study of the Greeks, we also seem to be abandoning the Greek idea of a strong and chauvinistic Middle Class as the dominant force in society. I'm not saying that the Middle Class is gone, but that it is dwindling in the US.

      --
      This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    71. Re:Homie Opethie by pclminion · · Score: 1

      That would be easy to solve with a new law. You aren't allowed to practice regular medicine without a license, after all, and then claim no guarantees and refuse all regulation. If you perform an operation on someone and they die, you can easily be sued for malpractice, and if you're not licensed you go to jail for practicing medicine without a license. The government specifically regulates normal medicine fields, but has looked the other way with things like chiropractic for a century now.

      Sounds incredibly dangerous. How exactly would you word the law to ensure that, for instance, receiving a foot rub from your spouse to alleviate sore feet isn't made illegal?

    72. Re:Homie Opethie by vlm · · Score: 1

      Next thing you know, we'll be engraving our coinage with trust in religious beings.

      You mean like "In God we trust"?

      Lets poke the /. meme police and see if they accept that a JEFFERSONIAN NICKEL with "In God we trust" is ... IRONIC... given his religious views, and his rather unique bible publishing venture? The truth of the matter flies directly in the face of the 1984 style rewrite of history where the founding fathers were, according to the ministry of truth, all devout evangelical christians...

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    73. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That's a rather narrow field, and exactly how different can golf be than any other business? Shouldn't they just get a degree in business? Universities are supposed to be places where you study the fundamentals of something, which you can then apply, with experience, to many places or industries. The fundamentals of business are all the same; if you need industry-specific knowledge, you pick that up by actually working in that industry.

    74. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I dunno, but are you arguing for total deregulation of medicine? Chiropractors put themselves out there as "real doctors", so why shouldn't they be regulated the same way?

      Besides, we've had physical therapists in normal medicine for ages; people who get broken bones, joint replacements, etc. are frequently referred to them for subsequent treatment, yet foot rubs by unlicensed people aren't illegal yet. It seems the government is able to handle that decently.

    75. Re:Homie Opethie by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > How can you write off the civilization that gave us private property, money, justice and the rule of law? /sarcasm
      Right, aside from property, money, justice, philosophy, what have the Greeks ever given us!?

      Bloody Greeks. /oblg. Monty Python - Life of Brian
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExWfh6sGyso

    76. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My dad was an MBA and during undergrad he took a course in star trek.. this was probably around when TOS was first on the air too.

      Star trek courses are nothing new.

    77. Re:Homie Opethie by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > a nice placebo

      So why does the placebo effect even exist at _all_ ?

    78. Re:Homie Opethie by MidGe · · Score: 1

      If I had some mods points you would have had one for sure.

    79. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      it's probably to do with claims made. rather like in advertising.

      the other day i heard a homoeopathy believer say her son's autism was cured by homoeopathy.

      i knew at that point there was nothing i could say that would make a difference to her.

      when there's people selling placebos to cure cancer, very real harm is done, and it's easily measured.

      i'd love it if chiros, homoeopaths, applied kinesiologists, scientologists etc were legally required to disclaim everything they did with "this is not proven to work any better than a placebo". that would be enough for me.

      now... to teach people what placebo means...

    80. Re:Homie Opethie by neonKow · · Score: 1

      I think the commonly accepted solution is that you can't charge for something, claim it does something, and not have the ability to back it up with some sort of proof or license, and other forms of accountability, such as the ability to be sued for malpractice.

      It's not like the M.D. system has made it illegal for moms and dads to give their children cold medication. There shouldn't be any legal tangle here.

    81. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      though i agree with your sentiment, i knee-jerked a bit at Art History. it's actually pretty useful - there's a lot of art out there and it has a genuine place in society (in fact, i'd argue a society without art would be extremely disturbing).

      lots of money in it if you know your shit. what's not to like?

    82. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      university has never been about getting a job. that's a pretty recent idea.

      technical college, or whatever local equivalent, or apprenticeships, traineeships, etc are about getting jobs.

      what we need now is a taller ivory tower that takes the place of old universities, so the current crop of universities can carry on being glorified technical colleges.

    83. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      made me discreetly lol at my desk.

    84. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 2

      yes, but there's the payoff that in a hospital you have a chance to actually get better.

      if you go into a hospital with cancer, there's at least a chance that you might leave without it.

    85. Re:Homie Opethie by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      how do you placebo control for surgery? cut them open and stitch them up without making any changes? how do you get that past an ethics committee?

    86. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It' worth remembering that the number of placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies showing homeopathy to be effective, is equal to the number of placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies showing surgery to be effective -- that is, zero. Very little standard medical practice has a firm scientific evidence of effectiveness behind it; "evidence based medicine" is a new term.

      You, sir, are either woefully ignorant, or a filthy liar.

      I am often amazed that people who demand placebo-controlled, double-blinded studies of acupuncture, will go under the knife without complaint despite the fact that, so far, in every case where a surgical technique has been tested against a sham procedure, the real surgery was no better than the sham.

      I find it hard to believe that you are not simply lying through your teeth here, in service of a very stupid sort of false equivalence you're promoting for some reason.

      For minor complaints, surgical interventions have been tested against placebo, and found to produce better outcomes. (Or not, in some cases.)

      For major problems, placebo based testing requires something no medical researcher could ethically do: denial of appropriate, obviously necessary treatment for a life threatening problem. For example, if you were a doctor sworn to do no harm, would you ever try to treat someone with a compound fracture of a major leg bone with a sham surgery? No, you would not. Because it's rather well known what happens if such an injury goes untreated: permanent maiming or (rather frequently) death. From infection (if the skin is broken), bleeding, or a fat embolism (bone marrow getting into the circulatory system).

      You do not have to take some percentage of patients who make it to an ER operating room in time and treat them with sham surgery to learn this, because sadly, the real world supplies many patients who don't make it there on time. Their misfortune provides all the "control" information one could possibly desire for the scientific study of "surgery vs. doing nothing".

      Or, let's consider something of a less immediately life-threatening nature, something not involving trauma. This one is personal: over a decade ago, I suffered a spontaneous retinal detachment in one eye. Without surgery to halt its progression and tack the detached area back on, I would be blind in that eye today. There is literally no doubt about this -- I've read up about it, and if nothing is done, detachments of the kind I had will progress until the entire retina is detached and all sight in that eye is lost forever.

      (That's a comment on evidence, BTW, not on the effectiveness of surgery -- the point is not "surgery doesn't work", it's that "getting good medical evidence is hard, because people are complicated systems.")

      Sorry, dude, you're literally trying to promote poor understanding of the medical evidence in favor of surgical intervention. Not going to let you get off with that kind of mealymouthed excuse.

      Free clue: placebo-controlled double blind studies are generally only necessary in medical science when determining whether an outcome is positive is difficult. People "go under the knife without complaint" for many surgeries which have not been studied that way because no such study is required -- the efficacy of the surgery can easily be proven beyond the shadow of a doubt without any blinding at all. The same people may, with complete logical consistency, demand placebo-controlled double blinded studies be done of acupuncture, because the claimed effects of acupuncture are notoriously slippery and difficult to pin down, and the only way you're going to get around that is to use the tools which science has developed to objectively discriminate legitimate but small effects from those which exist only in the mind.

    87. Re:Homie Opethie by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure about that. A&M Universities (agricultural and mechanical) have been around for about 150 years now. Given that universities themselves have only been around for about 925 years, that's a pretty decent fraction of that time, and more than half the lifetime of the USA; I wouldn't call it "recent". A&M universities provide colleges of agriculture and engineering, both of which I think are pretty obviously about getting a job rather than simply acquiring a classical education.

      "Recent" is how university tuitions have skyrocketed due to various factors, leaving kids with 6-figure debts when they graduate; that's only happened in the last 10-20 years.

    88. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right ... because we've made a concession to science by putting a price on carbon we have, in the interests of balance, to spend some tax dollars on pseudo-science as well. I thought the $200mill going the school chaplaincy programme would have already fulfilled that.

    89. Re:Homie Opethie by anotheregomaniac · · Score: 1

      they make good lawyers, because they are "belligerently argumentative."

      oh, yeah? Says who?*


      *IANAL

    90. Re:Homie Opethie by Carnildo · · Score: 2

      Hell, I'd be happy if they just re-introduced Rhetoric and Logic as required courses. That alone would knock out at least half of the garbage we have to put up with in both media and society...

      I wouldn't be so sure of that. My uncle is a professor who teaches logic at a university where it is a required course; about a third of his students simply never "get it" no matter how many different techniques he tries or how much effort they put into it. Around 10% have trouble with simple logical inference of the form "If A is true then B is true. A is true, therefore ____"

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    91. Re:Homie Opethie by Billlagr · · Score: 1

      My now ex sister in law used to wear raw onion rings over her ears to deter a cold. Nothing I could say made a difference to HER either!

    92. Re:Homie Opethie by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Try reading up on the placebo effect. AFAICT it's not the magical self-healing miracle that people make it out to be. It's reports of better health where symptoms are highly subjective, not actual healing where symtpoms are objective.

      The placebo effect isn't going to make your cancer go away, or your bones heal. But it might help with poorly-defined pain, or it might work as a stimulant, or a variety of other things which can be altered easily by perception and expectation.

    93. Re:Homie Opethie by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

      ... in which France was founded by Kiss after they'd defeated the Samoans by destroying their Deathstar.

      If you get around to making that into a movie I'll want to see it.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    94. Re:Homie Opethie by Demanufacture · · Score: 1

      In Australia, a "Diploma" is not the same as a "Degree", see:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Qualifications_Framework#Diploma.2C_Advanced_Diploma.2C_Associate_degree

      A diploma is a 2-3 year course, whereas a degree is 3-4.

      --
      --- "When you're strange"
    95. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been studying theory of Chinese Medicine and what utter shit it is! Surely there are some connections that aspects of it have with healing certain things, but there's always some legitimate reason behind it. Chinese Medicine just teaches chi being everything. If you're sick, you don't have enough chi. It's terrifying and studying it has made me a little nuts. I'm not going to say it has nothing to offer, but the explanations they give are all crazy.

    96. Re:Homie Opethie by Satire+Jones · · Score: 1

      Because it works, now don't get me wrong, science is about proving something and showing HOW it works. The how is still open for debate, but the fact that statistically significant results occur is incontrovertible.

    97. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Homeopathy DOES harm you if you take their remedy and don't seek real medical advice. My mother nearly died because she listened to a homeopathic doctor and didn't get real treatment.

    98. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I majored in wanking at porn school and now I have a great [hand]job!

    99. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet lawyers make such shitty philosophers.

    100. Re:Homie Opethie by Sal+Zeta · · Score: 1

      Or "Art History"

      Try to tell that to a restorer. Or an Industrial Designer. Or even an Engineer specializing on sustainable housing.

    101. Re:Homie Opethie by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      That's a rather narrow field, and exactly how different can golf be than any other business? Shouldn't they just get a degree in business? Universities are supposed to be places where you study the fundamentals of something, which you can then apply, with experience, to many places or industries. The fundamentals of business are all the same; if you need industry-specific knowledge, you pick that up by actually working in that industry.

      There isn't a whole lot different, and that's the whole point. Business degrees are largely cookie-cutter, they have almost all the same requirements, etc, except for a small selection of extra courses that are degree specific. One at my university was Business Computer Science, which was a business degree like all the others, except it also taught the basics of programming. In the same way, the PGM program was a business degree like all the others, except that you also played some golf for university credit.

      So, to answer your question, YES, they did "just get a degree in business". Business degrees are generic and specific at the same time, but far more generic than an A&S, or Engineering degree.

      As perhaps a better example, take the Math requirements for an Engineering degree program at a single university. How much variation do you expect to find? Now, take that Math requirement and turn it into a "business" requirement, and that's what a Business degree is.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    102. Re:Homie Opethie by tempmpi · · Score: 1

      That says nothing about it's place in the 21st century, of course.

      I think the basic mechanism is still at work. There is still a huge number of common diseases where no treatment exists that is much more effective than a placebo. And for even more diseasses the "best" treatment can still reduce the quality of life of the patient instead of increasing it, because the side effects of the treatment decrease the quality of life more than it is improved by wanted effects of the treatment.
      When people first visit a homeopathic doctor most of the time they already went to a scientific doctors before. The chance is then very high that their problem is something where scientific medicine doesn't yet have a good remedy. Often doctors won't tell their patients about that, but instead prescribe something that is a effective treatment for a different disease but not for the disease the patient actually got: a bad placebo with side effects.

      For homeopathy to die, doctors need to tell their patients when they can't help them instead of treating them with placebos with side effects.

      --
      Jan
    103. Re:Homie Opethie by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      They water it down a lot.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    104. Re:Homie Opethie by gorzek · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you went to a shitty college. I hang out with some college students, including a couple philosophy majors, and all they ever do is debate about Kant, et al. They seem pretty well-versed in the history of philosophy.

    105. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen it suggested that the appeal of alternative medicines is that the practitioners will spend more time talking to their clients. Often they'll get some common-sense advice that's mildly helpful.

      I read an article once that said that most often people seek medical attention for an ailment when the symptoms are near the peak of severity, so that people will notice recovery not long after seeking assistance, regardless of whether any treatment they received was helpful. In my experience, on most occasions when I've sought assistance for an acute problem, the doctor would only be able to offer mild palliatives.

      So, I'm not surprised that some people have a hard time distinguishing between a science-based approach and pseudo-science.

    106. Re:Homie Opethie by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      FTFY

      In the last 10-20 years, a lot of universities have been offering pop courses at the lower levels in an attempt to generate more revenue.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    107. Re:Homie Opethie by rhalstead · · Score: 1

      Hey, I resent that! I really enjoyed "The techniques of Bait and Fly Casting" at the "University Level. OTOH it didn't seem to do much for depleting the trout population. Apparently they are smarter than the professors I had.

    108. Re:Homie Opethie by rhalstead · · Score: 1

      I learned a lot from my Logic course. Of course my father who never made it out of the 8th grade taught me the same thing. You can't out BS a professional BSer. He has more ammunition unless someone slips him/her a good cathartic.

    109. Re:Homie Opethie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Double BA (Art History/Visual Culture) was harder than my Comp. Sc and Physics degrees. You have to justify every little thought you put into a paper with examples that came before. Art also has a lot to do with architechture. Every major period in art was preceeded by technological advances and changes in architecture. Art History, to some extent, is a bit about science history. Plus, you can still do Philosophy classes on Neitzsche, Bacon, Aristotle, Kant etc. If you do a Phlosophy degree you'll be familiar at the end with all of those people. 'Star Trek' or 'Golf Management' as courses make sense, as long as they are not entire degrees. 'Golf Management' makes perfect sense for people doing Business degrees (or even BA's which touch on business). Sports management of any kind would be a bonus for anyone going into the industry, so it has a real world application as well as being educational. 'Star Trek' as a course could work on numerous levels, from the science behind it, to the philosophy and social aspects of it. It would fit into Communication Degrees, Media Degrees, BA's majoring in writing/film/art/history/media, Socialogy degrees. It also has real world applications (I'm sure you're smart enough to think of uses that fit into the degrees I listed). It isn't like 'Star Trek' was developed in a vacuum. The OS says a lot about the mind set of the sixties, as well as Roddenberry's beliefs affecting the next generation of Americans (and others around he world).

    110. Re:Homie Opethie by robsku · · Score: 1

      I don't mind the fluff being taught. What I object to is the teaching of outright falsehoods.

      This is exactly why I object to teaching religion as truth.

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
    111. Re:Homie Opethie by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on that, at least for schools providing mandatory education to minors. What adults study is their business, do long as they don't ask the state for a penny. Comparative religion though - everybody should study that. Religion is

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    112. Re:Homie Opethie by robsku · · Score: 1

      I'm with you on that, at least for schools providing mandatory education to minors. What adults study is their business, do long as they don't ask the state for a penny. Comparative religion though - everybody should study that. Religion is

      I'm not sure what "comparative religion" means - english is not my native language - so could you explain it to me? If you mean basically teaching facts of different religions and teaching "what they believe in" instead of teaching one religion and stating that it is the truth, well, I'm all for that :)

      --
      In capitalist USA corporations control the government.
    113. Re:Homie Opethie by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's exactly what it means.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    114. Re:Homie Opethie by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      I used to work (as a sysadmin) for a publishing house that printed academic works on homeopathy. The textbooks are as thick as as any calculus/physics book, and their founder, Samuel Hahnemann was a scientist in his own right known for his work in chemistry. In fact homeopathic doctors take pride in calling their discipline a science and publish journals which at least in form follow the standard academic publishing. I have seen it working with absolutely ordinary people of all ages. It helped me and I never though of myself as someone susceptible to suggestion. I do know how it manages to remove swelling near my knee joint within minutes (a chronic condition). Maybe it's really bullshit but If it's just placebo effect then real scientific medicine needs to really research it further, because it seems to be very effective in some cases, such as pain relief.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
  3. what what! by zlives · · Score: 1

    what no witch craft...

  4. Confucious say... by Zondar · · Score: 0

    Oh nevermind.

    1. Re:Confucious say... by siddesu · · Score: 1

      Confucius didn't have much to say on the issue of homeopathy, he was a philosopher. These days he'd gotten a job in the talk radio industry.

  5. As Horacio Caine would put it by Daas · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seems that Australia is "diluting" its talent.

    YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

    1. Re:As Horacio Caine would put it by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      You win this thread.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:As Horacio Caine would put it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Old meme is old.

    3. Re:As Horacio Caine would put it by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

      Pot? Kettle.

    4. Re:As Horacio Caine would put it by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
  6. But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by scorp1us · · Score: 4, Informative

    These "pseudo science" articles indicate that pseudo science works better than science seems to indicate.
    Plecebo works better than the real thing (warning :vulgar language)

    Accupunture works, doesn't matter where

    Accupunture works

    --
    Slashdot's rate-of-post filter: Preventing you from posting too many great ideas at once.
    1. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Maybe they should consolidate all the courses into a survey-level "Placebo 101" class.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    2. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Qubit · · Score: 1

      But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all

      What ever happened to just a spoon full of sugar?

      Placebo
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
      "Sugar pill" redirects here.

      Ohhhhh

      --

      coding is life /* the rest is */
    3. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by forkfail · · Score: 1

      To be an effective placebo, it has to be a believable placebo.

      Thus, you have to dress it up with ritual or herbs or pins and needles or lots of water or whatever the method of convincing the patient that they're getting something that will help.

      --
      Check your premises.
    4. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, wrong and wrong. Acupuncture works as well as sham acupuncture, and neither fix anything. They stimulate nerves that distract the person from pain. That's it, nothing more than rubbing a bumped knee.

    5. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by arose · · Score: 1

      Opioid painkillers work better than non-opioid ones, endorphin works really, really well. That doesn't mean that endorphin triggers are effective drugs, much less the most effective drugs (kids, don't try this on your pulmonary inflammation). Good news is that placebos can work without deception, fraud and money-grubbing, so research in that area can focus on how to make it a tool for doctors, not a living for frauds and True Believers.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    6. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by vlm · · Score: 1

      Maybe they should consolidate all the courses into a survey-level "Placebo 101" class.

      The homeopathetic version of that would be only one weekend. More effective that way, don cha know

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    7. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be an effective placebo, it has to be a believable placebo.

      Not necessarily. Do a little research.

    8. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be an effective placebo, it has to be a believable placebo

      Placebos are good when an expert oversees the patients health and changes to strong treatment when necessary. However people died because they where led to believe that alternative medicine alone would help them, children died because their parents where led to believe that alternative medicine was the best solution.

      Alternative medicine gets advertised as full side effect free alternative to normal medicine. However who will tell these people to go to a real doctor when they hit 42C or that their cancer needs to be removed?

    9. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Tom · · Score: 1

      There are two issues here:

      One, we know for a fact that it isn't the acupuncture or the homeo-pills or the praying or whatever that is doing anything, it is the mind of the patient. However, the placebo effect requires that the patient believes he has been given medicine, and the psychological effects are very interesting and not entirely understood, yet. Colour and size of the pills, for example have measurable, statistically significant effects. It may be that acupuncture is a more effective placebo than a pill.
      But - and that is the point - that doesn't make acupuncture a science. It makes it a part of medicine. Maybe all those placebo treatments should be folded into a "Placebo Medicince" branch.

      Two, the ethical issue. You are lying to your patient (and possibly to yourself). Whether or not it is ok to deceive someone in order to help them is an interesting ethical dilemma and doesn't have a trivial solution.
      But one thing is - I hope - something we all agree on: We don't want people to major in deceit and receive PhDs in fraud, do we?

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    10. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Working as well as placebo is better known as "no statistically significant effect". This applies to both scientific and pseudoscientific treatments. If your treatment isn't performing better than your sham treatment, you haven't demonstrated anything at all.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Conversely, people also die when they trust the best that conventional medicine has to offer. Context is going to to mean a lot here as in some cases, there isn't much that can be done beyond providing comfort to the individual and hoping that they pull through on their own.

    12. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Pope · · Score: 1

      The "spoonful of sugar" was to help the medicine go down, it wasn't the medicine itself.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    13. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Don't they call that business management?

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    14. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by tibit · · Score: 1

      Suffice to say that such things aren't called alternative medicine for a reason. If it's medicine, it's medicine. If it's not, it's "alternative". That's actually somewhat logically correct: you have the medicine, and alternatives to it. By implication the latter will not work, not on any large population, otherwise they'd be considered medicine. Ta-dam.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    15. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Alright, so we know that herbalism works for certain disorders (e.g. aches and pains, upset stomach, etc) why is herbalism generally referred to "traditional medicine" or "alternative medicine"? By your logic, it should be "medicine" as there are known treatments for disorders that work when the proper dosage is given with a frequency greater than a placebo.

    16. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by livingboy · · Score: 1

      If needles are involved, mechanism is quite clear. Pain releases endorphins and breaking the skin results in small local infection so body fights against infection.

      At least that was a result that we got with horses, used one known brand injection that is sold for human athletes by well known German manufacturer whose nasal spray was big hit in the USA.

      Injections helped the horse, though I doubt that those minuscule amounts effective ingredients had any real effect (dilution bit above homeopathic levels and much below drug levels), it must have been the way that product was given.

      Same kind of effect was also found when horse was injected with his own blood to the muscle (that classic method means that you create artificial bruise by that blood injection), for joint problems effective method is giving horse fluid taken from healthy joint to the sore joint.
      (That is jokingly said to be oil change)

      So when needles are used, I don't think that it is solely placebo effect that causes positive results.

    17. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by volkerdi · · Score: 2

      To be an effective placebo, it has to be a believable placebo.

      Thus, you have to dress it up with ritual or herbs or pins and needles or lots of water or whatever the method of convincing the patient that they're getting something that will help.

      Actually, there was a study comparing a double-blind placebo with "here, take this sugar pill containing no active ingredients", and the placebo was just as effective even when the patient know it was a placebo.

    18. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be an effective placebo, it has to be a believable placebo.

      As I understand it, a placebo is effective even if the patient knows it's a placebo.

    19. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by sandmaninator · · Score: 1

      But a patient's belief that the placebo works is required for it to work! You want Aussies to get their placebos from unaccredited hacks? The "drugs" will likely work better if they come from graduates!

      Healing is a great deal more about psychology than most slashdotters would like to admit. It's a messy business, studying the human mind. The hard sciences have difficulty dealing with something so complex.

    20. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Where it works, it is medicine.

      We know some of it works because we have studied those parts and found them effective, to the same standards of evidence base as actual medicine. However it's still alternative because -

      1) It's based on magical thinking
      2) Practitioners are not qualified/accredited and could be prescribing anything
      3) Many of the effective herbal remedies (e.g. willow bark) contain varying concentrations of the active ingredient, and also other active ingredients that may be harmful, so the pharmaceutical (e.g. aspirin) is both more effective and safer.

    21. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      1) It's based on magical thinking

      There is nothing magical about herbalism if you are actually doing it correctly. Everything that applies to dosing for regular pharmaceuticals applies to herbal treatments as well. Plus, modern chemistry has advanced to the point where the active compounds in plants and herbs can be identified and referenced accordingly which also improves the dosing significantly. In short, it's not based on magical thinking.

      2) Practitioners are not qualified/accredited and could be prescribing anything

      True, but the same could be said for just about anyone billing themselves as a medical practitioner anywhere you go in the world.Just because someone has an MD, NP, or PharmD after their name, it doesn't mean that they are qualified or accredited. If you look back historically, anyone that was participating herbalism for the general public usually underwent an apprenticeship of several years before they were considered ready to practice on their own. These days most reputable groups want two years of study followed by another two years of internships before they will recognize someone as a herbalist.

      3) Many of the effective herbal remedies (e.g. willow bark) contain varying concentrations of the active ingredient, and also other active ingredients that may be harmful, so the pharmaceutical (e.g. aspirin) is both more effective and safer.

      True, but that is part of the reason why anyone that actually wants to use plants and herbs needs education so that they know what they are doing. You can't just go into the woods, clip some leaves off a plant, and expect the same results every time, largely due to the varying concentrations that you mentioned. However, even if you have a consistent, known dose of a pharmaceutical, there are still PK/PD effects to take into account and dosing has to be adjusted to the patient.

    22. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by Nursie · · Score: 1

      There is nothing magical about herbalism if you are actually doing it correctly. Everything that applies to dosing for regular pharmaceuticals applies to herbal treatments as well. Plus, modern chemistry has advanced to the point where the active compounds in plants and herbs can be identified and referenced accordingly which also improves the dosing significantly. In short, it's not based on magical thinking.

      Then why prefer herbalism to other medicine?

      True, but the same could be said for just about anyone billing themselves as a medical practitioner anywhere you go in the world.Just because someone has an MD, NP, or PharmD after their name, it doesn't mean that they are qualified or accredited.

      Actually it does. There are specific standards they must adhere to, the MD does precisely mean they are qualified. You're talking nonsense here.

      True, but that is part of the reason why anyone that actually wants to use plants and herbs needs education so that they know what they are doing. You can't just go into the woods, clip some leaves off a plant, and expect the same results every time, largely due to the varying concentrations that you mentioned. However, even if you have a consistent, known dose of a pharmaceutical, there are still PK/PD effects to take into account and dosing has to be adjusted to the patient.

      They'd be better putting their learning efforts into mainstream medicine then. Of course things have to be adjusted by patient, but if you're using palnt material you have no idea what you're giving them, and as pointed out the plant source material can easily contain bad stuff as well. I gave willow as the example - there is indeed aspirin in there, there are also hepatoxic compounds. You are far better off giving a known dose of a pure substance than you are giving herbal supplements. This is an actual fact. There is no instance I know of where herbal remedies are both more effective and less harmful than refining the active ingredients and giving them at known doses. The possible exception to this is cannabis/marinol, but the retarded legal and moral situation around cannabis use makes this whole area difficult, and AFAICT the cannabis derived medications so far only look at THC, which is far from the whole picture.

    23. Re:But a plecebo is the most effective drug of all by darkstar949 · · Score: 2

      Then why prefer herbalism to other medicine?

      Who said it was preferable? Herbalism is good for some things, not so good for others. Anyone trying to treat all ailments with herbalism is going to find that there are a lot of gaps that they can't cover; however, on the same token, it can also cover a lot of the minor aches, pains, upset stomachs, etc that are part of life and limits the number of times people are rushing to a hospital for something trivial. Likewise, depending upon where you live, running down to the hospital isn't always an option and you want to attend to some things on your own.

      Actually it does. There are specific standards they must adhere to, the MD does precisely mean they are qualified. You're talking nonsense here.

      Again, the existence of initials after someone's name in and of itself does not mean that they are qualified. This is reason why in the United States getting an MD doesn't automatically grant you a license to practice medicine. Likewise, where you live in the world also plays a huge factor as the quality of education is quite variable.

      They'd be better putting their learning efforts into mainstream medicine then. Of course things have to be adjusted by patient, but if you're using palnt material you have no idea what you're giving them, and as pointed out the plant source material can easily contain bad stuff as well. I gave willow as the example - there is indeed aspirin in there, there are also hepatoxic compounds. You are far better off giving a known dose of a pure substance than you are giving herbal supplements. This is an actual fact. There is no instance I know of where herbal remedies are both more effective and less harmful than refining the active ingredients and giving them at known doses.

      Except not everyone is in a position to be able to study for a full medical degree, nor does everyone that studies herbalism necessarily want to do it to help other people, sometimes you just want to be able to treat your own minor concerns. Additionally, depending upon where you are in the world, you might not even have access to refined medications and knowledge of pants and herbs is arguably almost mandatory. Remember, not everyone lives in the city with fairly easy access to doctors and pharmacies.

      The possible exception to this is cannabis/marinol, but the retarded legal and moral situation around cannabis use makes this whole area difficult, and AFAICT the cannabis derived medications so far only look at THC, which is far from the whole picture.

      Cannabidiol is also known to have a strong potential as an anti-psychotic and possibly as a cancer treatment but currently it is too restricted legally to likely show up any time soon.

  7. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ROFL. Yes, it's dreadfully inconvenient that scientists insist that something actually work.

  8. Using what works by S-HubertCumberdale-F · · Score: 5, Interesting

    my favorite quote concerning alternative medicines is... "If Alternative medicine practices worked, they wouldn't be alternative any more" not sure where it came from.

    1. Re:Using what works by TarMil · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well there's this bit from Tim Minchin's storm - "Do you know how they call alternative medicine that has been proven to work? Medicine."

    2. Re:Using what works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not necessarily. It costs significant money to get a treatment researched and approved. If the treatment is not patent-able, there is little incentive to do it.

      In some cases, there may be objections that have nothing to do with its effectiveness. For example, illicit drug proponents claim that certain drugs can treat various ailments. But even if that was true, the drug is not going to get approved as a medicine due to its history (some rare exceptions exist). Likewise, if there is any validity to some popular alternative medicine practices, approval will be an difficult due to its history. (Difficult relative to a new synthetic chemical or a new practice that originated in a modern hospital.)

    3. Re:Using what works by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      If a major drug company had a patent on a pill that had the same test results as many of these treatments, there is no doubt in my mind that it would be on the market, and that it would be less likely to cause problems than many of the other pills currently on the market. But if it can't be put in a pill, the economic incentives run precisely in the other direction.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    4. Re:Using what works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alternative medicine is either medicine that has not been proved to work, or been proved not to work. ...

    5. Re:Using what works by medv4380 · · Score: 1

      Asprin is just the old folk remedy of Willow Bark Tea purified to just its active ingredient.

    6. Re:Using what works by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. It costs significant money to get a treatment researched and approved. If the treatment is not patent-able, there is little incentive to do it.

      And yet they still make aspirin.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    7. Re:Using what works by Dasher42 · · Score: 1

      If they work but they can't be patented for major profits for pharmaceutical partners, then they're the devil. Keep the bias in these sources in mind; I've seen folks suffer because completely legitimate generic drugs are being taken off the market in favor of new, patented medicines with worse side effects. Alternative medicine is what they'd like to take off the market too!

    8. Re:Using what works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Different AC here.

      Not necessarily. It costs significant money to get a treatment researched and approved. If the treatment is not patent-able, there is little incentive to do it.

      And yet they still make aspirin.

      Because "they" didn't need to put up any money to develop aspirin or prove through clinical trials that it is effective and not poisonous. When "they" develop new treatments under those parameters, it's reasonable for "them" to be entitled to patents on those treatments (for a time) lest another "them" come along and render their work moot to them.

    9. Re:Using what works by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't worry to much about attributing that to anyone. It's so obvious anyone who gives any thought to the matter is bound to come up with a realization along those same lines.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    10. Re:Using what works by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. In countries with universal health care the government has an incentive to fund such research.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    11. Re:Using what works by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Aspirin in acetylsalicylic acid. The active ingredient in willow bark is salicin. They are different, but closely related chemicals.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  9. I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by Gordonjcp · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, I skimmed the first chapter of a book on it, anyway. Less is more, right?

    1. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy

      Me too! It doesn't work. The end.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by Bengie · · Score: 1

      Anyone else have the voice from "End of the World" saying "THE END!"?

      F'n kangaroos

    3. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by SockPuppetOfTheWeek · · Score: 2

      Guess what, no it isn't. It's produced by injecting an animal with enough venom to produce an immune response, then harvesting the immune cells which target the venom. It's as much homeopathy as vaccination, which is to say, it's not.

    4. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This only works if, every time you read a page, you then beat your head against a bottle of water. Otherwise it's just silly.

    5. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      i've never heard of anit-venom anywhere. so i suppose you could be right.

    6. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by ynp7 · · Score: 1

      Me too! I drink water ALL the time.

    7. Re:I'm a world-leading expert on homeopathy by prionic6 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work for everything, or even most things. But have you ever heard of snakebite anit-venom. Guess what, that's homeopathic!

      You're confusing it with snake oil.

  10. I've got a solution by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Keep offering the courses, but let Penn and Teller teach them.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:I've got a solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are their qualifications? Are they certified in it?

      If I wanted to know how a magic trick worked or get a (LOUD) opinion on something like this they would be at the top of my list. Teaching... not so much. They are entertainers do not confuse them with teachers.

      Look with a skeptical eye upon everyone around you. Even those you agree with. If you do not follow that, you are missing their message...

      They fall many times into the same trap they accuse others of. They are tricksters and fraudsters. They think everyone else must be like them. It is their world view. They are bright enough to know it too (and have said it many times). Just be careful with them. Their magic shows are top notch (I would expect no less from professional magicians). Their opinion show is grating. Which mostly consists of Penn having the same meltdown (which he has been milking for years).

    2. Re:I've got a solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'd make great chiropractic professors. I believe the verbiage Penn used in that episode of Bullshit! was "baby-twisting motherfuckers".

    3. Re:I've got a solution by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Your solution is not dilluted enough. Just let P teach them

    4. Re:I've got a solution by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      What are their qualifications?

      Far better any of the practitioners teaching these courses, I suspect. And certainly more honest.

      Are they certified in it?

      I'm not sure how someone becomes certified in "homeopathy," "faith healing," etc. But the thought does conjure up some amusing images.

      They are tricksters and fraudsters. They think everyone else must be like them.

      They have debunked many frauds, it's true. But they do accept that many of the true believers really do believe in whatever bunk they're selling. What they DO NOT accept is that this belief makes the bunk any more credible.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    5. Re:I've got a solution by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      Your solution is not dilluted enough. Just let P teach them

      Actually, it should be Teller, since Teller rarely speaks, following the "less is more" precept would make him the more homeopathic edumacator.

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
  11. Re:Fundamentalists by SJHillman · · Score: 1

    Eh, not really. Scientists use human perception to form a question, then try to measure what causes it. Just because something isn't measurable now does not mean it can't be measured; if what you said was true, then fun stuff like black holes, dark matter and human intelligence would be considered myths because we haven't found a direct way to measure them yet.

  12. Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by tjlee · · Score: 2

    Practitioners and patients of Homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine seem to believe that they work. Wouldn't it be good to devote some resources towards scientific study of these practices? Even if it's to prove that the placebo effect is playing a part, at least science is advanced. Just because we don't understand whether/how it works doesn't rule out the possibility that there might be something to be discovered. If we want to be objective about it, why not study it?

    1. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Aladrin · · Score: 4, Informative

      I think you'll find that it's so roundly rejected *because* it's already been researched properly and didn't hold up.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    2. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by JustShootMe · · Score: 0

      Some scientists do not think it is worth their time to study things that they have already decided are not worth their time to study.

      By the way, I'm not defending homeopathy. But there are other things out there - many having to do with energy work - that do not have foundations in current science but are sworn by. I have personally felt its effect firsthand.

      --
      For linux tips: http://www.linuxtipsblog.com
    3. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by paskie · · Score: 1

      There were numerous clinical trials conducted. As a whole, they did not confirm efficacy of these treatments.

      I recommend excellent book "Trick or Treatment" as a good popular introduction to the field of alternative medicine and overview of scientific results.

      --
      It's not the fall that kills you. It's the sudden stop at the end. -Douglas Adams
    4. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      Is there anything specific that we don't already know to a reasonable level that you'd propose be studied? Be specific - check the journals and see how much time and money is already being spent on this research.

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
    5. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by vlm · · Score: 1

      Practitioners and patients of Homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine seem to believe that they work. Wouldn't it be good to devote some resources towards scientific study of these practices? Even if it's to prove that the placebo effect is playing a part, at least science is advanced. Just because we don't understand whether/how it works doesn't rule out the possibility that there might be something to be discovered. If we want to be objective about it, why not study it?

      Its more profitable to study self deception and con-artistry in the School-of-Economics or Poli-Sci or the business classes or religion classes if your institution has them. You could argue that's all those guys do all day.

      Taking "their thing" into the science labs would probably be about as inappropriate as trying to wedge voltammetry electrochemical analysis into the theology class, just a big WTF for all involved..

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    6. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Conducting a course which would debunk the very subject it is about is way too controversial for most universities. No way would they have the guts to be so politically-incorrect as to suggest that some religious-based faith healing was so much humbug, lest they bring down the wrath of the various interest groups who actually believe in this stuff. I suspect the "professors" who teach these courses are probably true believers/practitioners who may, at best, give cursory lip-service to any idea that they are a mere placebo.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    7. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by PRMan · · Score: 1

      Taking shark cartilage for joint problems and arthritis was constantly rejected as bunk, no matter how many times the studies showed that it was effective. Renaming it to its "scientific" components, "Glucosamine and Chondroitin" gave it a credibility it never had as "Shark Cartilage". Even scientists are distracted by human frailty such as pretty packaging (a name in their case) and a sense of importance.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    8. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Some scientists do not think it is worth their time to study things that they have already decided are not worth their time to study.

      That's tautologically true.

    9. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by arose · · Score: 2

      I have personally felt its effect firsthand.

      People feel the presence of god on a regular basis. People can hear the difference between "two cables" by someone telling them that cables have been switched though the equipment is untouched. People can remember things that weren't there with a little bit of suggestion. People have felt the Bad Eye on them. People have their pain soothed by a sugar pill, even knowing it is a sugar pill. I don't believe myself to be exempt, do you?

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    10. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by PRMan · · Score: 1

      Studies have repeatedly shown that prayer helps in hospital situations. Why? Maybe people just feel comforted or a sense that somebody cares about them and wants them to make it. What's the scientific explanation? I haven't seen a good one. But more people recover and have less complications.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    11. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      What's the scientific explanation?

      It's called the Placebo Effect. And it works equally well whether you're praying to Mohammad, praying to Jesus, or even if you just think you're getting some new, effective treatment (which could just consist of sugar pills). It's not indicative that some demigod somewhere is helping you heal, only that your attitude can have a huge impact on your recovery.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    12. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Savantissimo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      People (pseudo-skeptics) keep saying this, hand waving at the unspecified research they haven't read that supposedly backs them up, but the meta-analyses keep refuting their gut beliefs.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    13. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by GungaDan · · Score: 1

      "Studies have repeatedly shown that prayer helps in hospital situations"

      Cite for that? Or did you just hear it from your voodoo priestess and take it as gospel? 'Cuz the most recent study I've seen says the opposite:

      http://www.dukehealth.org/health_library/news/9136

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    14. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or maybe part of it could be that many studies of glucosamine and chondroitin still show no effect greater than a placebo. Or that some of the studies that show more mixed results depend on forms that are not easily absorbed from shark cartilage. Or maybe a lot of it has to do with those chemicals being sourced from more common cartilages like from cows and pigs, so it is not as associated with sharks, unlike all of the claims related to cancer instead of joint problems.

    15. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Hatta · · Score: 3, Informative

      If shark cartiledge was shown to be effective "many times", then how come the best clinical research we have on glucosamine/chondroitin still inconclusive?

      Researchers found that:

              Participants taking the positive control, celecoxib, experienced statistically significant pain relief versus placeboâ"about 70 percent of those taking celecoxib had a 20 percent or greater reduction in pain versus about 60 percent for placebo.
              Overall, there were no significant differences between the other treatments tested and placebo.
              For a subset of participants with moderate-to-severe pain, glucosamine combined with chondroitin sulfate provided statistically significant pain relief compared with placeboâ"about 79 percent had a 20 percent or greater reduction in pain versus about 54 percent for placebo. According to the researchers, because of the small size of this subgroup these findings should be considered preliminary and need to be confirmed in further studies.
              For participants in the mild pain subset, glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate together or alone did not provide statistically significant pain relief.

      And here's the result of a 2010 metaanalysis of the literature:

      For none of the estimates did the 95% credible intervals cross the boundary of the minimal clinically important difference. Industry independent trials showed smaller effects than commercially funded trials (P=0.02 for interaction). The differences in changes in minimal width of joint space were all minute, with 95% credible intervals overlapping zero. Conclusions Compared with placebo, glucosamine, chondroitin, and their combination do not reduce joint pain or have an impact on narrowing of joint space. Health authorities and health insurers should not cover the costs of these preparations, and new prescriptions to patients who have not received treatment should be discouraged.

      So, does it make sense now why nobody paid attention to the research showing that shark cartilidge was efficacious? That research was almost certainly flawed, because serious research institutions have been unable to reproduce any effect.
      You have been duped.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    16. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Sorry, here's a link to the meta-analysis I quoted.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    17. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      However, the catch is that Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) is a large enough area that you can invalidate part of it without disproving everything. Chinese herbalism is part of TCM and there are a lot of "cures" under that and while some of them you might be able to dismiss outright as there know mechanism for why something might work, there can be other treatments that are highly effective that haven't been tested yet because some others under the same umbrella have been dismissed outright.

    18. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 1

      Studies have repeatedly shown that prayer helps in hospital situations. Why? Maybe people just feel comforted or a sense that somebody cares about them and wants them to make it. What's the scientific explanation? I haven't seen a good one. But more people recover and have less complications.

      Show me a double blind experiment which shows prayers work? Properly conducted double blind experiments has shown that prayer does not work. The experiments which do show a result, the patient knows that they are being prayed for and/or are doing the praying themselves. Sure it may help these people but this is due to the ritual causing the person to self heal. No super power is involved at all.

      If you disagree and think prayer does work in the double blind, go and speak to http://www.randi.org/site/index.php/1m-challenge.html and he will give you $1million when you succeed.

      --
      wot no sig
    19. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Hatta · · Score: 2

      I have personally felt its effect firsthand.

      This attitude ignores everything we know about the capacity for humans for self deception. Your eyes lie. If you don't have well controlled data, you don't really know anything at all.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    20. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some scientists do not think it is worth their time to study things that they have already decided are not worth their time to study.

      That's tautologically true.

      The best kind of true!

    21. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by LordLucless · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, science has demonstrated that some alternative medicines, for some treatments, are significantly more effective than placebo. To wit, chiropractcy and acupuncture both proved effective, under scientific scrutiny, for headaches and upper back pain.

      The reason they're alternative is because science doesn't understand the reason they work - as the explanations given by the practitioners are usually bunk (as is the wide list of ailments they claim to be able to correct). But there are nuggets of useful medicine buried in the dross.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    22. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which studies? stop waving your arms around and cough up the goods.

    23. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Where's the study about acupuncture actually working?

      All I've ever seen is that it works as well as a placebo. Chiropractice, or whatever it's called, may well work on limited conditions like back pain, as it is bone manipulation. More study of any positive effects and how to reproduce them would be good.

      Acupuncture, OTOH, I was pretty sure had been shown to be nothing but a sham.

    24. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by LordLucless · · Score: 1
      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    25. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Well, the first meta-study covers such a vast variety of different practices I find it hard to accept any sort of concrete conclusion there. And the second one there says nothing is certain, and specifically says in its discussion section:

      "These findings should be seen in the light of recent results from
      high-quality randomized controlled trials. Cherkin et al. [14] have
      shown that, for chronic low back pain, individualized acupuncture is not better in reducing symptoms than formula acupuncture or sham acupuncture with a toothpick that does not penetrate the skin.
      All 3 forms of acupuncture, however, were more effective than usual care. The authors consider, therefore, that the benefits of acupunc-ture ââresulted from nonspecific effects such as therapist conviction, patient enthusiasm, or receiving a treatment believed to be helpful ... Adequately controlling for nonspecific effects in future is likely to demonstrate that acupuncture has no or few specific effects on pain
      â(TM)â(TM)

      Which seems to agree with the hypothesis that it's a placebo.

    26. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by UpnAtom · · Score: 1

      The first one is a Cochrane study which means they're vastly better scientists than you.

      The second thing you have to remember is that while homeopathy is perfect for testing vs placebo, how on earth do you 'blind' the acupuncturist? What if sham needles have an active therapeutic effect?

      The whole double-blind paradigm is broken for acupuncture, all bodywork modalities inc physiotherapy, dental treatment, psychotherapy, cancer treatment etc. And it is deliberately broken by drug companies to skew results in favour of their products.

      Medical science? Don't make me laugh.

    27. Re:Perhaps study these treatments scientifically? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      The first one is a Cochrane study which means they're vastly better scientists than you.

      Yup, it does. Which is why I find this anomalous result in a meta-study odd, especially as it has garnered little to no comment from anyone other than those who espouse pseudo-science. I shall continue to watch out for honest commentary on the subject.

      The second thing you have to remember is that while homeopathy is perfect for testing vs placebo, how on earth do you 'blind' the acupuncturist? What if sham needles have an active therapeutic effect?

      Maybe you should read about how it was done, your argument from ignorance only shows one thing, your ignorance.

      The whole double-blind paradigm is broken for acupuncture, all bodywork modalities inc physiotherapy, dental treatment, psychotherapy, cancer treatment etc. And it is deliberately broken by drug companies to skew results in favour of their products.

      Citations, multiple, needed, otherwise this is just a rant.

      I'll agree that psychotherapy is wooly. But (for instance) cancer treatment is not.

      Medical science? Don't make me laugh.

      The only joke here is you and your judgements based on wilful ignorance.

  13. Theres no problem with teaching this stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As long as it is NOT in a science department.

    That is, we teach classes about Greek mythology, no need not to teach the homeopathic junk in whatever department teaches thing like "Comparative Religion"

  14. Some of it works, including the placebos by Savantissimo · · Score: 1, Informative

    This sounds like a turf/money battle started by a mainstream academic apparatchik who doesn't want to actually sort through the existing pile of evidence, let alone continue evaluating. Some of the methods listed in the article actually work reliably for some things. Others may actually cause harm. Yet others are placebos so advanced that modern medicine may take decades to catch up. The important thing is to keep using actual evidence to make decisions rather than to just accept the word of reactionaries who gesture vaguely at supposed piles of evidence which, on closer inspection, often say the opposite of what the pseudo-skeptic reactionary claimed.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    1. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Part of the problem with evidence-based medicine is that there are a lot of things that are very hard to test for in the way of a double blind study and a number of the traditional techniques (i.e. herbalism) can fall under that just because you have to be careful about what you are doing.

    2. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      others are placebos so advanced that modern medicine may take decades to catch up

      The combination of "placebos" and "advanced" scrambles my head. Are you sure you know what the placebo effect actually is ?

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    3. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An advanced placebo is defined as something that has the appearance of being a placebo but actually isn't. It is so advanced that
      you get the 'placebo' effect as well as some actual effect.

    4. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No this makes good sense placebos are reasonably effective and have few side effects. Practically the ideal medicine.

      Many pills you take are shaped and colored according to what provides the best placebo effect despite also containing actual medicine. Placebo has cured cancer only to have it relapse aggressively once the patient found out that the treatment was ineffective.

      Crazy stuff placebo doesn't simply make you feel better... it is actual medicine and it's certainly worth exploring much more.

    5. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a line of patter by a decent-to-excellent con artist (or someone trained by same) as to why you will get better. The better the line of patter, the better your chances are of believing it and having the effect kick in. We still don't know why it works as well as it does, but "advanced" and "placebos" definitely *can* be used rationally together.

    6. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what a placebo troll is ?
      It has no active trolling ingredient, but makes you feel trolled nevertheless...

    7. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know! Advanced Placebos! Aspartame pills instead of Sugar pills!

    8. Re:Some of it works, including the placebos by benhattman · · Score: 1

      In this thread, it appears placebo has been defined as a drug with such advanced efficacy that it cannot be understood by traditional medicine. I.E. a placebo is advanced medicine. E.g. voodoo.

  15. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Fundamentalists exist in science as well. Alternative therapy is outside the domain of science because science insists on being able to measure stuff with a physical instrument (human perception not being good enough). So science has immediately disqualified itself from judging alternative medicine, yet still the science fundamentalists continue pushing their doctrine outside of its bounds.

    The reason human perception is not good enough is the placebo effect, which is quite strong (and coincidentally, measurable). Homeopathy does not exist outside the domain of scientific questions just because it doesn't work.

  16. Re:Fundamentalists by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think you're missing a piece - the measurement of the health of a human is well within the realm of human perception and instrumentation. The goals of standard medicine and alternative medicine are the same: improve the health of a human. If standard medicine works and alternative medicine doesn't, well, you should be able to figure the rest out from there.

  17. Re:Fundamentalists by pe1rxq · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Human perception has proven itself to be pretty much useless many times..... But I guess you missed that lesson as you seem to have a pretty screwed up notion off science.

    If it works it will be measureable and you can call it 'medicine', if you can't measure even a single thing different when using the stuff it is not medicine.
    You can try and label it 'alternative' but it won't change the facts: its junk.

    --
    Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
  18. Re:Fundamentalists by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

    >So science has immediately disqualified itself from judging alternative medicine

    Er.. Science is quite capable of being used to judge the efficacy of alternative medicine. It happens all the time and typically the result is what one would expect.

    --
    I should use this sig to advertise my book ISBN-13 : 978-1501515132.
  19. Source of the problem by jesseck · · Score: 2

    Is the problem that these schools are teaching non-traditional medicine, or that there is a market for that education? Schools need money to run, and they can increase enrollment by offering courses such as "Eastern Medicine". I don't think this is completely the school's doing- there are consumers out there that swear on non-traditional medicine and practitioners who will perform those services. If anything positive, this non-traditional medicine "medical school" may raise the bar for entry into the field.

    As for the cheapening of the science behind medicine? Yes, it hurts. But, at the end of the day, it is science that finds cures to our ailments, not rhinoceros horn powder.

    1. Re:Source of the problem by CmdTako · · Score: 1

      oh. You only go to Doctors with a PhD in medicine? You forgetting the Mainstream Medical communities reaction to the Cure for Rabies? http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-cure-for-rabies

  20. Re:Fundamentalists by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Informative

    Alternative therapy is outside the domain of science because science

    Utter rubbish.

    measure stuff with a physical instrument (human perception not being good enough).

    Again, utter rubbish.

    A trial (simplified): give people (a) a placebo and (b) homeopathic treatment. See which get better and which don't. Doesn't even require anything more than perception. Do I percieve this person as dead yes/no?

    The results: homeopathy is no better than a placebo.

    If it doesn't make you better, then by what reasoning or intuition is it doing any good at all?

    So science has immediately disqualified itself from judging alternative medicine, yet still the science fundamentalists continue pushing their doctrine outside of its bounds.

    More tosh. Simplifying, either medicine makes you better or it does not. Science can tell you if it does.

    Please, in future learn *something* about science before dismissing it out of hand. And if you don't have the inclination to do that, then please carefully consider your comments about "fundemantalists".

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  21. Scientific Method by Grindalf · · Score: 1

    You mean current Medsci has any scientific research behind it at all? You could have fooled me!

    --
    The purpose of existence is to make money.
    1. Re:Scientific Method by JustShootMe · · Score: 1

      Of course it does. The foolish bit comes in when people start thinking that it's *all* based on science. Of course it's not. There are some aspects of medicine that are just as wishful thinking as homeopathy.

      And the very fact that side effects exist is a testament to our not understanding what we're doing half the time.

      --
      For linux tips: http://www.linuxtipsblog.com
    2. Re:Scientific Method by jesseck · · Score: 1

      You mean current Medsci has any scientific research behind it at all? You could have fooled me!

      Of course! They use the scientific method- I see it on House all the time. Make a hypothesis on what the ailment is, treat for it (testing their hypothesis), and observe. If their hypothesis is wrong, they come up with a new one, and so on.

    3. Re:Scientific Method by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The foolish bit comes in when people start thinking that it's *all* based on science. Of course it's not. There are some aspects of medicine that are just as wishful thinking as homeopathy.

      Examples?

      And the very fact that side effects exist is a testament to our not understanding what we're doing half the time.

      You can tell yourself that, but it doesn't make it true.

      Many drug side effects are there basically because the human body's circulatory system has this pesky property of distributing a drug everywhere, not just to the tissues you want to treat. It's common for medical science to know exactly how the side effect works, because usually it's a consequence of how the intended effect works.

      For example, many anti-cancer drugs (chemotherapy drugs) attack cell replication. All cells in your body "want" to replicate all the time, but ordinarily the rate is held in check. Cancerous cells are simply those where the regulatory mechanisms are partially or entirely knocked out by a mutation, leading to out of control growth and tumors. By flooding the body with a drug which kills cells that are in the process of replicating, you'll kill cancer cells at a high rate because they frequently try to replicate. But it also harms healthy tissues, because they do still naturally have a lower rate of replication (to replace dead cells, repair tissue damage, etc.).

      So we know exactly what is going on with some of the worst side effects that are out there, we're just (currently) powerless to prevent them.

      (I say "currently" because there is some interesting research going on with the development of biochemical techniques for delivering drugs to specifically targeted tissues. It could eventually be a major advance in reducing the side effects of chemotherapy (and other) drugs. But note that even if that turns out to be a total success, at no point do we not know what the drugs do... we're just engineering a way of delivering them exactly where they need to go, limiting the damage done to healthy tissue.)

  22. Creationism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Was I the only one who saw the headline and thought, "Here we go, yet another Creationism/Intelligent Design vs. Evolution article?"

    1. Re:Creationism by 0123456 · · Score: 2

      I thought it was going to be about 'Global Warming'.

    2. Re:Creationism by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 1

      I'm similarly confused. How does story relate to Bitcoins or people asking dumb questions that are resolved with 10 minutes with any decent search engine?

      --
      -- Using the preview button since 2005
  23. Counter-argument... by Pollux · · Score: 2

    Two academics write in a recent article decrying that a third of Australian universities now offer courses in such subjects as homeopathy and traditional Chinese medicine, which undermines science-based medicine.

    I think that academic scrutiny and study are exactly what these areas of medicine need. While I would definitely argue that there are many areas of these medicines that are placebos at best, I have heard and witnessed accounts of individual remedies, scrutinized by science, which nevertheless empirically appear to be effective. I would hate to through the baby out with the bathwater by dismissing either subject entirely.

    I don't want to feel that it's merely conspiracy theory to believe that "the man" / "big pharma" is trying to squeeze out all alternative medicine because it competes with their company. But, in the same sense, I don't want people acquiring argyria en mass just because they keep hearing about colloidal silver on the internet. Presently, US law outright forbids scientific study of these remedies. I believe they need to be studied so that there's conclusive evidence of what works and what doesn't work. And what we discover does work should be allowed in practice. The world of academia can help tremendously with that.

    1. Re:Counter-argument... by 246o1 · · Score: 1

      Presently, US law outright forbids scientific study of these remedies. I believe they need to be studied so that there's conclusive evidence of what works and what doesn't work. And what we discover does work should be allowed in practice. The world of academia can help tremendously with that.

      Bullshit. The NIH has been giving away enormous sums of money to study this crap, with the result that we now understand much better than we need to exactly how people come to convince themselves and others of the efficacy of specific placebos with magical and/or pseudoscience window-dressing.

      --
      Although the moon is smaller than the earth, it is farther away.
    2. Re:Counter-argument... by tibit · · Score: 2

      Presently, US law outright forbids scientific study of these remedies.

      Yeah, sure. Links to the law, please. Otherwise, you're full of it.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    3. Re:Counter-argument... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, counterarguments aren't allowed. This is Slashdot where, like reddit, groupthink rules.

  24. This is the danger... by JustShootMe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... of worshipping science to the extent of all else.

    Some "traditional medicines" are bupkus. Some are not. Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist. To think otherwise is arrogant. I can think of quite a few things in my life that science cannot (or at least does not at present) explain.

    There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet. And as long as their mindset continues to be "if I can't see it, smell it, touch it, taste it, or hear it, it doesn't exist" that will continue to be the case.

    --
    For linux tips: http://www.linuxtipsblog.com
    1. Re:This is the danger... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Some "traditional medicines" are bupkus. Some are not.

      OK... some herbs can have active compounds in them, etc..

      Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist. To think otherwise is arrogant. I can think of quite a few things in my life that science cannot (or at least does not at present) explain.

      The trouble is that you are basically jumping from "science can't explain everything" to "maybe one of these wooly theories is correct". Yes, it is certainly true that not everything is explained. That doesn't make some random wooly theory likely to be correct.

      And really, "well, science can't explain everything" is not a piece of evidence in favour of something being correct.

      There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet.

      Certainly true.

      And as long as their mindset continues to be "if I can't see it, smell it, touch it, taste it, or hear it, it doesn't exist" that will continue to be the case.

      And what precisely do you propose as the alternative? Over the years, people have conjectured many fanciful theories. Despite science being incomplete, they have generally been found to be junk.

      And when it comes to medicine, it is generally very easy to measure: do people get better or not.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    2. Re:This is the danger... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      Some "traditional medicines" are bupkus. Some are not

      If only we had some sort of method to distinguish between them...yeah...some sort of way to objectively separate useful treatments from useless treatments...

      Once you have figured out how we can determine which treatments are useful and which are not, you should apply for a patent.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    3. Re:This is the danger... by Antimatter3009 · · Score: 1

      The trouble is that you are basically jumping from "science can't explain everything" to "maybe one of these wooly theories is correct". Yes, it is certainly true that not everything is explained. That doesn't make some random wooly theory likely to be correct.

      True, but at the same time, let's not throw all of the "wooly theories" away out of hand. I sometimes think that a lot of people see something like "Eastern Medicine" and stop listening right there. But just because science didn't generate the theory doesn't meant the theory can't be correct. Let's test them and see how they work, then teach the ones that make sense. There's no reason to limit ourselves wholly to theories originating from science or non-science when the ultimate goal should be improving medicine, whatever the source.

    4. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This^.

      Modern medicine can and does get things wrong, their medical studies are nothing more than statistics most of the time. Unless they really know how a drug works and why some sort of reaction takes place in 99.9% of the patients, I would say that they are just playing the odds.

      I haven't looked into alternative medicine, but I know that there cheap, un-patentable, foods that will help clear up illnesses. Yet, the FDA won't study them, the Health and Human Services & CDC should, but are probably prevented from doing it. Universities could, but their after money now too. The Red Cross has too many disasters to worry about than to study and prove some cheap treatment exists.

    5. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      I know that there cheap, un-patentable, foods that will help clear up illnesses.

      Actually, you got that backwards. There are cheap, plentiful foods that cause most, if not all chronic diseases. We call these foods "carbohydrates", and we subsidize them as we grow them, and subsidize the medical care necessary to fix the problems that they cause.

      The "diseases of civilization" (heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, alzheimers), are all variants of chronically elevated insulin levels, which, fun fact, is caused by excess carbohydrate consumption. How much is excess? Well, depending on the person, as low as 40g/day.

    6. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't mean that it exists either. The wrong mindset is teaching that it exists as true.

    7. Re:This is the danger... by Tom · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Some "traditional medicines" are bupkus. Some are not.

      Name them. The ones that aren't.

      Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist.

      Science will gladly investigate the working treatments that you name above, I am sure of it. All of the commonly named examples have been examined - and found to be lacking.

      One thing that most people aren't aware of is that the comparison against a placebo is only the very first step of investigating a treatment. It is to establish whether the thing has any effect whatsoever. That doesn't mean it will become a treatment. Because it will then be compared against the best treatments currently available. Because, quite honestly, if you already have something that can save 80% of the patients from an otherwise deadly disease, why would you want to give them something else instead that saves only 60%?
      (and before you yell, yes of course that is simplified, factors such as side-effects, cost, availability, etc. are also considered. That's why there are different treatments available for many diseases, because some may be less effective, but also have fewer side-effects, etc.)

      I can think of quite a few things in my life that science cannot (or at least does not at present) explain.

      Don't leave us guessing! Give us examples. Pics or it didn't happen.

      There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet.

      Name five.

      I keep repeating myself, because there are probably 50 comments all saying that there are such things, but none of them actually say what they are.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    8. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... as long as their mindset continues to be "if I can't see it, smell it, touch it, taste it, or hear it, it doesn't exist" that will continue to be the case.

      You're going to have a long wait, then. The whole philosophy of science is predicated around the axiom that what our senses tell us is a real and true representation of the world around us. That's like objecting to Christians insisting on holding to the mindset that Christ was the Son of God.

    9. Re:This is the danger... by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Exactly. That's why cave men were so long lived after all.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:This is the danger... by Hatta · · Score: 2

      Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist.

      If science has tested something, and the test fails to show any effect, then yes, it does mean it doesn't exist. Or at least, it means the probability of existance is under some threshhold determined by the statistical power of the test.

      As for arrogance, what would you call believing in something that science has tested and failed to find any evidence for? Do you people really think that you are smarter or more thoughtful than the professionals whose job it is to empirically demonstrate what is real and what is not? If so, where's your data?

      There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet. We agree on that much. But rejecting empiricism, the ONLY method that has EVER proven to be effective at determining what is real and what is not, isn't going to get us anywhere.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:This is the danger... by darkstar949 · · Score: 4, Informative

      There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet.

      Name five.

      You might have to to give a bit more in the way of parameters for this but off the top of my head:

    12. Re:This is the danger... by slimjim8094 · · Score: 1

      I just realized the problem here. No, science can't explain everything. But science can detect, measure, and quantify things. You use that, with the scientific method, to explain.

      There's tons of things we've observed that we can't explain. We're trying to, and we know it's there because we've measured it, but we don't know why. The key, crucially important bit, is that science hasn't been able to measure any effect of homeopathy. And we've tried plenty.

      There's lots of stuff that science doesn't explain. But there's noting that science hasn't observed that's worth anything. Scientists observed that certain barks lessened pain - that became aspirin. Scientists observed that the foxglove helped people with heart problems, in a concrete and measurable way, and then found the chemical digitalis - a common heart treatment. Herbal and other "alternative" medicines are, at this point, only alternative because they don't work.

      And to any of the pharma cynics out there - do you have any idea how much money the drug companies spend on things that never amount to anything? Don't you think they'd be thrilled to find an "alternative" treatment that already worked, and was cheaper to understand and prove safe because people were already using it with the demonstrably positive effect? And you can absolutely patent a synthesis technique, so it's not about that.

      Here's the jump that people object to - you have a plant, some technique, etc that people consider "alternative" or "bupkis", and you say it works. Scientists come in, check it out, try to compare it against a placebo, and find that it doesn't work. Science can't explain why it works - because it doesn't! "Science can't explain everything", while true, does not apply to things that science can't measure.

      Not that unmeasurable things can't matter to people, but that's the realm of philosophy or magic or religion or something.

      --
      I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    13. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Uh-huh. Because the existence of carbohydrates negates the possibility of the existence of cheap, healthy food products.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    14. Re:This is the danger... by Tom · · Score: 1

      Ok, now I know where you are getting from.

      Yes, these are examples where science is incomplete and there are still many more questions than answers.

      However, take anaesthesia as an example. Would you rather be put under by a medical doctor following scientific principles - incomplete as his knowledge may be - or take a homeopathic pill or have some old chinese man put needles into specific spots that he claims will remove the pain?

      My guess is you'll be going with the doctor. And rightly so. True, much is still unknown, but with what we know, we are already better than chance at getting you back out.

      And progress is being made. The thing is very much scientific and the scientific method is giving us more understanding than any other approach to the topic.

      Which, I believe, is the qualifier missing from most of the "but science doesn't know everything!" arguments. If that is all, the argument has no content. If the science-rejecter can offer some other method that provides more understanding, I will be the first to listen.

      But since that usually doesn't happen, science is still the best method available to us, even if it only knows 0.001% of a random field of knowledge.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    15. Re:This is the danger... by IorDMUX · · Score: 1

      The "diseases of civilization" (heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, alzheimers), are all variants of chronically elevated insulin levels, which, fun fact, is caused by excess carbohydrate consumption.

      Not quite. I'll give you one out of five (diabetes -- and that's only Type II. Type I is entirely autoimmune and is not caused by insulin levels, diet, etc.). As for the rest...

      • Heart disease? Limited hardening of the arteries can occur due to high blood glucose levels, but this manifests in the extremities, not the heart. More important is the progressive age-related thickening, combined with the buildup of the cholesterol plaques which cause heart disease. Note that the American Heart Association states that low-carbohydrate, high-fat diets such as the Atkins diet actually increase the risk of heart disease.
      • Cancer? So many different causes are known, from viral to radiation-related chromosomal damage to genetics to potential telomere issues... Insulin? It seems odd that our body would produce a carcinogen. I've never heard of this before, got any references?
      • Obesity? Calories are calories, and they make you gain weight. It is certainly cheaper to eat a high-carbohydrate diet than it is to eat a high-fat/high-protein diet, but the diet is a cause of high insulin levels, not an effect of them.
      • Alzheimer's? Where did you get this one? Alzheimer's is caused by the brain failing to properly cut and fold its own proteins, creating plaques that travel throughout the brain and destroy neurons. In fact, research shows that Alzheimer's patients have reduced levels of insulin in the cerebrospinal fluid. There has been quite a bit of research on this horrible disease posted to Slashdot recently,
      --
      >> Standing on head makes smile of frown, but rest of face also upside down.
    16. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Some are not" ... Science doesn't just have a process to figure out if something is bupkus, science /is/ that process.

      Regarding traditional medicines, yeah, these can point to interesting areas to study. To apply science. And that's a regular reasonable argument of Traditional Chinese Medicine schools and the like.

      I looked hard at entering a TCM school a while ago. Had smart friends involved in it. Talked to them and actual MDs who we also involved. There was a lot of interest at the time, specifically in applying proper science so various treatments would have the track record to become accepted in regular medicine. Serious work that serious smart people were rolling up their sleeves to do.

      That was just shy of thirty years ago. Think Amiga 1000. Nothing ever came of it at all. The TCM school is still around, doing what it always did. Fleecing regular intakes of new people with an interesting argument, riding along on that and placebo effect until the good people fade away and are replaced by the next generation.

      It's bupkus. Stay interested, and keep your eyes open. Keep my warning handy.

    17. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      You misunderstand average lifespan versus individual lifespan.

      Infant mortality kept "average lifespan" ridiculously low. People weren't decrepit at age 28, they just happened to have three dozen brothers and sisters that died at age zero. Once you got past that infant mortality, humans pretty much last until about 114-115 years old (barring your chronic diseases of civilization, or predation by animals, or some other act of god.

      Imagining people as old and decrepit at age 40 because the average lifespan where they live is 28 is a misunderstanding of how average lifespan is calculated, and what it really shows us.

    18. Re:This is the danger... by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      True, but at the same time, let's not throw all of the "wooly theories" away out of hand.

      "Keep an open mind, but not so open your brain falls out"

      There are an infinite number of wooly theories without a shred of evidence to back them up. Which ones should should I keep an open mind about?

      My default position is always going to be "yeah whatever" until someone does enything at all to pursuade me otherwise. Arguing that it might not necessarily be correct isn't an argument.

      There's no reason to limit ourselves wholly to theories originating from science or non-science when the ultimate goal should be improving medicine, whatever the source.

      Are there any theories not coming from science which have proven to have any useful predictive power?

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    19. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Sad, but true. Mass production of corn and grain thanks to generous government subsidies ends up being the cheapest feed for food animals, screwing with their omega3/omega6 fatty acid balances. Grass fed stuff ends up being more expensive than the cheap meats, which while certainly better than carbs, are still tainted by them in some way.

      I'd love to imagine feeding the world on grass fed beef, but I'm not sure if we've actually got enough arable land to sustain that practice for all of humanity.

    20. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      The best indicator of heart disease is triglyceride level/HDL, which, is adversely impacted by chronic insulin levels. The AHA is a marketing organization, and don't understand the science.

      Cancer cells outcompete other cells because they thrive in a high blood sugar environment - a corollary to high insulin levels.

      Fat cells are driven to hold onto fat by insulin. Basic biochemistry.

      Alzheimer's - the damage done to the brain cells also correlates with insulin, being "Type III" diabetes as it were.

      Watch some lectures, and get back to me: http://garytaubes.com/lectures/

    21. Re:This is the danger... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      And when it comes to medicine, it is generally very easy to measure: do people get better or not.

      Oh, wow, guess again.

      Many compounds tested for medical effects act weakly or have dangerous side effects. Tests that give positive results, when retested, have no effect or harmful results. That's why so many studies with very strict controls are required for new medicines, and why nutritional substances can have in excess of 100 studies on their effects and still not have widespread acceptance. Medical testing isn't easy.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    22. Re:This is the danger... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      There are things about the human body and mind that science does not understand yet.

      Name five.

      You might have to to give a bit more in the way of parameters for this but off the top of my head:

      Of these five things, can you name one profession, trade, organisation, discipline or area of thought other then science which can beyond reasonable doubt, demonstrate a better understanding of them beyond science?

      Proving that science doesn't know everything, does not invalidate science.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    23. Re:This is the danger... by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Some "traditional medicines" are bupkus. Some are not.

      Name them. The ones that aren't.

      Willow bark. Limes. Saw palmetto. Nettle extract (both leaves and roots, different products for different purposes). Ginseng. Gingko biloba. Red pepper extract. Marijuana. Blueberries. Myrrh. Fish.

      All of the above have been heavily tested and are either available raw, or with the active ingredient extracted or synthesized.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    24. Re:This is the danger... by zigge · · Score: 1

      Many modern drugs have their roots in natural substances, but in a herbal preparation it is very difficult to gauge the dosage of the active chemical(s) and because of this herbal preparations can be dangerous. Especially if being used in conjunction with conventional drugs.

    25. Re:This is the danger... by Tom · · Score: 1

      I stand corrected. I misread or misunderstood that part.

      Yes, many natural remedies contain ingredients with actual medical value. For some reason, I understood the term more limited as in "some of the stuff that science says doesn't work really does".

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    26. Re:This is the danger... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      However, take anaesthesia as an example. Would you rather be put under by a medical doctor following scientific principles - incomplete as his knowledge may be - or take a homeopathic pill or have some old chinese man put needles into specific spots that he claims will remove the pain?

      Depends on the situation, for actual surgery or invasive procedures I'd be hard pressed to believe that anyone is not going to take the anesthetic. When it comes to recovery though, I'd be willing to try other things for analgesic purposes. However, that is partly due a personal bias against stronger pain killers in general.

      When it comes to science, philosophically I would be hard pressed to believe that it can explain everything but the framework will likely lead to explanations for most things. Additionally,. there are a lot of ethical concerns involved when it comes to medicine that I think is going to prevent it from learning about certain things just because there is no way to properly test them in general (some aspects of alternative medicines) or because a proper double blind study isn't really feasible.

    27. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh, I only count two:

      • Strange diseases
      • The human brain

      Seriously, you could make a nearly infinite list of things "science doesn't know" by enumerating distinct things the brain does. Once science does figure out brain science that list, no matter how long, it (mostly) disappears.

    28. Re:This is the danger... by Tom · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, ethics in medicine. Did you know they actually do double-blind tests on emergency stroke patients?

      Aside from that, for the first part, I think there needs to be a better differentiation regarding the so-called "alternative" treatments.

      There are some that have not been proven nor disproven to work.
      And then there are some that have been proven to not work.

      I'm all for experimenting with the 1st kind.
      And I am also calling anyone pandering the 2nd kind a fraud and a liar.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    29. Re:This is the danger... by benhattman · · Score: 1

      Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist. To think otherwise is arrogant.

      Is it more arrogant to withhold judgement about the medical efficacy of a substance (or procedure) with no demonstrated improvement over placebo, or is it more arrogant to bitch that people don't nod along with your pet dogma? Science never says an undiscovered thing doesn't exist. It literally can't work that way. But you seem to have a bee up your bonnet because science doesn't validate whatever it is you believe in.

      Well, guess what, there's a great process for rectifying that. If your dogma is true, design a scientific experiment that proves it. Contact professors at universities near you, and find one who's sympathetic to your cause and get their input on your experiment. Then run it and publish for the world to see.

    30. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      Only in the US - most of the rest of the world doesn't subsidise corn farming. That's why people often complain that familiar things like sodas taste different in America - corn syrup is used in everything. Australia is a large beef exporter, and only 40% of our beef is raised in feedlots. You can raise beef on land that's generally unsuitable for raising crops, so it's not necessarily an either-or proposition.

      And that still doesn't support your point against the OP - the easy, cheap availability of carbohydrates doesn't make carrots expensive or hard to find.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    31. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      - the easy, cheap availability of carbohydrates doesn't make carrots expensive or hard to find.

      I'm sorry, you've now changed your statement - first it was "cheap, healthy food products", and now it's "carrots" (which, fun fact, can be quite starchy).

      I think you've got to define "healthy food products" before you go any further. "Carrots" is definitely not the basis for a healthy diet. Grass-fed hamburger, pork ribs, grilled chicken and fish are a basis for a healthy diet. In short, animal fats and proteins are the basis of a healthy diet.

      So, given that, yes, the cheap availability of carbohydrates (including carrots), crowds out healthy food products.

    32. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, you've now changed your statement - first it was "cheap, healthy food products", and now it's "carrots" (which, fun fact, can be quite starchy).

      No, that's what we in the business call "an example".

      Grass-fed hamburger, pork ribs, grilled chicken and fish are a basis for a healthy diet

      Atkins? I thought you were dead. Remember: just because you have scurvy, it doesn't mean you're a pirate.

      So, given that, yes, the cheap availability of carbohydrates (including carrots), crowds out healthy food products

      Ignoring your trendy "carbohydrates are the devil" monomania for the moment, I can buy chicken breasts at $14/kg, "organic" beef mince (ground beef for you yanks) for $16/kg, and fresh fish for $17 - and that's just from my local supermarket. That's around $3 - $4 a serve.

      Not to mention the idea that animal protein is being "crowded out" of the American diet is purely absurd. The average consumption of beef and chicken is around 30kg a year per capita, and pork around 25kg. That's 200g a day, just in those meats, not counting low consumption stuff like lamb, turkey, game, etc.

      People are getting fat (and sick) because they're not eating properly. But blaming one single cause is simplistic jingoism. People don't have the time to cook any more, so they eat more and more pre-prepared food and take-away, which come with fats and sugars (yes, carbohydrates) added in. Restaurants and other outlets compete with each other on "value for money", which leads to obscene serving sizes. Technology has reduced the necessity of exercise, and the modern, corporate worklife limits opportunity for recreational exercise, and piles on the stress. Obesity and depression have significant correlation, and the constant bombardment of impossible ideals of body tend to push people into unhealthy extremes. And there's probably a dozen other significant contributors that I can't think of off the top of my head. Claiming that everyone will be healthy and live forever if we just ban corn, potatoes and white bread is just silly.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    33. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Atkins? I thought you were dead. Remember: just because you have scurvy, it doesn't mean you're a pirate.

      Well, Atkins died of a skull fracture after slipping on ice, not his diet. The vegan physician that pretexted to get his medical records, and then tried to smear him when his body bloated over five days in ICU, well, we'll just leave that as an exercise for the reader.

      As for scurvy, you'll note that it was caused by eating hard tack (carbohydrates), not due to a lack of fresh fruit. Inuit and Masai lived for generations without anything except animal protein and fat, and were notoriously healthy before the western diet with carbs came in :)

      Claiming that everyone will be healthy and live forever if we just ban corn, potatoes and white bread is just silly.

      Not forever, but probably close to 114 years old - that seems to be the upper limit despite lowered infant mortality and greater management of chronic disease.

      Point of fact, the diseases of civilization have followed the spread of carbohydrates in our diets. The mechanism is well understood (blood sugar/insulin), and the coincidence of these diseases of civilization give us reason to believe they are related.

      So, how do we organize our society for the reduction of carbohydrates in the diet, and an increase of healthy animal fats and proteins? Do we have enough arable land to support the meat animals necessary to feed all of our society? Can animal husbandry overcome the problems of omega3/6 fatty acid balance and still maintain industrial efficiency? I don't know. But the fact of the matter is that the road to health is in the opposite direction of corn, potatoes and wheat bread.

    34. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      As for scurvy, you'll note that it was caused by eating hard tack (carbohydrates), not due to a lack of fresh fruit.

      No, I won't. Scurvy is caused by a vitamin C deficiency, not by consumption of carbohydrates.

      As for the rest of your post, it's just more of the same - unsubstantiated assertions.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    35. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Scurvy is caused by a vitamin C deficiency, not by consumption of carbohydrates.

      Fun fact - carbohydrates leach vitamin C from your body. Sailors got it because they spent months eating hard tack rations.

      Take a couple of guys, send them to live with the Inuit for a year without a single fruit or vegetable...no scurvy.

      Watch one of these lectures if you want substantiation: http://garytaubes.com/lectures/

    36. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      No - sailors got scurvy because they didn't get enough vitamin C. If you eat carbohydrates you may need slightly more vitamin C, but with or without carbohydrates, no source of vitamin C results scurvy. Inuits don't get it because they ate offal - some internal organs contain vitamin C.

      If you tell modern Americans (or Australians) to eat low-carb, high-protein and avoid fresh fruit and veg, they're not going to be eating offal. They're going to be eating exactly the things you outlined - beef (mince or steak), chicken, pork, lamb, fish. And they're not going to get everything they need from that.

      Watch one of these lectures if you want substantiation

      What, you mean a physicist cum quack-dietician? He has no formal training in nutrition, and those that do disagree with him.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    37. Re:This is the danger... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No - sailors got scurvy because they didn't get enough vitamin C... If you tell modern Americans (or Australians) to eat low-carb, high-protein and avoid fresh fruit and veg... They're going to be eating exactly the things you outlined - beef (mince or steak), chicken, pork, lamb, fish. And they're not going to get everything they need from that.

      Allow an observer to intrude with a quotation from the Wikipedia article on scurvy, with a few key points emphasized to make sure you don't have any trouble finding them.

      Many animal products, including liver... oysters, and...the brain... contain large amounts of vitamin C, and can even be used to treat scurvy.

      Fresh meat from animals which make their own vitamin C (which most animals do) contains enough vitamin C to prevent scurvy, and even partly treat it. ... the disease was only seen in people eating long-preserved diets or canned goods, but not in people eating any sort of fresh diet, including arctic diets primarily based upon meat. In some cases (notably in French soldiers eating fresh horse meat) it was discovered that meat alone, even partly cooked meat, could alleviate scurvy.

      So, if liver & onions, oysters, or headcheese just ain't your thing, a nice rare steak should do quite well enough to make sure that you don't suffer from vitamin C deficiency.

    38. Re:This is the danger... by LordLucless · · Score: 1

      ...and then die of salmonella poisoning when you try the same thing with chicken or pork. Note that in all the cases listed above, gaining vitamin C from meat was done in the case of a severely restricted diet (Inuit, and French soldiers with a poor supply line).

      From that very same article, even people in modern, developed countries can rarely be afflicted by scurvy. Only of the citations is available in full, and only one other cites the cause of the scurvy in the abstract, but in both those cases, it's due to a heavy-meat diet, and an almost complete absence of fresh vegetable and fruit.

      Yes, technically you can survive on just meat, even just on the prime cuts. But doing so requires a very restricted, boring diet - like rare steak for dinner every day - and people aren't going to stick to it. Except people like the OP, I guess, who think that a slice of orange with all its evil carbohydrates is going to drop his life expectancy by a decade.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    39. Re:This is the danger... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Except people like the OP, I guess, who think that a slice of orange with all its evil carbohydrates is going to drop his life expectancy by a decade.

      Look around you. If you see someone who is obese, diabetic, has heart disease, cancer, or any number of other chronic disease, you can pretty much bet that they've been carbohydrate poisoned.

      Some people can handle a diet filled with oranges. Some people can handle a diet with occasional oranges. And then you've got some people for whom oranges are going to drop your life expectance by a decade.

      I poisoned my body with carbohydrates for over thirty years, and was on my way to an early grave due to high blood pressure, obesity, bad cholesterol, and pre-diabetes. When I stopped poisoning my body with carbs, I dropped 50 pounds, my blood pressure normalized, my blood sugar normalized, and my cholesterol got better. And now, nearly five years later, I can't imagine living any other way.

      Now you're right, some people have some real addiction problems, and can't let go of the cocaine, or heroin, no matter what it does to their bodies or lives. But that doesn't mean we don't continue to counsel them to quit the things that are hurting them.

      Carbohydrates hurt people.

  25. Homeopathic BPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, isn't BPA relatively safe, until it approaches a very small amount, at which point our bodies begin to interpret it as hormonal signalling?

    Until someone studies the effects of various compounds at very low concentrations, then they must be treated as unknowns, and worthy of study.

    1. Re:Homeopathic BPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, isn't BPA relatively safe, until it approaches a very small amount, at which point our bodies begin to interpret it as hormonal signalling?

      Sorry, no.

    2. Re:Homeopathic BPA by cmholm · · Score: 1

      Good God no, where did you get that idea? BPA has all kinds of interesting effects on the body, depending on the level of exposure. As the exposure level goes down, it may be that hormonal signaling is the only symptom left to arise, and that exposure below that required to cause hormonal signaling is totally asymptomatic.

      --
      Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
    3. Re:Homeopathic BPA by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Not everything that's unknown is worthy of study. There are so many things that we don't know that we can't possibly study all of them.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  26. And string theorists too! by popo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If we're going to start acknowledging the horrifying growth of pseudo-science in our midst, can we include the no-proof-required branches of physics?

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    1. Re:And string theorists too! by tibit · · Score: 1

      A string theory is a mathematical theory. It's OK in the sense of mathematical formalism, but otherwise fairly useless. Mathematical theories are fairly special, because the testable predictions they make are directly only useful in mathematics. In a most basic sense IIRC, a mathematical theory doesn't even need to have predictive power, it only needs to satisfy some soundness criteria. Applying mathematical theories is sometimes possible; yet sometimes we just don't know how we can apply a particular piece of mathematics. There's a whole lot of mathematics that we don't know how to apply outside of mathematics! The physicists who work on string theories are pretty much taking the job away from mathematicians :)

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  27. An international problem by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    All around the world, homeopathy, naturopathy (which may use some real natural cures, but is still based on a rejection of scientific advancements) old-fashioned chiropractic (subluxation crap), and accupuncture don't get laughed out of the room immediately as they should.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    1. Re:An international problem by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      How does one luxate a sub? Does it involve depth charges (properly used High explosives can often provide effective solutions).

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    2. Re:An international problem by Un+pobre+guey · · Score: 1

      And in the US (I've updated it a bit):

      Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of moronic and/or superstitious beliefs regardless of their basis, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, to petition the Government for a redress of grievances, or to cause or encourage others to believe any manner of idiocy, particularly with the specific aim of taking their money.

    3. Re:An international problem by bussdriver · · Score: 1

      We have an international corporation problem becoming bigger each year and I think there is some connection of that with both people's feelings towards established institutions being influenced as well as propaganda which leverages science or pseudo science.

      For example, anti-global warming propaganda harms the credibility of all science. Corporations like Monsanto convince us that their science makes nature better and science knows everything - there are no risks to our DNA hacking...
      Governments prohibiting "alternatives" known to work, like Stevia or weed while promoting commercialized lesser products like THC drugs with side effects. Unavailability of cheap generic solutions etc... hell, the corps world wide are trying to OWN potable water!

      Expectation of performance. Science to many people seems to be to be viewed as a form of religion. We didn't get our flying cars by 2000 as was promised in 1950. We didn't get a 30 hour work week thanks to technology either! We are not living on the moon. The pill might be much better and safer than the herb it replaced and it may even be cheaper but the expectations could be HIGHER than that of the herb. The fault is not so much in science or even the futurists (who must share some blame) but the "corporation" or well, the advertizing hype industries and politicians created. We have millions of people; some who should know better, believing science will find a way to solve ALL problems, even the impossible ones like many exponential growth curves at the root of most of today's big problems. It is an easy way to tune out and just leave problems in science's hands... the anti-science ones would do the same but they leave the problems in god's hands. Disillusioned believers may lash out against god or science; but science lacks the level of institutional and traditional to help appease the disillusioned and bring them back in the fold.

  28. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Science is not opposed to homeopathy or alternative medicine per se. If the course of treatment cannot be measured by physical measurements, that is perfectly fine. However, if the treatment does not have an effect on outcome of the patient, it is rightly labeled as ineffective. For example, clinical trials of massage and acupuncture have proven the effectiveness of these treatments for specific conditions. http://apps.who.int/medicinedocs/en/d/Js4926e/ and http://nccam.nih.gov/health/massage However, homeopathy specifically the serial dilutions of compounds or extracts in water, has never been proven effective in any clinical trial and goes against basic precepts of chemistry and biology.

  29. stop harping about the Placebo effect you yoyo's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, a placebo can fool you into not noticing the symptoms, but that doesn't mean they 'work', because they don't cure, or even help in any non-subjective ways. "How do you feel now, Dave?" isn't hard data.

    Placebos don't kill cancerous tumors, didn't eradicate polio, and there's no need to waste University funding to find out that "magical chinese foot pads suck all the bad vibes out through the soles of your feet" is a fat load of shit.

  30. Just think.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yea, I'm taking Voodoo 101 as an elective this semester. Next week we're sacrificing chickens!"

  31. Hypocracy by jacerie · · Score: 0

    I find it amusing and depressing that modern medical science has fallen so far. Everything that is known by modern medicine owes its beginnings in ancient medical practices such as Chinese medicine and homeopathy. A perfect example of this is aspirin. Hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago, the medical minds of the day would give their patients tea brewed from willow bark to ease their pain. Where is aspirin found in nature? Willow bark. Natural cures and remedies are available for most ailments, but modern medicine has dismissed the natural treatments in favor of synthetic solutions. These same synthetic solutions have lead to the rise of super-germs and man-made diseases Mother Nature would have nightmares about.

    1. Re:Hypocracy by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      And modern chemistry owes its beginnings to alchemy but we know better now and we don't do that shit anymore. Why go backwards instead of just relegating the outdated and largely wrong knowledge to the history books?

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Hypocracy by GofG · · Score: 2

      We owe way more to Hippocrates than we do to Ancient China, and Hippocrates believed that all illness was caused by an imbalance of the four biles, which is absolutely ludicrous and shares absolutely no notions with reality.

      Everything today owes everything to the past. To say that the past is in any way better or more important than the present, however, is hugely ridiculous.

      --
      GFA/M/S d-- s: a--- C++++ UBL++$ P+ L+++ !E- W++ N+ !o K- w--- !O !M !V PS++ PE Y+ PGP+ t+++ 5- X+ R tv@ b++ DI++++ D+ G
    3. Re:Hypocracy by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Chinese medicines, perhaps, Greek medicines, certainly. But Homeopathy? I don't think so, but my subscription to The Lancet expired sometime in the eighties. Can you give me an example of homeopathy as practiced by modern conventional western medicine?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    4. Re:Hypocracy by Kozar_The_Malignant · · Score: 3, Informative

      >I find it amusing and depressing that modern medical science has fallen so far. Everything that is known by modern medicine owes its beginnings in ancient medical practices such as Chinese medicine and homeopathy.

      Far from having "fallen so far," modern medicine has come a long way since its roots. Polio killed people when I was a child, and I challenge you to find a homeopathic polio vaccine.

      >A perfect example of this is aspirin. Hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago, the medical minds of the day would give their patients tea brewed from willow bark to ease their pain. Where is aspirin found in nature? Willow bark.

      You seem to be confusing herbal medicine with homeopathy. I have a degree in botany and actually have studied and used herbal medicine (more as a hobby than anything.) Yes, willow bark, Salix sp. contains salicin, which is similar to acetylsalicylic acid. The concentration in the willow bark varies widely from species to species, and willows are relatively difficult to key out. In species with enough active ingredient to be effective, the concentration can vary from 0.01% to over 10% depending on time of year, growing location and other factors. That's a 100-fold difference in concentration of the active ingredient making it fairly difficult to make sure you get an effective dose and don't O.D. Personally, I find it easier and safer to take two 500 mg. tablets. Also, you don't want to give willow bark tea to a child, because of Reyes Syndrome, and I have yet to find the Tylenol Bush.

      >Natural cures and remedies are available for most ailments,

      No, they aren't. There are no natural remedies for polio, smallpox, yellow fever, scarlet fever, TB, Ebola, rabies, cholera, and a whole long list of others.

      >but modern medicine has dismissed the natural treatments in favor of synthetic solutions.

      That's because they work better. There is a treatment for breast cancer derived from the bark of the Pacific yew tree, Taxus brevifolia. If your wife, daughter, or sister has breast cancer, you really want them taking the commercial drug under the supervision of a good oncologist, rather than sucking on yew bark. Also, before a synthetic version was developed, the tree was damn near wiped out from people stripping the bark to sell.

      >These same synthetic solutions have lead to the rise of super-germs and man-made diseases Mother Nature would have nightmares about.

      "Super germs" have come about through the overuse of antibiotics, an entirely different issue.

      --
      Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
  32. This is why we need to improve science education by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Nobody claimed that alternative therapies are beyond the reach of scientific inquiry; there have even been some studies on the effectiveness of Chinese herbal medicine (part of traditional Chinese medicine). The problem is that these alternative therapies are being practiced and taught without first being subjected to scientific evaluation -- it is anyone's guess as to whether or not these treatments are actually effective. Here is an example, from TFA, of the sort of claims that are being made:

    some chiropractors now extended their manipulation of the spine to children, and claimed that this could cure asthma, allergies, bedwetting, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, colic, fever and numerous other problems, and could serve as a substitute for vaccination.

    Evidence? Studies? Clinical trials? Nothing has been presented to support the claim that chiropractors can cure asthma or bedwetting, let alone the really bizarre claims (a substitute for vaccination?).

    There is no conspiracy or closed-mindedness. When evidence that herbal medicines do work, scientists embrace them:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_marijuana

    You see that long and extensive list of studies? Did you notice that the scientific criticisms were almost entirely focused on smoking as a method of ingestion? Did you notice that the non-scientific criticisms were political, driven by America's far-right government agenda that has been pushed for decades now?

    These scientists are objecting to the teaching of treatments that have no evidence to support their use, which have not been the subject of any studies, and for which no statement of efficacy can be made (how do we know these treatments do not cause more harm than good? how do we know that these treatments are not just a waste of time?).

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  33. Homeopathic education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Allow an accredited doctor of medicine to lecture to them for 10 seconds. Then they will understand the details of homeopathy, right.

  34. Re:Fundamentalists by vlm · · Score: 1

    science insists on being able to measure stuff with a physical instrument (human perception not being good enough).

    On one hand, I want to make fun of the "soft sciences" like psych. On the other hand, I want to make fun of the alternative loons by pointing out ... practically all pre-1980-ish psych experiments (post 1980 psych students started hauling early home computers into the lab, probably because they were tired of writing down the data).

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  35. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alternative therapy is actually well within the domain of science, and scientific tests have proven that it does not work, but good try.

  36. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. That's just... wow...

    You're obviously not a scientist, so here's a crash course. First, human perception is exactly what's relied upon in the sciences of sociology and psychology. Much research of both sciences depend exclusively upon surveys. There are even scientific laws related exclusively to human perception (e.g. Weber's Law).

    Second, let's talk about medicine specifically. Medical sciences, and treatment testing in particular, rely on what are called "double-blind studies". What you do is have the treatment (say, a drug, or a homeopathic nonsense remedy or whatever) and a placebo that appears to be that treatment (identical-looking sugar pill, for instance). Give 100 people the treatment, and 100 people the placebo. Neither the patients nor the experimenters know who is getting the treatment and who is getting the placebo. If the 100 people who are given the treatment don't do better (on average) than the 100 people on the placebo, then obviously the treatment doesn't work, does it? Obviously, it doesn't matter if you're taking diluted peppermint oil or just some funny smelling water.

    Science can, and does, judge alternative medicine, and quite well. And alternative medicines never perform better than ESP.

    (If you believe yourself, or someone you know, is psychic, you should enter one of those paranormal challenges that are willing to hand out millions of dollars for evidence of such things.)

  37. Where's the science? by IQGQNAU · · Score: 1

    So where is the science to support the academics' rant?

  38. Political correctness in plain view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm, negative inflammatory comments about homeopathy and fundamentalists so far, but no negative comments about Chinese medicine. Doesn't anyone want to be brave enough to comment about how idiotic all Chinese people are? No? Not quite politically correct? But no problem attacking people that political correctness has deemed worthy of attack?

    I only bring it up because I see over and over how politicial correctness limits people just as much as any other ideology. Of course, the "appeal to authority" (in this case traditional western medicine authority) truly makes a fool of people who buy into the belief that only western drugs and surgery offer any real benefit.

    I know from my own experience and that of others that chiropractic care offers the only effective solution to certain problems and I wouldn't be surprised if millions of people around the world suffer horribly who wouldn't have to if they had access to it. I also know that at the very least the holostic approach of Chinese medicine can be more effective than "here, take this pill to see if it helps" approach of western medicine (something western medicine is reluctantly acknowledging).

    Expand your horizons people. Stop limiting yourself to a certain belief system you've inherited from your parents and authority figures. Really expand your mind by being willing to admit that some of your cherished beliefs may actually be crap and may have no more validity than the beliefs of others whom you characterize as foolish because, quite frankly, I know for certain from reading your comments on SlashDot that some of your cherished beliefs are ignorantly foolish. It would take just too much of my time to educate you fools.

    1. Re:Political correctness in plain view by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2

      All Chinese people aren't idiotic (that's racist. You're racist.) but traditional Chinese medicine sure as hell is. It drives A LOT of the trade for products from the carcasses of endangered species. Tiger penis, rhino horn, and elephant tusk, off the top of my head, are some things that morons take when they should be taking Viagra.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    2. Re:Political correctness in plain view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Elephant tusks aren't used for medicine. Ivory is in and of itself a material to carve stuff on to. Many chinese families still gift their newly weds with ivory chop sticks.

    3. Re:Political correctness in plain view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's be fair. The vast majority of Chinese Medicine practitioners are not consuming endangered species.

    4. Re:Political correctness in plain view by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      So the best you can say about it is that it uses a low proportion of endangered species product while wasting people's time, money and health with bullshit.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:Political correctness in plain view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All Chinese people aren't idiotic (that's racist. You're racist.)

      Correct. Most Chinese accept white patriarchical numbers whereas gender studies and african studies do not and that is why they are garbage.

    6. Re:Political correctness in plain view by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Really expand your mind by being willing to admit that some of your cherished beliefs may actually be crap and may have no more validity than the beliefs of others whom you characterize as foolish

      Which cherished belief do you refer to? The belief that chiropracty is bunk? Or the belief that the scientific method is the only way to determine objective reality?

      The first one is easy to admit. Chiropracty may in fact not be crap. Go get some data and let's talk.

      The second one is a lot harder. How else do you propose that one determine between truth and falsehood besides testing?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    7. Re:Political correctness in plain view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying Chinese medicine is to blame in a bid to avoid being a racist? And you have no citations for any of these products? Why do we receive more Viagra spam than tiger penis spam?

      If you want, I can say this: Many people are idiotic, and many cultures continue to thrive on idiotic ideas.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medicines_in_traditional_Chinese_medicine#Rhinoceros_horn suggests that they're not thinking about their penises with the rhino horn. I haven't found anything about elephant tusk, but I suspect is a conflation of poached animals into "they must use them for sex, those savages!" to generate page hits. I'd be willing to bet they were made into back scratchers or something very ornate for someone who wanted the prestige of having something made out of ivory.

  39. Re:Fundamentalists by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science, lots of things that science is not yet able to measure, and lots of things that science does not yet understand. That includes many things that we take advantage of daily -- even before we start on the stuff which is ridiculed by people like you.

    Name one thing.

    --
    <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
  40. Re:Fundamentalists by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That includes many things that we take advantage of daily -- even before we start on the stuff which is ridiculed by people like you

    [citation needed]

    Are scientists representatives of God?

    No, scientists are just people who back up their claims with evidence, collected and analyzed according to careful procedures. Representatives of deities are the people who demand that we believe their claims regardless of the available evidence, because we are supposed to place value on "faith."

    Do they really know EVERYTHING?

    Did someone claim that scientists know everything? Scientists conclude their publications with lists of unanswered questions, which is what motivates scientific investigations in the first place. Scientists are not claiming that treatments which have not been investigated do not work -- they are claiming that there is no way to know, until those treatments are investigated.

    I think a better question is this: do you think that you know everything? If you do not demand evidence, then how do you determine what is or is not true (or which treatments are or are not effective)?

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  41. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are very wrong, the goals of standard and alternative medicine are completely different.

    Standard medicine is there to improve the health of man kind

    Alternative medicine is there to improve the wealth of man;

  42. Chinese Medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think it's theoretically possible to teach a non-bullshit class in Chinese Medicine. There are attempts to standardize the practice, to use non-bullshit terminology, and to write scientific studies on the process.

    It would be great for TCM to get some academic analysis that would put to rest whether or not it's all psychosomatic - of course there has been some research, but not much, and it's generally low quality. I'm not sure if an undergraduate program at an Australian university would be the way to do it.

  43. This sounds like ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... the impotent ranting of someone who didn't get his daily dose of tiger penis soup.

  44. Re:Fundamentalists by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

    I'd mod you up but I already commented. It's sad how so many otherwise interesting sites are infested with these self-appointed guardians of scientism such as the A.C. you replied to and the troll authority who "answered" you ... they seem to crawl out from under their rocks whenever a story like this comes up.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
  45. Re:Fundamentalists by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science,

    Er, not sure what that means. Things work or not because of the underlying physics of the universe. Science does not make things work or not.

    Science explains things. It gives understanding. That may help devise other things that work by using the modelling powers of science.

    lots of things that science is not yet able to measure,

    Is there something specifically you have in mind?

    and lots of things that science does not yet understand. That includes many things that we take advantage of daily --

    Sure. Heck, science doesn't even understand gravity really.

    even before we start on the stuff which is ridiculed by people like you.

    And here we go. There's your leap. What things are these things that are taken advantage of on a daily basis and are ridiculed by the likes of me?

    Do you really believe that Science explains everything? No

    No scientist would every claim that - we'd be out of a job for a start. You're setting up a straw man.

    Then why can't you accept that some real things may exist outside of the bounds of current scientific dogma.

    You're angling to leap from "not everything is explained by science" to "my whacky theories of the world are true".

    Just because science is not complete doesn't mean (e.g.) homeopathy works.

    fundamentalists... fundamentalists... fundamentalists...

    Inigo Montoya would like a word with you.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  46. Re:Fundamentalists by chichilalescu · · Score: 1

    the problem with your argument is the definition of "better".
    if you're talking about something that can be objectively measured (i.e. "this patient has a temperature of N degrees, let's see if we can bring it down to N-1"), then it's all good. you test the sugar pill versus whatever treatment, and see which does better.

    but if you're talking about reducing pain, then it gets complicated. objectively, you can see that a proposed treatment has the same result that a placebo does. does this mean that the treatment is worthless? well, if any fraction of people feel better after the "treatment", even though it's practically a placebo, then what is your argument against those people using the treatment?

    don't worry, I know that the problem is with quacks lying about objectively measurable results.

    but what do we do in the case of conditions where a "placebo" works very well for a significant fraction of people? shouldn't we fund some research into why the placebo works?

    --
    new sig
  47. What a relief by assertation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I started reading the title of this thread and though "please don't be the US".

    After all, we have
    - global climate change deniers
    - anti-vaccination groups
    - paleo diet followers
    - raw foodism
    - a museum that claims dinosaurs and cavemen lived together on the newly created 5 thousand year old Earth.

    What a relief to know that the US is not the only developed country with a problem of people making up their own reality.

    1. Re:What a relief by kamapuaa · · Score: 1

      Following a Paleo diet is on par with global climate change deniers?

      I don't paleo diet myself, but it's a healthy way to eat. The diet excludes "grains, legumes, dairy products, salt, refined sugar, and processed oils," and aside from the body's requirement for salt (which should be OK with a meat-heavy diet), what's wrong with that?

      I know food preferences are like a religion but comparing it to anti-vaccination groups is ridiculous.

      --
      Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    2. Re:What a relief by inviolet · · Score: 1

      I started reading the title of this thread and though "please don't be the US".

      After all, we have - global climate change deniers - anti-vaccination groups - paleo diet followers - raw foodism - a museum that claims dinosaurs and cavemen lived together on the newly created 5 thousand year old Earth.

      What a relief to know that the US is not the only developed country with a problem of people making up their own reality.

      Your attempt at passing off a package deal has been detected by automatic scanners.

      "One of these things is not like the other . . . one of these things does not belong . . . "

      --
      FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
    3. Re:What a relief by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      Your attempt at passing off a package deal has been detected by automatic scanners.

      "One of these things is not like the other . . . one of these things does not belong . . . "

      Crackpots always think their own variety of crackpottery is special. "Those other guys are nuts, but we know the truth!" Sorry, everything on GPP's list belongs there, and if there's one of them you think is Different, that says more about you than it does about the items presented.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    4. Re:What a relief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You lost me at global climate change deniers, get educated fool.

    5. Re:What a relief by assertation · · Score: 1

      No disrespect, I think the beliefs "justifying" the paleodiet are psudeoscience. Buy one of the books and run one of the theories by anyone with an archeological background.

      Be prepared for snorting and other rude noises.

    6. Re:What a relief by eternaldoctorwho · · Score: 1

      - a museum that claims dinosaurs and cavemen lived together on the newly created 5 thousand year old Earth.

      As a resident Kentuckian, I am very ashamed to share a state with that museum. I sincerely apologize to the rest of the world, for that waste of space and funds.

    7. Re:What a relief by kamapuaa · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, of course. But you can buy "Paleo Diet Cream Puffs" online so I think it's more a weird set of dietary restrictions than an actual attempt to eat like a cave man.

      --
      Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    8. Re:What a relief by dwpro · · Score: 1

      I'm shocked you lump the paleo diet in there with those other items, could you expound on why?

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    9. Re:What a relief by dwpro · · Score: 1

      There are a whole spectrum of things up there IMHO. I guess my crackpottery is the paelo diet, can you explain why you think it is on par with young earth creationism or anti-vaccine groups?

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    10. Re:What a relief by Anomalyst · · Score: 1

      After all, we have
      - Climate change alarmists
      FTFY

      --
      There is no right to feel safe thru security vaudeville at the expense of everyone's freedom, privacy and tax money.
    11. Re:What a relief by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 1

      I guess my crackpottery is the paelo diet, can you explain why you think it is on par with young earth creationism or anti-vaccine groups?

      There's no evidence that the "paleo diet" is actually what our ancestors ate, nor that grain, legumes, and (in people who produce adequate amounts of lactase) dairy products are in any way bad for you. The one study that purports to show benefits from the diet is tiny and riddled with methodological problems. I don't think anyone seriously disputes that lean meat and fresh vegetables are better for you than processed crap (which goes a long way toward explaining the observed benefit from any diet; pay attention to what you eat, and you'll probably eat better) but the idea that humans -- who are, by all the evidence, about as omnivorous as any creature that ever walked the Earth -- should restrict themselves to a small subset of available foods is entirely without support.

      That being said, it's not "on par" with the ones you mentioned because it's not a public health threat like anti-vax, nor an assault on the foundations of science like creationism. So I'll moderate my initial statement a little: not all the items on OP's list are equally nuts. Honestly, though, that's kind of like saying, "I may be bipolar, but at least I'm not schizophrenic!" -- it's all still pretty wackadoodle by sane people's standards.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    12. Re:What a relief by shilly · · Score: 1

      Wow. A denier quoting heinlein. That is one hell of a calumny on the world's finest hard sf writer

    13. Re:What a relief by mjwx · · Score: 1

      I started reading the title of this thread and though "please don't be the US".

      After all, we have
      - global climate change deniers
      - anti-vaccination groups
      - paleo diet followers
      - raw foodism
      - a museum that claims dinosaurs and cavemen lived together on the newly created 5 thousand year old Earth.

      What a relief to know that the US is not the only developed country with a problem of people making up their own reality.

      As an Australian, I can say with the big exception of a museum claiming dinosaurs and cavemen lived together, all of these idiocies exist in Oz and are most unfortunately, increasing. Add to the general anti-science movement an unhealthy dose of racism and xenophobia and the intellect of Australia is dropping rapidly. The only thing you have over us ATM is partisan politics and we are rapidly catching up to you on that with the likes of Tony Abbott.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    14. Re:What a relief by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Anyone using the phrase "global climate change deniers" as a term of opprobrium also thinks that mankind is causing worldwide heating to a significant degree, that everybody should take steps to reduce their pleasure in life in order to reduce global warming, and that global warming is a bad thing.

      I cordially invite you anti-industrial slime to go bury yourself so as to limit your contribution to worldwide pollution.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    15. Re:What a relief by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have global climate change deniers, you have man-made global warming deniers. The documentary "Global Warming - Emerging Science & Understanding" debunks man-made global warming myths.

      You don't have people making up their own realities on vaccination, you have many people DYING or getting autism immediately after taking mercury vaccines, toxicology showing mercury levels off the chart in their blood.

      Now, go back to sleep and take your vaccines like a good citizen. If you're vaccinated then you are safe anyway, so it doesn't matter of other people choose not to take the vaccine.

    16. Re:What a relief by benhattman · · Score: 1

      GP doesn't appear to claim paleo diet is == to AGW denial. In the grand scheme, even if people lived 25% shorter on a paleo diet, it's clearly not as bad. But I think the point is that it's the same intellectual flaw that leads down both paths. Antivaccine is often found on the "left" and AGW denial on the "right", but both are caused by a general distrust of experts and reliance on anecdotes and societal pressure over accurate knowledge. In that way, yes the caveman diet fits right in.

    17. Re:What a relief by assertation · · Score: 1

      Aren't you a charming person. Your graciousness is only surpassed by your concern for other people and the world.

      If evolution was perfect you would die before you have a chance to reproduce and pass your dispositions onto another generation.

  48. The unicorn retort by elrous0 · · Score: 1

    Just because science has not discovered something does not mean it doesn't exist.

    Every time I hear that argument, I respond with "Science hasn't proven that unicorns don't exist. But that doesn't offer ANY evidence that they DO."

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:The unicorn retort by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Every time I hear that argument, I respond with "Science hasn't proven that unicorns don't exist. But that doesn't offer ANY evidence that they DO."

      http://www.google.com/patents/US4429685

    2. Re:The unicorn retort by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Are you mocking the Invisible Pink Unicorn?

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    3. Re:The unicorn retort by SockPuppetOfTheWeek · · Score: 1

      Science hasn't proven that unicorns don't exist. But that doesn't offer ANY evidence that they DO.

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1025793/The-horned-deer-solve-mystery-unicorn.html

    4. Re:The unicorn retort by tibit · · Score: 1

      Now we need something on rainbows and ponies. That was informative and funny, though. Thanks!

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  49. Re:Fundamentalists by vlm · · Score: 2

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science, lots of things that science is not yet able to measure, and lots of things that science does not yet understand. That includes many things that we take advantage of daily -- even before we start on the stuff which is ridiculed by people like you.

    Name one thing.

    Good troll response would be the miracle of Transubstantiation during daily mass, of course. That LOL funny. I'm betting we don't get anything this witty.

    --
    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  50. Re:Fundamentalists by serviscope_minor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    the problem with your argument is the definition of "better".

    I was simplifying for the OP who clearly didn't understand science.

    but if you're talking about reducing pain, then it gets complicated.

    Yes certainly.

    objectively, you can see that a proposed treatment has the same result that a placebo does. does this mean that the treatment is worthless?

    Well, ethics aside, placebos aren't worthless treatments. But alternative-medicine placebos aren't any better than regular placebos.

    but what do we do in the case of conditions where a "placebo" works very well for a significant fraction of people? shouldn't we fund some research into why the placebo works?

    Certainly. The placebo effect is amazing and well worthy of scientific research.

    Homeopathy for instance isn't. The science is done and it has been shown to be a simple instance of the placebo effect.

    Fun fact: the placebo effect works even if people know they are taking placebos!

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.
  51. Anecdotal Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't speak on homeopathy. I've never tried it.

    Since we are of a mix cultural family, the choice of medicinal remedies from both sides of the Atlantic are not decided by what, but by the reputation of the practitioner. When I went back to Hong Kong to visit, my doctor brother took a look at my maladies and recommended me to try out the non-invasive methods first.

    With regards to chinese medicine, accupuncture worked great for a stubborn muscle knot on my back that lingered for two years. The accupuncturist isolated the knot with about 7 needles and pricked (without drawing blood) a few muscle groups around the knot. As I waited, he corrected my posture, gave me recommendations of pillows, etc. After a week of treatment the knot has decreased its size by about 75%.

    Die-Da, a form of massage that treats bruises and muscle pain, has made a trouble wrist with nagging injuries almost pain free. The condition has previously existed for 3 years after a weight lifting accident. For awhile I couldn't even feel my one side of my ring finger and pinky. Now the wrist doesn't pop when I rotate my hand (it use to sound like I was working a small nut cracker). Previously there were knot-like lumps on the side of palm. They are now gone.

    All in all, 5 days of treatment on the back, 7 days on the wrist. I spent 300 bucks in total and most of the symptoms are gone. YMMV.

    1. Re:Anecdotal Information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My mother got to some accupuncture to get rid of her cigarette addiction. It didn't help. Two other people also didn't stop smoking.
      I was given homeopathic medicine for cold as a child. Well, the cold was over in 7 days ;)

  52. Animal Testing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should subject homeopathic medicine to animal testing. By that I mean they should lock one of these doctors in a cage with a tiger. If they can prevent being eaten using plant extracts and chiropractic treatment, I will have more faith in their practices.

    1. Re:Animal Testing by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      I say give the doctor a chance and arm him. A super-soaker with a single lead filing in the tank should turn that tiger into a red smear if he can wield it properly.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  53. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    some chiropractors now extended their manipulation of the spine to children, and claimed that this could cure asthma, allergies, bedwetting, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, colic, fever and numerous other problems, and could serve as a substitute for vaccination.

    Some chiropractors have also broken people's necks. Do you really want them messing with your children's not-fully-formed spines?

    --
    No sig today...
  54. Acupuncture does work but can't be tested by danparker276 · · Score: 1

    much of it depends on the skills of the acupuncturist and what methods they use. If they just grab some random guy who has studied acupuncture for 1 year and knows from a book where to stick the pins, it's not going to be as effective as someone who has studied from masters for 20 years. Acupuncture basically is a science because they've used trial and error and test subjects for 1000s of years. If you do it right, they needles send an electrical signal to the brain, saying something is wrong. The brain then responds. You can almost think of it as a keyboard for the brain.

    1. Re:Acupuncture does work but can't be tested by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Actually...not quite.

      http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2008/04/sham_acupuncture_is_better_than_true_acu.php

      "Both treatment groups, "true" and sham acupuncture, experienced decreases in the intensity of arm pain, arm symptoms, and noted improvement in arm function. However, patients in the sham acupuncture group improved more than patients in the "true" acupuncture group in the intensity of arm pain and just as much in measures of arm function and grip strength."

  55. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is not truly the case. If there is no money to be made in a non-patentable product expensive clinical trials will not be conducted no matter the efficacy. Also, FDA has been deceived many times by corporate pharma data as evidenced by the lawsuits continuously filed against various drug manufacturers. FDA has also been known to have a swinging door when it comes to hiring former big pharma personnel who often leave again to return to the mothership when their work is done.

  56. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every single person in here knows for a fact that there are things beyond current science. Even bringing that up is a red herring. The question the adults are wondering about is whether specific idea X is reasonable. In that question, you cannot reasonably argue "there are things you don't know, so therefore you must treat any idea out there as reasonable - deposit your brain in this jar please."

  57. Canada too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See York University's near affiliation with some chiroquacks a number of years ago.

    www.csicop.org/si/show/universitys_struggle_with_chiropractic/

  58. Re:Fundamentalists by jd · · Score: 1

    Human perception is never good enough for anything. Humans perceive things that are unreal all the time (see The Guardian's experiment on false memories that they recently ran as an example).

    Anything that exists can be measured by a physical instrument. Not necessarily at the time that you deduce that it exists (particle physics frequently deduces the existence of particles long before direct observation becomes possible) but even then you can firmly establish the constraints on that physical instrument and thus prove that such an instrument must be buildable.

    Unlike some, I am not a skeptic of "alternative medicine" merely because it is alternative. I accept entirely the premise that there may be alternative approaches to medicine that are superior to conventional Western medicines. If a witch-doctor could demonstrate repeatable cures for hangovers then I would want to know how any why, but I wouldn't deny evidence merely because of the label on the packet. However, I absolutely require that such approaches be shown with the same scientific rigour that I would expect of any other kind of medicine (or, indeed, any other kind of phenomenon). Equally, I am highly skeptical of Western medicine where that scientific rigour is absent or dubious. There can be only one standard and there can be no excuses made for any industry, be it mainstream or traditional.

    (Equally, in surveys of scientists where a high percentage of fraud is claimed, no excuses can be made for scientists who commit fraud. Fraud is fraud, whether carried out by bankers, Harley Street doctors, scientists or the local shaman. I don't care who, I don't care why.)

    My chief complaint for those who pick sides rather than pick standards is that they are not looking at the evidence, no matter what side they pick. Science isn't about "home team" vs. "the other guys", science is about methodology, rigour and standards of evidence. (For those who give a rat's arse, I apply that to all things. I don't like bands, I like songs. I don't like countries, I like factors. I don't like authors, I like stories. I don't give a damn about the source, I care about the results. The source doesn't enter into it. Ever.)

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  59. Traditional Chinese medicine... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is the most dangerous, environmentally destructive, downright evil practice humans still perform. Rhino horn powder, dragon bones, grizzly bear bile, tiger penis... wft those aren't medicine, those are spell components.

  60. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If it doesn't make you better, then by what reasoning or intuition is it doing any good at all?"

    You're missing the point. If people were allowed to set up "placebo practices", and made all sorts of general health claims that didn't quite cross the threshold of illegality, they would probably get plenty of customers who were: A) too cheap to go to a real doctor, or B) for whatever psychological reason think regular doctors can't treat their condition properly. (Whether there is a physiological condition TO treat is left as an exercise for the reader.)

    But, no, they can't do that. People would catch on if they advertised it as "New and improved! Works as good as genuine placebo! Special this week: twice the dilution for regular price!" So they set up homeopathy practices. That's how you make money off the gullible.

  61. If you do this for a million generations .. by roguegramma · · Score: 1

    .. it might actually work.

    --
    Hey don't blame me, IANAB
  62. Re:Fundamentalists by berashith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Tim Minchin knocks this out of the park ... alternative medicine, by its definition, has either been not proven to work , or proven not to work. Alternative medicine that has been proven to work is called ... medicine..

  63. meta not pseudo by fibonacci8 · · Score: 1

    Traditional Chinese medicine is metascience, it should properly be grouped with philosophy rather than medicine. Treat it as an enormous collection of hypotheses just waiting to be tested and you discover the true worth. Treat it as a final solution and you'll understand why there are so many quacks out there labeling things "herbal" or "folk" remedies to avoid being charged with outright fraud.

    --
    Inheritance is the sincerest form of nepotism.
  64. Isn't that what killed Steve Jobs? by enterix · · Score: 1

    Didn't he tried alternative cancer treatment...

  65. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Alternative medicine" that works is just called "medicine".

    Lots of mainstream medical theory originated with folk remedies. Among the examples of alternative medicine that was studied and proven to have benefits are:

    Willow bark tea (now called aspirin)
    Exposure to Cow Pox to prevent Smallpox (origins of the vaccine)
    Manual re-alignment of joints to aid in healing after an injury (now called physical therapy).

    Now, the problem is that for every one remedy that works there are a bunch more that "only work if you believe" (placebo effect), or "work but can't be measured" (don't really work at all). Furthermore over time the ones that do work become accepted as legitimate medicine, so increasingly "alternative" medicines just the collection of crap that people believe because the guy who sold it to them had a "trustworthy face".

    If a remedy actually works you can trivially prove it by conducting a double blind study (the control group will recover more slowly to a statistically significant degree than the experimental group). If your alternative medicine of choice can't live up to this than that means (with mathematical certainty) that any healing effects you feel are purely coincidental. Believing otherwise is roughly as intelligent as insisting that when your computer got a virus, and I performed a chant and reformatted the hard drive, it was the chant that got rid of the virus, and if you had believed a little more maybe you wouldn't have also lost all your files.

  66. Re:Fundamentalists by mellon · · Score: 1

    Consciousness.

  67. Re:Fundamentalists by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

    "...then obviously the treatment doesn't work, does it?"

    err... no. Perhaps the treatment wasn't amenable to setting up a blind test. (e.g. DMSO - can't do a blind test because any route of administration causes an intense garlic-like flavor perception by the subject that nothing else can match. Many of the attempts to create placebos are also faulty - the fake acupuncture needle may nevertheless stimulate in the same way as the real thing. Placebos vary wildly in their effects, and better placebos can be engineered. The relegation of all psychological effects to the outer darkness is a primary flaw of today's "double blind" dogma.

    If medical science were I.T., they'd insist that only hardware was properly real, and that while software might arguably exist (at least machine code - not that woo-woo talk of OSes, let alone the other stuff) it should be regarded as a mere confounding factor to diagnosing proper problems which obviously means testing empirically verifiable things such as transistors and wires and voltages and stuff.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
  68. Western medicine used homeopathy when convenient by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is drinking cranberry juice for a UTI different than taking some weird root or herb for a different affliction?

  69. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by Hentes · · Score: 1

    The problem is that these alternative therapies are being practiced and taught without first being subjected to scientific evaluation -- it is anyone's guess as to whether or not these treatments are actually effective.

    Chinese medicine has detailed models

    although they are incompatible with western science which is why many are sceptical about them. But western medicine isn't that scientific either, it's still mostly an empirical field. The majority of modern medication was first found in plants by trial and error, not derived from predictions of a rational model.

    These scientists are objecting to the teaching of treatments that have no evidence to support their use

    A thousand years of folk knowledge is plenty of statistical evidence.

  70. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    "Alternative medicine" is a catch-all phrase for pretty much anything that is not a pharmaceutical. There are plenty of things that are classified as alternative medicine that can be proven by science. The biggest problem in alternative medicine is that typically (always?) the treatment is inexpensive and not protected under patent. That means that no one will invest money to prove its efficacy because they are not the exclusive benefactors of the results.

    In the US, the law says that anything that is used to cure, prevent, or ameliorate disease is by definition a drug. The only companies who invest the money to get FDA approval are ones that have a patent to control the return on the investment. That means that only drugs will solve medical problems. The pharmaceutical industry has a financial interest in perpetuating your perception that everything 'alternative' is junk. The companies that offer real measurable solutions to medical problems but lack control of the returns also lack the ability to widely promote their solution because 1) they have a ton of competition, and 2) they do not have FDA approval and therefore cannot advertise an actual solution (they also have to fight the perception that inexpensive solutions are worthless).

    Disclaimer: I run an 'alternative medicine' company selling products with quantifiable results. I know something about what I am talking about.

  71. Re:Fundamentalists by arielCo · · Score: 1

    Human perception is hard to standardize and thus to communicate reliably (oblig: http://xkcd.com/883/); that's why scientists often recur to mechanical instruments and even those are not always required ("the specimen is alive" and "the patients reported less pain" are good enough in certain applications).

    Science is only about knowing as opposed to figuring or having an opinion. All of the scientific method tries to address the question: "can we be sure about it?"; that's its only "fundament". Everything else (blind and double-blind, sampling, error calculation, etc) are techniques to achieve that.

    --
    This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
  72. a lot of conventional medicines are "herbs" by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    I share the aversion to homeopathy and am ambivalent about Acupuncture. But let's not throw out everything just because it didn't come from an American drug manufacturer. A lot of conventional medicines started as "herbs" -- the most well known Western example probably being salicin in willow bark, which was known for its pain relief since at least the first century AD, and later became acetylsalicylic acid or Aspirin. Does anyone think Aspirin is a placebo? It came from an old home remedy of ground up bark in Greece around 400 AD (at latest -- perhaps a lot earlier)... Surely it's not actually helping your hangover?

    Chinese "herbs" may contain active ingredients either singly or in certain combinations that the established medical community either hasn't discovered or acknowledged yet, or may not have figured out how to make gobs of money from, yet. Or maybe not. But I don't think it does us good as a species to disregard out of hand treatments simply because they've been done for a long time in another country by old guys who don't speak English.

    One problem I think Westerners have with Chinese medicine is that the terminology and explanations for the medicine's effectiveness is alien to us. Talk about "chi" and "energy flow" and "hot and cold system" doesn't follow our paradigms. And maybe the explanation is complete fantasy -- an attempt by someone with no medical background to explain their observations. That doesn't necessarily mean that the phenomenon being observed did not happen.

    Disclosure: I don't "believe in" Chinese medicine any more than I "believe in" Western medicine. I observe that the Dit Da Jow I rub on bruises has analgesic properties, and that's a good enough reason to use it, even if it doesn't have healing and restorative properties as advertised. I observe that every cholesterol lowering drug my Western doctor has tried has resulted in crippling muscle pain at the dosage she wants me to use, which prevents me from working out and reducing this gut that is probably the main cause of my high cholesterol. So I do not take it, preferring to exercise more and change my diet. (Which would be a very "Chinese medicine" approach.) (I've lost a significant amount of weight from exercise since stopping the statins, which I don't think I could have done otherwise.)

    Try to keep an open mind, but not so open your brains fall out.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:a lot of conventional medicines are "herbs" by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 1

      The problem with traditional Chinese medicine is that it is not been proven with sample groups, double-blind tests, and quantitative measurements.

      I dare say that there are some real gems hidden from the west amidst what is considered nonsense by many. The problem is, that there is also a lot of nonsense. Most of the traditional approaches probably stemmed from one person noticing a "healing" from one product- and thus- telling others.

      This healing could have been coincidental- or something specific to that individual. For example if someone having trouble sleeping switched from drinking coffee at night to decaf green tea they could say tea had magic qualities to make people sleep (when really it is because they stopped drinking coffee). Drinking tea therefore wouldn't help other people.

      A lot of the percieved benefits may just be placebo effect. Western medicine on the other hand has gone through rigorous scientific study.

      I won't say Chinese medicine is nonsense- only that it is based on traditional remedies- some of which might be correct and some of which might be nonsense.

      Oh- and most good "Western" doctors would have told you to get more exercise and eat right before putting you on medicine for cholesterol.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    2. Re:a lot of conventional medicines are "herbs" by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      > The problem with traditional Chinese medicine is that it is not been proven with sample groups, double-blind tests, and quantitative measurements.

      True, but I'd add that this is a problem that Western medicine has with Chinese medicine, not necessarily a problem with Chinese medicine per se. For one thing, it ignores what tests and quantitative measurements were done over the centuries, in China. In other words, the problem with traditional Chinese medicine is that it has not been Westernized.

      Western medicine *has* gone through rigorous scientific study, but sometimes that study has been in error, or negative effects are noticed after release, or there is a profit motive to ignore or soft-pedal negative effects. (Examples abound.) Where ever there's huge amounts of money involved, or collective opinion, or even opinions held by a few in power, one can't expect rigorous, completely objective science. So one *could* say that some part of Western medicine (hopefully a small part) is nonsense, also.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    3. Re:a lot of conventional medicines are "herbs" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but I'd add that this is a problem that Western medicine has with Chinese medicine, not necessarily a problem with Chinese medicine per se. For one thing, it ignores what tests and quantitative measurements were done over the centuries, in China. In other words, the problem with traditional Chinese medicine is that it has not been Westernized.

      No, the problem is not that it hasn't been "Westernized". The problem is that much of TCM actually hasn't been tested or quantified in any scientifically meaningful way. Those parts which have been tested and found to work? They aren't just TCM any more, they're scientifically proven. Science is not intrinsically "western", it's usable by everyone.

      You've bought into a false west/east dichotomy. What you're calling "Western" medicine has a ton of unscientific skeletons in its closet, same as TCM. Homeopathy, chiropractic, the theory of humors, all every bit as crazy and nonsensical as, say, acupuncture. What's more, just like the East, the West has hardly rid itself of its skeletons, because homeopathy etc. continue to be relevant (in the sense that people use it) to this day, no matter how much scientific evidence is amassed against the nonsense.

      Worse than that -- lots of new skeletons are being generated all the time. There are thousands of "western" quack cancer treatments. There are vile people who promoted the thoroughly unscientific idea that vaccines cause autism, and part of what made them credible to the public was that some of them were actually M.D.s. So on and so forth.

      I'm equally sure this happens in China. People are people.

    4. Re:a lot of conventional medicines are "herbs" by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Again, do you *know* that TCM has not been tested or quantified in any scientifically meaningful way, or are you assuming that because it's dispensed by old guys who don't wear white coats or speak English?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  73. Re:Fundamentalists by forkfail · · Score: 1

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science

    Your phrasing says a lot about your mindset.

    Nothing requires science to work. Rather, science tells us what works, and how well.

    Science is not some magic battery that powers some things and not others. While some inventions and approaches may be the result of applying the scientific method, there is no power of some sort being drawn off some reservoir of science.

    I know that this should be obvious to readers here, but precision in language about these things matters. See also "I believe in X" where X is a scientific theory - your belief doesn't matter. What matters are the observations and the logical chains that lead from those empirical premises. Belief has nothing to do with it.

    --
    Check your premises.
  74. Why TCM and Science don't mix by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know I'm going to get flamed for this, but here I go anyway.

    One example of how things aren't always repeatable is architecture. We can take the exact same building (say, an igloo) and put it somewhere else (say, the Sahara) and it'll be useless except to quinch thirst. Complex systems tend to be highly sensitive to their environment. Every person's body is a different environment. So, no, I don't expect that every good medicine can be tested through repetition. We can't give aspirin to a thousand random people and prove that it helps everyone. Some people will end up bleeding from the stomach. Traditional Chinese medical treatment is far more complex than aspirin (an herbal remedy isn't based on one ingredient, but on a complex assortment of ingredients which interact with one another) and will have different results on different people - even if that traditional Chinese medical treatment does have a worthwhile effect on some people. The art is in figuring out whom it will have a positive effect on and whom it won't. But you can't test that through giving the treatment to a thousand random people.

  75. You misudnerstand something here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Placebo is an effect which is ALWAYS here. When you take a pill, be it anti depressant or whatnot, it will be there. The effect will vary from psychological alleviation of symtom (nothing changed but the persons feel better) to pain lessening. Now accunpuncture was comapred to FAKE accunpuncture , and it was shown to have the SAME effect : aka accunpuncture is not better than placebo. The same for homeopathy which when tested is no better than palcebo. But that palcebo effect, ALSO exists with real medicine. So by going homeopathy / accunpuncture, you are NOT making yourself any favor , you are just feeling the pocket of somebody else. Evidence based Medicine OTOH not only has its own effect, but also the palcebo effect. It is a win win. All your article showed is that doing "anything" is better than doing "nothing" (due to placebo effect). This does not change that it is utter pseudo science based on nothing whatsoever , you could as well do crystal healing, otr some other shit.

  76. Re:Fundamentalists by forkfail · · Score: 2

    So how do you explain all the intelligent people using it?

    Because intelligence is not by any means always adequate to overcome fear.

    --
    Check your premises.
  77. all kinds of medicines are the same by harduser · · Score: 0

    Be it conventional or traditional - no medicine can cure flu in less than 7 days and all fail to cure cancer or other terminal diseases. It's up to patients whether they want to rely on folklore beliefs or methods based on statistical results.

  78. Alternative medicine in Australia by nbauman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's what's going on in alternative medicine in Australia. Unfortunately this article is behind a paywall, so I'll give you an excerpt. (It helps to understand that when you give a lung x-ray, you have a good chance of finding spots that nobody can really interpret, that usually turn out to be harmless.)

    http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1110812
    What's the Alternative? The Worldwide Web of Integrative Medicine
    Ranjana Srivastava, F.R.A.C.P.
    Department of Medical Oncology, Monash Medical Centre, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
    N Engl J Med 2012; 366:783-785 March 1, 2012

    Out of curiosity, an impressionable woman in her 30s attends an integrative medicine exhibition; having recently had a child, she's been sleep-deprived and wants to investigate natural remedies. At the seminar, she wins a door prize — a blood test that promises to diagnose cancer. She was considering getting a blood test anyway and seizes this opportunity for a more comprehensive workup. After all, you can't be too careful about avoiding cancer.

    Weeks later, she receives a call from an apologetic but alarmed stranger telling her she has advanced cancer.

    “How do you know?” she gasps.

    “Your blood test is positive for circulating tumor cells.”

    “What does that mean?” she cries.

    He sends her a three-page report and tells her to seek immediate help. She spends a nail-biting week awaiting an appointment with the recommended integrative health expert.

    Glancing at the report, the expert declares, “You have advanced non–small-cell lung cancer. You need treatment now.” The woman is petrified: Has her teenage smoking habit come back to haunt her?

    “Are you sure?” she asks.

    “Absolutely. There are circulating tumor cells in your blood.”

    Tears streaming down her face, the woman asks, “What now?”

    The practitioner prescribes a 12-week course of intravenous vitamin C, at a cost of $6,000, paid up front. Without further discussion, an appointment is made.

    [Gets a CT scan, which shows 2 2mm nodules. They could be lung cancer.]

    The hunt for a rapid cure brings the woman to my office. Relating her story, she shifts between self-assurance and sheepishness. “I know you find this incredible, but I need your help. I am dying of cancer.”

    “There's no evidence of cancer,” I reply, seeking to reassure her.

    Instead, her tone sharpens: “But I have circulating tumor cells! How can you say that?”

    Incredulous, I try to explain too many things. The blood test is a long way from being validated for clinical use. It was unscrupulous even to offer it. Does it make sense to her that it was sent to an unheard-of overseas laboratory for processing? Why did no one recommend that she see an oncologist?

    [Demands a PET scan. PET scan clear, the 2 nodules on the CT have disappeared. Probably transient foci of inflammation. Srivastava tells her, "There is no cancer." Woman still insists she has lung cancer. Demands to see a surgeon. Surgeon refuses to see her.]

    1. Re:Alternative medicine in Australia by Ocker3 · · Score: 1

      I'd classify this as a scam, rather than alternative medicine. Scams happen in any field where some people hold more knowledge than others (which includes pretty much every field of study). Vitamin C has been shown to help some things, but not others, certainly not in mega-doses (Anything in too large a quantity is poisonous), certainly not cancer. I would argue that actual Alternative Medicine practitioners actually believe in what they're doing, and an honest practitioner would want their methods to be scrutinised and verified by science if someone was willing to pay for the study. Of course, some traditional medicine practitioners don't really care about Western Science and just practice what they've been taught, as they've seen it work.

    2. Re:Alternative medicine in Australia by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting anecdote. Just as a silly side note, $6,000 will buy over 200 pounds of vitamin C. Sigh, there are SO many bad people out there.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    3. Re:Alternative medicine in Australia by dbIII · · Score: 1

      I'd classify this as a scam, rather than alternative medicine

      Yes but "alternative medicine" is the name that's placed on a lot of these scams. If that's what they call it and nothing but the scammers are easily visable then that's what they get called.
      I've got one paticularly nasty one near me that is ripping off impressionable teenagers by selling them an expensive course in some sort of applied voodoo. Among other things they hold the record in Australia for the largest default on tax to date. They've changed their name now to sound like a mainsteam technical college.

  79. Re:Fundamentalists by Barsteward · · Score: 1

    "So I use scientific principles in a domain that science rejects."

    i don't think you should have said that, its at odds with being a "trained scientist". Can you prove what you perceive in order to humiliate the real scientists? The world is waiting for "proofs" from the homeopathic "scientists".

    That Mitchell and Webb Look: Homeopathic A&E http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMGIbOGu8q0 is well worth a viewing

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  80. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    Chinese medicine has detailed models

    ...which are based on what? Where is the evidence for these models? How do we know that acupuncture works better than blood letting, prayer, or instructing patients to stand on their heads?

    A thousand years of folk knowledge is plenty of statistical evidence.

    So the Earth is flat? Dead people may reappear as ghosts? Ritualistically sacrificing an animal will result in a good harvest?

    The fact that people believe things work does not mean that they work. Herbal medicines probably do work sometimes, but we need to investigate these matters to determine when herbal medicines work, when they do not work, and what they actually do. Leeches were subjected to scientific testing, and it turns out that sometimes leeches are the right approach to a medical problem -- but not nearly for the number of conditions leeches were once used for.

    Here's my question for you: do you believe things just because everyone else believes those things? If not, how do you determine what is or is not true? What role, if any, does evidence play in your evaluation of truth?

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  81. example of harm by spacefem · · Score: 4, Informative

    The saddest example I see of pseudoscience is in the birth communities, medical technology has taken us out of the tragic "good old days" when 1 in 10 babies and 1 in 100 mothers didn't survive a birth. But suddenly everyone thinks it's a great idea to run away from hospitals and doctors and use untrained homebirth attendants, even for high risk pregnancy. In Australia death rates are four times higher for homebirth babies.

    Having recently been pregnant and seen the "trust NATURE" mantras thrown at me again and again in online communities, I'm so afraid of who else is being mislead. But the consequences are unimaginable.

    1. Re:example of harm by Pope · · Score: 1

      Heh, "Trust Nature." The same one that fills Australia with loads of really poisonous creatures? :)

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    2. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, your blog citation is gospel. Excellent work, there. Unfortunately many US hospitals have CS rates closing in on 50%, and the AVERAGE is 32% as of 2010: citation http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/databriefs/db35.htm

      If you don't want a CS, and you're low risk, finding a well qualified midwife that will assist in a homebirth and offer reasonable advice on when to transfer to a hospital is a perfectly acceptable alternative. Diffrn't strokes for diffrnt folks.

    3. Re:example of harm by Yakasha · · Score: 1

      The saddest example I see of pseudoscience is in the birth communities, medical technology has taken us out of the tragic "good old days" when 1 in 10 babies and 1 in 100 mothers didn't survive a birth. But suddenly everyone thinks it's a great idea to run away from hospitals and doctors and use untrained homebirth attendants, even for high risk pregnancy.

      I suppose you have some science to back up this claim?

      In Australia death rates are four times higher for homebirth babies.

      Oh a blog. Excellent. Hang on a second while I setup a blog to counter your claims.

      On second thought, let me take a piece of the original study your blog is quoting and fix that sentence for you, shall I?

      In Australia, death rates are four times higher for homebirths with untrained attendants.

      In other news, cars repaired by your cousin the high school drop out with a 68 IQ break more. But I bet if I set up my own blog I could claim car repairs are dangerous and have people re-post it.

      Having recently been pregnant and seen the "trust NATURE" mantras thrown at me again and again in online communities

      Nature of course being notorious for failing to notify you of complications through electrical impulses flying down your nerves.

      , I'm so afraid of who else is being mislead. But the consequences are unimaginable.

      In all fairness, there are a lot of untrained attendants misleading people. Unfortunately there appear to still be trained doctors doing the exact same thing, as is evidenced by your post.

      Now for just the facts that are backed up by reputable published scientific studies (not blogs :):

      • trained attendant home births have the same mortality rate as trained attendant hospital births
      • home births result in fewer post-natal complications

      Imho, far worse than the anti-science crowd is the misquoting science crowd.

    4. Re:example of harm by Yakasha · · Score: 1

      trained attendant home births have the same mortality rate as trained attendant hospital births

      For low-risk births.

      I just know the pedantic crowd will come out in force if I don't fix that first.

    5. Re:example of harm by medv4380 · · Score: 1

      Yea the good old days when doctors had a 40% death rate for mother and child during pregnancy because they were too stupid to watch their hands after handling dead bodies. Then used their improved death rate after they figured out how to wash their hands to claim modern medicine was saving lives. Now we have a 30% percent C-Section rate because doctors prescribe them because its after 5 on Friday or the Weekend even though they are aware that C-Sections are linked to Asthma and other respiratory diseases.

    6. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, in the UK it's different - almost all births are handled by midwives, even high-risk ones, although the obstetricians will have more input. There are usually only 2 doctors on a labour ward at night.

    7. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wtf? Having a C-section only makes it more likely that your future children will be born by C-section.

    8. Re:example of harm by TheDugong · · Score: 1

      In Australia C-sections are often done for liability reasons. They tend to get sued if they do not do everything possible and the baby dies or has other bad stuff happen.

      Our ob was completely fine, actually very happy, with my wife having a natural no-drug birth... in hospital and with everything, including drugs, to hand if needed. We're not stupid. The midwife thought it was awesome and is writing a paper on the birth.

      USE ALL THE THINGS!

      Seriously, we did hypnobirthing - lots of witchy-witchery-woo in that (no, really, there is), but it worked. It helped my wife really relax. All through the pregnancy, we did loads of exercise (she was walking/jogging 8-10km a day up until a few days before the birth), yoga, maintained a good diet etc.

      So... all holistic and stuff, but with modern medicine, which we ended up not really needing, to hand should Pete raise his Tong.

    9. Re:example of harm by medv4380 · · Score: 1

      Yes, C-Sections are in fact linked to Asthma. If you ask your OB or ask your spouse to ask her OB you'll find out. It's common knowledge for the medical community and is one of the reasons some hospitals have made moves to fix the C-Section rates.

    10. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is, this is a reaction to the massive *over* medicalisation of birth in Australian hospitals. Where elective cesearean is promoted despite demonstrated poorer outcomes. Where an obstetrician is paid several times as much to attend a cesearean over a normal vaginal birth (and of course, it's quicker, so they can do more of them). It's no wonder that people are shying away from hospitals.

    11. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But suddenly everyone thinks it's a great idea to run away from hospitals and doctors

      Hospitals and doctors?

      My birth would have gone fine at home with just a midwife present, but instead I got a doctor who was a little too eager to play with his toys and left me with a four-inch scar across my face.

    12. Re:example of harm by shilly · · Score: 1

      All of that was nicely done

    13. Re:example of harm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Interesting link. I liked how in my browser the column for significance in the first chart is not visible.

      Anyway, as they say correlation does not equal causation. Best to remain skeptical to all those pushing an agenda, do your own research, and make the best choices you can.

    14. Re:example of harm by benhattman · · Score: 1

      OK, so you've got an axe to grind. Congrats?

      GP is right about this. Deaths during birth used to be much higher, and because of improved medical interventions, they are lower. You don't need a "blog" to prove that. It's one thing to say too many c-sections are performed (true) or that women might benefit from fewer epidurals (questionable). But, to argue that home birth is as safe or safer than hospital birth is you pushing a clearly false agenda.

    15. Re:example of harm by Yakasha · · Score: 1

      You don't need a "blog" to prove that.

      No, you need reputable scientific studies. Which have been performed. Which have been published. Which have been misquoted by bloggers and then repeated here as fact "disproving" the very same reputable scientific studies.

      But, to argue that home birth is as safe or safer than hospital birth is you pushing a clearly false agenda.

      First, the only things I'm promoting are science, logic, and the ability to read and think critically. If you think that is a bad agenda to push, well, our discussion is going to be really short. What I am saying is the GP quoting a blog that misquotes a scientific study leading to false conclusions and claiming it is an example of science destroying misinformation is just as dangerous and stupid as what the GP was complaining about. The specific topic is merely an irrelevant coincidence. What the GP/blogger stated about the dangers of homebirths is a lie as "Homebirths are more dangerous" (as claimed by the GP/blogger) is a vastly different statement than "homebirths attended by untrained personnel are more dangerous" (as claimed in the quoted study).

      Who in their right mind would think car repairs performed by untrained technicians would match the quality of repairs done by trained technicians?
      Pregnancy/birth is no different. Its not rocket science.

      Unless you hire an untrained scientist/blogger out of his Mom's Hippie Hostel (tm)...

      Many aspects of a home birth are beneficial. Many aspects of a hospital birth are beneficial. Many aspects of a home birth are detrimental. And many aspects of a hospital birth are detrimental. There are indeed hippies that think an unassisted "home" birth in the middle of a forest is the best way to go. There are also trained attendants that want to shove a living snake up those hippie's cooches until they and everybody that has ever heard of such a stupid idea dies from it. Likewise there are doctors that educate and inform, and there are doctors that lie to push their own beliefs.

      Your post actually brings up another point... Doctors are not gods. They are human. They are susceptible to the same biases and mistakes as the rest of us. Your apparent blind faith in them, regardless of contradicting evidence presented, is both telling and disturbing.

  82. Science-Based? by trongey · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'd like to hear more about this "science-based" medicine. It seems like a great concept. Unfortunately, the only resemblance conventional medicine has with science is that doctors experiment with various drugs to see if some random combination might have a positive effect.
    How many commercials have you seen lately where the voice-over says, "We think this drug works by..."?

    --
    You never really know how close to the edge you can go until you fall off.
    1. Re:Science-Based? by Ltap · · Score: 1

      Would you rather have people who are honestly uncertain or people who are dishonestly certain? Honest certainty is the ideal scenario, but certainty is a hard thing to get in science (and some would argue that you should never be too certain, anyway).

      --
      Yet Another Tech Blog
      (but so much more, including game and movie reviews)
      http://yanteb.peasantoid.org
  83. Re:Fundamentalists by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 1

    So how do you explain all the intelligent people using it?

    Well - how do you explain the fact that there are a vast number of intelligent people who follow a religion, as well as a vast number of intelligent people who do not believe in a religion? I'm really not saying anything about religion, I'm just saying that your argument is very, very flawed. I will apologize, though for using "alternative medicine" as a catch-all when I was really referring specifically to homeopathy. If you set up a double blind study on a specific ailment and treat one group with a placebo, one group with a homeopathic remedy, and one with modern medicine (assuming modern medicine has a treatment for the specific ailment), then you will find that the homeopathic remedy is equally as effective as a placebo. If you can show me a peer-reviewed study that shows a homeopathic remedy which is more effective than a placebo, then I (and I would imagine a large number of other folks on /.) would accept your argument. I'm not trying to be mean here, I just don't believe that you are making sound arguments, and you're not really addressing my argument directly, either.

  84. Re:Fundamentalists by Tom · · Score: 0

    science insists on being able to measure stuff with a physical instrument

    Liar.

    Instruments are not a principal requirement for science, and many current sciences do much of their work without them (psychology, anthropology, social sciences, to name just a few).

    The reason the natural sciences are using instruments is that they have reached a level of precision that is higher than human perception. Early in their days, they didn't. Newton did some of his work on optics with his own eyes, some chalk and a few pieces of wood, etc.

    So science has immediately disqualified itself from judging alternative medicine

    You wish.

    If I put 100 emergency patients into a hospital with real medicine, and the other 100 into a church where they are prayed for daily and get acupuncture and homeopathic sugar pills, the only physical instrument I need is a bunch of coffins. And the only science I need is checking who survives and who dies.

    And when it comes to judgement, it doesn't get any more specific than your fraud is killing people.

    the science fundamentalists

    I think you want to look up the origin and actual meaning of the word fundamentalist.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  85. Re:Fundamentalists by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points for this and your other posts. Well put.

    --
    wot no sig
  86. Falsifiability by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

    Well, the problem is that you've conflated good science with bad science there.

    Good science - look for the falsifiable hypothesis.

    Things that don't have a falsifiable hypothesis:
    -raw foodism
    -dinosaurs and cavemen living together
    -anti-vaccination groups
    -global warming alarmists

    Things that do have a falsifiable hypothesis:
    -paleo diet (or more specifically, the carbohydrate hypothesis of disease)

    If you want to be scientific, you need to have a both necessary and sufficient falsifiable hypothesis, and then ruthlessly attempt to falsify it. When you fail, despite your best efforts, you're probably on the right track.

    1. Re:Falsifiability by ClickOnThis · · Score: 1

      Well, the problem is that you've conflated good science with bad science there.

      Good science - look for the falsifiable hypothesis.

      Things that don't have a falsifiable hypothesis:
      -raw foodism^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H
      -dinosaurs and cavemen living together
      -anti-vaccination groups
      -global warming alarmists

      Things that do have a falsifiable hypothesis:
      -raw foodism
      -paleo diet (or more specifically, the carbohydrate hypothesis of disease)

      If you want to be scientific, you need to have a both necessary and sufficient falsifiable hypothesis, and then ruthlessly attempt to falsify it. When you fail, despite your best efforts, you're probably on the right track.

      Fixed that for you.

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    2. Re:Falsifiability by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      How would you state the falsifiable hypothesis of raw foodism?

      What observations would convince you that a "raw food diet" (however you'd like to define that), was not anymore beneficial to health, than say, any given low-glycemic diet? Is there a definition of "raw" that simply limits maximum temperature the food has gotten to, or some variant of that?

      I'd offer that say, a diet of raw potatoes, sugar beets, rice and wheat would be deleterious to health, as measured by insulin response. Maybe there's a definition of "raw food" that I just haven't been exposed to.

    3. Re:Falsifiability by ClickOnThis · · Score: 1

      How would you state the falsifiable hypothesis of raw foodism?

      What observations would convince you that a "raw food diet" (however you'd like to define that), was not anymore beneficial to health, than say, any given low-glycemic diet? Is there a definition of "raw" that simply limits maximum temperature the food has gotten to, or some variant of that?

      I'd offer that say, a diet of raw potatoes, sugar beets, rice and wheat would be deleterious to health, as measured by insulin response. Maybe there's a definition of "raw food" that I just haven't been exposed to.

      One can evaluate the health effects of a raw diet just as one evaluates the health effects of any diet: a properly-designed experiment with controls and metrics to assess the health of the participants.

      I'm not saying raw-foodism is proven to be effective, I'm just saying one can examine the question of whether it is effective, i.e., it does present a falsifiable hypothesis.

      Come to think of it, all of the items on the list we're discussing can pose hypotheses that are falsifiable. It's just that some of them have been falsified already ad nauseum (humans and dinosaurs co-existing, irrational fear of vaccinations and denial of climate change.)

      --
      If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
    4. Re:Falsifiability by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      a properly-designed experiment with controls and metrics to assess the health of the participants.

      I'm sorry, maybe I wasn't clear - what is your technical definition of "raw food"?

      I'm just saying one can examine the question of whether it is effective, i.e., it does present a falsifiable hypothesis.

      I'm sorry, again, I'm losing you on definitions - because "raw" doesn't correspond to some actual difference that we've got an easy measure for (let's say, like glycemic index), you're not presenting a falsifiable hypothesis. Any contrary information from an experiment, and you'll just say "oh, that wasn't *really* raw". Specifics, if you have them.

      Come to think of it, all of the items on the list we're discussing can pose hypotheses that are falsifiable.

      Catastrophic Anthropogenic Global Warming, where both hot temperatures and cold temperatures are considered validations of "predictions" is clearly not falsifiable. Every possible observation is asserted as compatible through ad hoc special pleadings.

      More background from Popper: http://www.stephenjaygould.org/ctrl/popper_falsification.html

    5. Re:Falsifiability by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any definition of raw food will do. If you say something wasn't "really" raw, then try the experiment again with your idea of what is really raw.

  87. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like Steve Jobs?

    It really worked out well for him. By the time he came to his senses his cancer had metastasized and the situation was dire. Then it was too late. There was a good chance he could have been treated successfully if he had sought proper medical help in the first place.

    Also human perception is bunk. Why do you think we spend so much time on things like double blind studies?

  88. Re:Fundamentalists by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    One big item is gravity. No one really understands how that works; we only know that it seems to be correlated to mass. Why exactly having a bunch of matter in one place (e.g. a planet or star) creates a gravitational field, no one knows. If we knew that, we'd probably be able to figure out how to manipulate gravity (by means other than simply collecting mass and moving it around) and do some really interesting things, such as create anti-gravity devices, or perhaps even exceed lightspeed travel.

    Now, don't take this to mean that if some yahoos come along saying "give us a bunch of money and we'll use these magic crystals to modulate gravity waves and make you feel better", that you should believe them.

  89. Let's test them... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 2

    ...and see *if* they work.

    In terms of medical science, that means double-blind placebo controlled studies.

    Sadly, our tests of these pseudo-scientific medical practices has shown them to come up short:

    http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2008/04/sham_acupuncture_is_better_than_true_acu.php

    1. Re:Let's test them... by Antimatter3009 · · Score: 1

      Sadly, our tests of these pseudo-scientific medical practices has shown them to come up short:

      http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2008/04/sham_acupuncture_is_better_than_true_acu.php

      This is partially my point, though. This article says "sham" acupuncture is equivalent or better than the real thing, but leaves out that both are better than the usual treatment:

      http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2007/09/acupuncture-may-be-more-effective-for-back-pain-treatment-than-conventional-medicine.ars

      So yeah, all of the magic behind acupuncture and placement points and whatever other junk may not be true, but that doesn't change that there's something about the process of acupuncture that seems to help. So there's no need to throw it out. It really does help, and science should work to figure out why so we can make it better, not throw it away because it doesn't work exactly like practitioners think it does.

    2. Re:Let's test them... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I'm still not convinced that you can do a proper double blind study for acupuncture and it is also one of those that covers a lot of areas (e.g. pain management, nausea, etc) so you have to test each one of those before you can make a conclusive judgment on the whole practices.

    3. Re:Let's test them... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      So yeah, all of the magic behind acupuncture and placement points and whatever other junk may not be true, but that doesn't change that there's something about the process of acupuncture that seems to help.

      I believe we call that the "placebo effect."

      It really does help, and science should work to figure out why so we can make it better,

      Now *that's* an interesting idea - how do we make the placebo effect more effective!

    4. Re:Let's test them... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Treat them as individual practices, and just process of elimination. If we discover that acupuncture is useless for everything except fighting one specific viral infection, great, we'll stop telling people to use it for all the placebo effects, and just have them use it if they come back with that particular virus.

      In fact, you make that your Acupuncture 101 course - what we've determined it cannot do. Eventually, it just ends up being a huge list, but my bet is that when it comes down to it, applying the rigorous scientific method and testing falsifiable hypotheses, acupuncture simply cannot stand on its own.

    5. Re:Let's test them... by UpnAtom · · Score: 1

      Many treatments are inherently less testable than others.

      That doesn't justify bias against them.

    6. Re:Let's test them... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      That would be the best way to approach it, but the catch is finding people that are actually willing to do the degree of work required to do that. However, I doubt that you will see any aspect of acupuncture be accepted as proper "medicine" until such time that the mechanism of action is explained by something other than the flow of qi. Also, figuring out to properly test acupuncture is still a major concern and personally I'm not convinced that a proper placebo group can be formulated.

    7. Re:Let's test them... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      personally I'm not convinced that a proper placebo group can be formulated.

      Well, there's the argument that all acupuncture is placebo :)

    8. Re:Let's test them... by hsthompson69 · · Score: 1

      Absolutely it does.

      Untestable, unfalsifiable hypotheses are pseudo-science. I could make the claim that my thought processes are the cause of all miraculous healing on the planet, and that with just a little donation from every last man, woman and child, I could do even *more* miracles. You'd be quite justified in dismissing my claims as quackery.

    9. Re:Let's test them... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Well, there's the argument that all acupuncture is placebo :)

      Potentially true, but on the same token, we also don't use placebo groups for new surgical procedures either because of their invasive nature.

  90. Re:Fundamentalists by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 1

    OK. Fair enough. I can totally accept that. If my premise is incorrect, and alternative medicine is not meant to improve an objective, measurable, scientifically-derived notion of the health of a human being, but instead is meant to improve a subjective, philosophical, personal characteristic such as "wealth," then it is not science. The whole point of this article is that these universities are providing science degrees for these subjects. If they were philosophy or anthropology then there would most likely not be a discussion like this. I think your argument really reinforces the point of the article.

  91. Nonsense by datsa · · Score: 2

    As the number of alternative practitioners graduating from tertiary education institutions increases, further health-care resources are wasted, while the potential for harm increases.

    As if there's no waste and harm in Western medicine. Western health practitioners tend overtreat their patients with more invasive techniques like prescription drugs and surgery, with their side effects and "complications". Acupuncture and herbs can be medically active and effective. Why not apply the scientific method to understanding how these less invasive treatments work instead of demonizing them because they are "traditional"?

    1. Re:Nonsense by Taibhsear · · Score: 1

      herbs can be medically active and effective. Why not apply the scientific method to understanding how these less invasive treatments work instead of demonizing them because they are "traditional"?

      A.) That's where we got many, if not most, of our drugs from.
      B.) That field of research is called Pharmacognosy.

      The problem comes in with dosage. You can't know how much of a substance you are getting with herbs. Each plant will have varying concentrations of the active ingredient(s). The pill you take from the doctor or pharmacy has the same amount every time. Little to no guesswork involved in figuring out the right dosage. The maximum dosage is listed right on the bottle. Show me where it lists the concentration of active ingredients and max dosage on the herbal supplement. Until that's there, for Pete's sake, please listen to sound medical advice.

    2. Re:Nonsense by datsa · · Score: 1

      Standardized dosage doesn't help if the side effects are known, and in some cases, worse than the problem being treated. Meanwhile, modern "sound medical advice" rarely takes nutrition, stress, or other environmental factors into account, even though these things are undeniably linked to all sorts of medical problems (these are some of the first things alternative practitioners ask about). These problems exist even assuming your doctor has your best interests in mind, and doesn't have any sort of conflict of interest that might make him or her more inclined to prescribe a particular medication to you.

      I'm not saying herbal medicine is an acceptable alternative to synthetics in all cases. But the summary presented here (and the headline of the article) is slanted towards the nonsensical attitude that *only* Western medicine is worth pursuing, and that Australian universities should abandon alternatives. TFA, incidentally, includes a defense of these programs omitted from the summary.

    3. Re:Nonsense by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Many herbs are extracted for a particular concentration of the active ingredient, listed on the label. This can be either better or worse than a synthetic, completely purified chemical. It's worse in the case of some herbs where the remaining components are unknown and not necessarily beneficial. It can be better, for example, in the case of vitamin E: the synthetic chemical is alpha tocopherol; the "natural" form frequently includes the beta, gamma, and delta forms, and the gamma form has been demonstrated to be important, particularly at higher dosages.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  92. Re:Fundamentalists by Aguazul · · Score: 1

    Human perception is never good enough for anything. Humans perceive things that are unreal all the time (see The Guardian's experiment on false memories that they recently ran as an example).

    I don't want to argue because you're taking a reasoned stance rather than a fundamentalist stance. But just to point out that human perception is all that we've got. It is our only direct input, despite its flaws. Everything else is second- or third-hand. To me it is valuable to understand the only direct input feed we have from the world, and to put it above second-hand sources such as other people's opinions, or constructions such as 'objective reality' (which is something we construct in our imaginations through accumulated impressions and consensus, not something we perceive directly).

    Anything that exists can be measured by a physical instrument. Not necessarily at the time that you deduce that it exists (particle physics frequently deduces the existence of particles long before direct observation becomes possible) but even then you can firmly establish the constraints on that physical instrument and thus prove that such an instrument must be buildable.

    This seems circular. You are defining 'exists' as something that is measurable by a physical instrument. To me the only thing that exists is my direct perception, and everything else is secondary, for example it is derived from perception through reason and model-fitting in my imagination.

    Unlike some, I am not a skeptic of "alternative medicine" merely because it is alternative. I accept entirely the premise that there may be alternative approaches to medicine that are superior to conventional Western medicines. If a witch-doctor could demonstrate repeatable cures for hangovers then I would want to know how any why, but I wouldn't deny evidence merely because of the label on the packet. However, I absolutely require that such approaches be shown with the same scientific rigour that I would expect of any other kind of medicine (or, indeed, any other kind of phenomenon). Equally, I am highly skeptical of Western medicine where that scientific rigour is absent or dubious. There can be only one standard and there can be no excuses made for any industry, be it mainstream or traditional.

    I know a witch-doctor (well, several), and I think his cure for one person's hangover would probably be different to his cure for another person's, depending on the case. For your study, you'd want all the treatments to be the same, right? I don't think it's going to happen, not when it is so personal. So I guess we're not going to get the straightforward proof you're looking for. But whose fault is that? If you require very strong independent standards of objective proof, you're excluding all treatments which might work but are difficult to study or analyse.

    Anyway, it was a pleasure to discuss this with a non-hostile person.

  93. Homeopathy and holistic medicine by PrimalChrome · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's worth noting that the handful of homeopathy practitioners that I've met over the years have a holistic approach to their medicine. I'll try to provide an example :

    Western Doctor visit : You sit in the waiting room for an hour before being taken back to a room. They spend 2 minutes to weigh, measure, and get your vitals. Doc walks in and you complain of headaches. He nods, looks you over, and prescribes Tylenol 3 and ushers you to the payment processor.

    Homeopathy practitioner visit : You sit in the deserted waiting room for 5 minutes before going back to a room. The practitioner comes in and gets your measurements/vitals and asks you what's wrong. You say you're having headaches. They ask more questions about activity cycle, diet, stressors, and your social situation. They prescribe you a placebo, tell you to quit playing League of Legends until 2am, and get another 2 hours of exercise per week.

    There are positives to the methodology that contribute to the observed successes in those that believe.....but the actual treatments are not one of them.

    1. Re:Homeopathy and holistic medicine by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Another interpretation of your scenario is the failure of the government to recognize the benefits of allowing people to have access to codeine (one of the effective ingredients in Tylenol 3) without prescription. Millions of people are dealing with pain unnecessarily because the DEA would rather you die of liver damage from overdosing on Tylenol than getting enough codeine to stop pain.

      Physicians, dentists, and other health care providers love to prescribe Tylenol 3 only because the DEA tends to not look too close when and where its prescribed. They do this because one is more likely to die from it than get high. Problem is that the people that abuse the stuff will cook off the Tylenol and get high as a kite from the codeine but the people using it legitimately for pain will have to run the risk of liver damage. I suppose the people that are taking Tylenol 3 for legitimate pain control could cook off the Tylenol to avoid the risk of liver damage just like the junkies do but doing so means they run the risk of getting busted for a federal felony.

      People are dying from Tylenol overdose but the DEA does not seem to care. They'd rather see you dead than high. Returning codeine to OTC status would mean fewer people to arrest, fewer prescriptions to regulate, and therefore fewer agents, less funding, and generally smaller government.

      If we're going to talk about how fucked up modern medicine is today we're going to have to talk about how fucked up our drug laws are now. Perhaps people would be less interested in seeking "alternative" medicine if medicines known to be effective by human civilization for thousands of years were widely available instead of locked up by government fiat.

      Along with opiates I'll toss marijuana in there too. Of course if we legalized those two classes of drugs the DEA would be making only about 10% of the arrests they are now. Can't have that, can we?

      --
      I am armed because I am free. I am free because I am armed.
    2. Re:Homeopathy and holistic medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in China, I'm a westerner. I have been to a local Chinese hospital on occasions and have been treated with Chinese herbal medicines. These are very different from what we would call homeopathic medicines. Like one time, I had seriously injured my elbow. I received a dark red cream to put on patches. Not exactly the extreme diluted stuff, but a tick paste of all kinds of herbs. It made my arm feel very warm and helped with the pain.

      Come to think of it, valium and digitalis are herbal medicines as well...

      I'm sure that a lot of the Chinese medicines are complete nonsense, but I equally think that some of them actually do work. Just not the kind of thing that we come in contact with in the Western world.

    3. Re:Homeopathy and holistic medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.pdfernhout.net/to-james-randi-on-skepticism-about-mainstream-science.html#Homeopathy_as_a_big_picture_example
      "Now, I'm not going to suggest that all, or even most, homeopathy works as advertised. But, please consider for a moment five plausible explanations for why some homeopathic remedies may indeed work as well or better as some mainstream drugs for the same condition."

    4. Re:Homeopathy and holistic medicine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd still say it's highly, arguably criminally neglegent to be touting homeopathy as any kind of "medicine", placebo or otherwise. A good doctor will also tell you to get lots of water and bedrest... which is what the homeopath directe too. If they think they're being healed with homeopathy though, then when they have cancer or a viral infection or something actually not-healable-by-doing-nothing, they'll drink their water that the "doc" says is medicine, and go home and wait for it to take effect... instead of say... an ACTUAL doctor saying "holy christ, get your ass to the emergency room NOW"

  94. Re:stop harping about the Placebo effect you yoyo' by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

    "Placebos don't kill cancerous tumors..."

    Baseless assertion. Psychological factors have a huge role in physical illness, from conscious and subconsciously determined patterns of physical actions and lifestyle, autonomic nerve and hormonal signals to the immune system. Placebos affect the disease indirectly, via psychology, but the results are also physical and sometimes profound. You may not be able to heal a broken leg with it, but you could possibly reduce the swelling, and potentially do many other biochemical tricks, including some that look unreasonably complicated and difficult from the outside.

      There are many case studies of spontaneous remission of tumors, and they often aren't explainable by the official treatment - that's why they get called "spontaneous." The patient will typically tell the doctor that it was because of prayer or fruit juice or vitamins or laetrille or some other weird thing, and the doctor will be briefly puzzled/annoyed in the few seconds before he is distracted by something else. In the rare event the case is published, the patient's explanation will of course never appear. These are probably mostly instances of successful placebos.

    --
    "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
  95. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no proof that anyone has come up with that will prove to me that you are conscious. In fact, there is no proof that anyone has come up with that will prove to me that *I* am conscious. I just take it as a matter of faith that both of us are.

  96. Re:Fundamentalists by Tom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science

    Name five.

    lots of things that science is not yet able to measure,

    Do you mean "measure" or do you mean "quantify"? Because measurement is not as important in science as many non-scientists believe. It is important, yes, but not so important that you couldn't do science without.

    lots of things that science does not yet understand

    Depending on your definition of "understand". Do you mean entirely, completely, know-everything-about? Then yes, pretty much everything falls into that category. But on almost everything that scientists have ever bothered to have a few looks at, we have at least a general idea of how it works. And - that is the important part - we are continually improving them.

    Science basically works like this: Imagine the fact, law of nature or whatever you have is a number between 1 and 99. Instead of writing a book about how god made the number 42 special and everyone who says otherwise needs to die, scientists will figure out an experiment that tells them if the number is less or greater than 50. It takes ten years to build. They still don't know very much, but now they have a better idea than anyone else. Turns out it is less than 50, so the religious fanatics who wanted to kill all the scientists when they started the experiment may be right. Of course they now celebrate their "victory".
    The scientists continue to work, and manage to come up with an experiment that can tell them that the number is +/- 10 of any number they choose to test. It is horribly expensive, so they only get funding to run it three times. Since they know it's But they are getting a pretty good idea.

    So yes, we have many fields where we still don't know what the number is. But in almost all of them, we are much closer to it than guesswork, and on many, we already know the first 20 decimal places and are trying to figure out the 21st and 22nd.

    Then why can't you accept that some real things may exist outside of the bounds of current scientific dogma.

    Name five.

    Do they really know EVERYTHING?

    You don't seem to have any issues using a computer connected to a global network, neither of which has come into existence through homeopathy, praying or interpreting ancient mystical texts.

    So here is the $1 mio. question for you:

    If you trust scientists enough to put your life into their hands every time you take a plane - because, just in case you didn't know, planes don't fly because of acupuncture or Genesis - then what is your criterion for picking the areas of your life where you trust science, and where you doubt science?

    Based on what wisdom and higher understanding do you decide which things fall into the bounds of science and which ones don't?

    And, the $10 mio. bonus question: What does it take to convince you that you are wrong?

    fundamentalists scientists

    You really want to look up "fundamentalist".

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  97. but ... but ... double blind test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You will get flamed for this on /. because some fat guy who writes c++ knows more than billions of (not mostly white) people and thousands of years of demonstrable successes. There are lab studies that show, and reproduce, causality between nitric oxide levels and needle treatment. Oh really? See the google if your curious. Now many of these lab studies do not have western names in the authors list so take that as you will. Acupuncture definitely works and is not an entirely placebo effect in many circumstances. And if it's pain alleviation you're after what exactly is wrong with a placebo effect (it's cheaper than morphine). And there ain't gonna be a double blind test because a double blind test REQUIRES identical subjects. So until we clone some lab people and raise them identically you're out of luck.

    So all you western keyboard warrioring engineers: before you wave away many centuries of evidence ... how's your back.

    1. Re:but ... but ... double blind test by Daas · · Score: 1

      Mine's great, thanks for asking.

  98. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are thousands of years of observation behind Chinese herbal medicine. There is a plausible mechanism of action.

    That makes it, not "pseudoscience", but protoscience. To the best of my knowledge, Chinese doctors hadn't discovered double-blind statistically valid clinical trials. That makes their observations subject to improved scrutiny, but not necessarily wrong.

    Pre-scientific medicine made some valid discoveries. Indian doctors had figured out that you should boil water before drinking it, and locate the privy downhill from the well. The Chinese figured out that motion was a necessity for health before we discovered anything about lymph circulation. The Greeks knew that being fat was bad for you.

    Nor is Western medicine necessarily scientific. The "evidence-based medicine" movement is constantly finding that standard treatments are not justified scientifically.

    The sound argument to be made here is that a university should be testing Chinese herbal medicine rather than teaching it.

  99. Re:Fundamentalists by forkfail · · Score: 1
    --
    Check your premises.
  100. Re:Fundamentalists by niado · · Score: 1

    but the stuff I use daily is proven beyond doubt in my world-view through careful observation of cause and effect. The only thing missing is a physical instrument to measure the results -- but why should I wait until one is invented when I have direct perception providing observations to work with.

    I'd be interested in some examples of things that you feel are unmeasurable but still proven to work.

  101. Re:Fundamentalists by Tom · · Score: 2

    (repost because stupid /. editor swallowed two sentences because it thinks the "smaller than" symbol starts an HTML tag)

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science

    Name five.

    lots of things that science is not yet able to measure,

    Do you mean "measure" or do you mean "quantify"? Because measurement is not as important in science as many non-scientists believe. It is important, yes, but not so important that you couldn't do science without.

    lots of things that science does not yet understand

    Depending on your definition of "understand". Do you mean entirely, completely, know-everything-about? Then yes, pretty much everything falls into that category. But on almost everything that scientists have ever bothered to have a few looks at, we have at least a general idea of how it works. And - that is the important part - we are continually improving them.

    Science basically works like this: Imagine the fact, law of nature or whatever you have is a number between 1 and 99. Instead of writing a book about how god made the number 42 special and everyone who says otherwise needs to die, scientists will figure out an experiment that tells them if the number is less or greater than 50. It takes ten years to build. They still don't know very much, but now they have a better idea than anyone else. Turns out it is less than 50, so the religious fanatics who wanted to kill all the scientists when they started the experiment may be right. Of course they now celebrate their "victory".
    The scientists continue to work, and manage to come up with an experiment that can tell them that the number is +/- 10 of any number they choose to test. It is horribly expensive, so they only get funding to run it three times. Since they know it's less than 50, the run the 2nd test on the numbers 20, 30 and 40. This gives you the greatest confidence (if they all fail, you know it's less than 10, the first succeeds, but the second fails, it must be between 10 and 20, etc.)
    After these experiments, they still don't know what the number is. But they are getting a pretty good idea.

    So yes, we have many fields where we still don't know what the number is. But in almost all of them, we are much closer to it than guesswork, and on many, we already know the first 20 decimal places and are trying to figure out the 21st and 22nd.

    Then why can't you accept that some real things may exist outside of the bounds of current scientific dogma.

    Name five.

    Do they really know EVERYTHING?

    You don't seem to have any issues using a computer connected to a global network, neither of which has come into existence through homeopathy, praying or interpreting ancient mystical texts.

    So here is the $1 mio. question for you:

    If you trust scientists enough to put your life into their hands every time you take a plane - because, just in case you didn't know, planes don't fly because of acupuncture or Genesis - then what is your criterion for picking the areas of your life where you trust science, and where you doubt science?

    Based on what wisdom and higher understanding do you decide which things fall into the bounds of science and which ones don't?

    And, the $10 mio. bonus question: What does it take to convince you that you are wrong?

    fundamentalists scientists

    You really want to look up "fundamentalist".

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  102. Comment on the article calls for a citation by lamber45 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Interesting comment on the article:

    "Dear Professors,

    "Please supply citations for the quantitative data and analysis that led to your claim that; "pseudoscientific" health courses are undermining the international credibility of Australia’s universities.

    "Your article's references in the Medical Journal of Australia neither support nor contradict your claim, they indicate no causal link between the international credibility of Australian universities and the offering or otherwise of alternative health courses."

    1. Re:Comment on the article calls for a citation by Ocker3 · · Score: 1

      It's an editorial, they don't have to provide evidence, they use their names for that. Which annoys me. I've read opinion pieces by otherwise good journalists which skip over key facts to make their point. Pisses me off.

  103. ... sample groups, double-blind tests, by opencity · · Score: 1

    would require identical subjects, no? Google: acupuncture nitric oxide and surf around for a while.
    I agree with
    > some of which might be correct and some of which might be nonsense
    and that certainly applies to some of western medicine including all of SSRIs. There's something happening, over the last thousands of years, that hasn't been quantified by western medicine.
    And "good" western DRs alter their thinking every couple of years as they should. We don't understand systems biology and are only starting to investigate. Dismissing acupuncture and Chinese herbal medicine is the mark of ideologues and amateurs.

    --
    Physics is like sex: sure, it may give some practical results, but that's not why we do it.
  104. Scientists and Doctors Caused This by medv4380 · · Score: 2
    Doctors and Scientists demonized midwives as "witches" and worse to give us Puerperal fever. Which caused an extreamly high infant and mother mortality. Which then caused every idiot to believe that before modern medicine was about 40%. Truth is Scientists and Doctors caused it and the actual mortality rate has always been closer to 1 in 100 prior to their incompetence getting injected in. And the 40% rate was caused by Modern Medicine to begin with. Doctors now perscribe C-Sections because it's interfering with their Weekend or their 5 O'clock Golf game. Truth is C-Section are tied to Athma. Wonder why Athma increases whenever a country "modernizes" and moves more to centralized hospital medicine. When you ask a doctor if this medicine given to a mother during labor will cause any problems with the Child long term they say "Sorry but we can't do that due to Ethical testing concerns we cant perform a double blind study to find out". So they are willing to go into the Ethically ambiguous area of not knowing if something is dangerous and rather than find out they use another "Ethics" argument to defend themselves.

    What has Pseudoscience given us? Asprin as Willow Bark Tea. Hypnosis as pain management.

    What has modern medicine and science given us? Plenty, but demonizing others and blaming your 40% mortality rate on others doesn't help gain you any respect.

  105. Re:Fundamentalists by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    There's definitely something to this. One of the problems with healthcare right now is that we don't have the technology to make scientific instruments to tell if many treatments actually work or not; you're usually relying on the patient to tell you if it helps or not, and that's mostly worthless in my opinion if you're looking for objective proof. People are terrible at providing accurate observational data. Just look at what happens when witnesses see a crime; you'll have a different story from every witness, and the video camera that captured it will show them to all be wrong.

    So some medical things are easy to see if treatments work or not: does the tumor shrink or go away, or get bigger? It's pretty hard to not be able to measure that. Does the patient die or not? Again, easy to measure. But what if you're trying to treat something that isn't measurable with present-day technology? One big example is pain. How do you measure that? Simple: you don't. It's impossible (with today's technology). We don't have a Starfleet Tricorder to measure pain in patients, we can only ask them what they're feeling. They might be feeling real pain, or it might all be in their heads. Amputees feel pain and other sensations from their missing limbs; the phenomenon is called "phantom limb". Is the pain real? Well, it's real to them, but it's obviously not coming from their missing foot. So where is it coming from? And how do you eliminate it? And how do you tell if it's been eliminated or not, or if the patient is creating the pain completely in their mind? We don't have the technology yet. Another one is fatigue: lots of people suffer from fatigue-based illnesses like lupus and others, which are generally lumped into the catch-all term "chronic fatigue syndrome". How do you measure if someone is genuinely fatigued and unable to function normally, or if they're making it up, or just lazy, or whatever? Simple: you don't. We don't have the technology. Another one is migraine headaches. There are expensive drugs for them, but again you're just going off of what patients tell you. There's no tricorder you can use to measure someone's headache, and say "oh, it looks like this guy is having a scale 9 migraine today. Let's try this treatment and see if that reduces it to a 5."

    I think a lot of alternative medicine is for people who regular medicine hasn't done much about helping, either because the remedies aren't highly profitable or patentable and thus can't be made into an expensive pharmaceutical, or because regular medicine just doesn't know what to do about it. So people turn to this alternative stuff because, quite simply, they're desperate, and their regular doctors are ignoring them or throwing their hands up. A lot of people with fatigue problems can probably be treated by dietary changes; this happened with my wife, who turned into a new person when she cut wheat gluten out of her diet. But regular medicine (at least in the USA) doesn't deal with diet much at all; in their mind, food loaded with trans fats and pure glucose is just as good as any other (because calories are all the same, right?), and food allergies and sensitivities are rarely if ever investigated. Of course, the fundamentalists will just tell you "it's all in your head", as if that's somehow supposed to help you when you really are suffering.

  106. Go Australians!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As the number of alternative practitioners graduating from tertiary education institutions increases, further health-care resources are wasted.... i.e. The bastards are spreading wealth to thin. It is all supposed to go to major corporations not to these people that genuinely care about health and being healthy. Next thing you know these satan worshippers will be extending organic farmings reach into mainstream....uuuggghhhh.

    Yes, I am being sarcastic. The truth is...

    We should be doing these things here. I've been to Australia (Bunbury and Melbourne), awesome people. I think this great news for Australians, as they increase their healthcare options and increase competition for healthcare systems, the need to compete will increase competence on all parties. And drive down costs to the consumer. Almost sounds like a free market at work, too bad we don't have that here in the states.

  107. Fundamentals of Science & Homeopathy by cmholm · · Score: 1

    >> There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science...

    Meaning, there are lots of things whose function we don't have a very clear understanding of. That's fine, as far as it goes. Even a bird can fly without taking a class in aerodynamics.

    What a bird cannot do is fly in a vacuum. We know why. We know why because it has been experimentally tested and verified using scientific method.

    This is the situation with homeopathy. It doesn't do anything more than we can do with tap water and a pseudo-shamanistic floor show. We know why. We know why because the various claims that have been made for it have been disproved by both tests specific to homeopathy research, and utterly unrelated tests which happen to overlap whatever hand waving homeopaths have thought up.

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
    1. Re:Fundamentals of Science & Homeopathy by terjeber · · Score: 1

      What a bird cannot do is fly in a vacuum. We know why. We know why because it has been experimentally tested and verified using scientific method (my emphasis).

      The heartless bastards!

    2. Re:Fundamentals of Science & Homeopathy by rleibman · · Score: 1

      Fear not, they tested on African swallows.

  108. Re:Fundamentalists by breech1 · · Score: 1

    Seconded. Wish I had mod points.

  109. Godless Bastages by sdinfoserv · · Score: 1

    How is this any different than politicians in the US pushing "Creationism" in US schools?

  110. Re:Fundamentalists by wootcat · · Score: 1

    The reverse is also true. My son does not respond to traditional pain relief remedies; aspirin, ibuprofen, acetaminophen. None of them work on him. A while back he started getting these intense abdominal pains. For two weeks he was essentially bed-ridden. We tried everything we could think of. He saw several doctors and had multiple scans and tests run. Nothing told us what was wrong or alleviated the pain. We then tried an acupuncturist. Before the session was over, his pain was completely removed. Now you could say it was coincidence, and maybe it was. A few months later, the pain reoccurred and within a couple days we took him back to the acupuncturist and again, his pain went away instantly. I believe if there are scientific paths to treat illness, you should take them. In general, I doubt many homeopathic claims, but if something works for you and it's not endangering or it can avoid negative side effects of traditional methods, how can you deny that?

    --
    I'm really a low 5-digit Slashdotter, but this ID is where I am now.
  111. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by fermion · · Score: 1
    It is absolutely true that homeopathic therapies largely has not been subject to scientific analysis, and when it is it has been found to be lacking.

    That said homeopathic and such therapies have been used to effective in managing the health of communities for a long time. It is possible that such therapy may be useful in managing the health needs in the future. The fact is not science based is not an issue in medicine, because medicine is not really science based. The science in medicine is use primarily to protect doctors from the harm they cause. Since homeopathy and such therapies cause no harm, there is no need for the protection of science

    Let's look at psychology which until the 1970's classified being gay as a illness and now revels in filling children bodies with poison. Gay as illness is a religious characterization, and never had any basis in science. The science that was done, and the classification in the DSM was to protect the doctors who wished to damage humans to fulfill a religious quest, not an effort to heal humans. Likewise, the scandals of the fake research and ghost written papers has shown that science has nothing to do with current crop of psychographics. Zyloft has had dozens of ghost written papers advocating Zyloft. A researcher that is not willing to put his or her name to a paper, or writes paper for money, has a huge credibility problem. The fact that a third of the paper for Zyloft are not traditional research is troublesome.

    Likewise Vioxx., which kills patients, is not based on proper traditional science, but on paid research by the drug companies. The fake science protects the doctors who prescribed the medicine, and protect Merck from taking full responsibility for those deaths. Again, traditional medicine does not get any of those protections.

    In more 'hard medicine' look at heart therapies There were few studies on women in term of cardiovascular health until the end of the twentieth century. Up until that time the focus was on men, and women were considered to be essentially the same. Not completely true. The pseudo research that so characterizes the medicine as the adopted blackshep of the genuine research community was based on what the power wanted to believe is true, rather than what observations indicated to be true.

    This debate is mostly about the pharmaceuticals trying to enforce the monopoly of drugs as the primary method to manage human health. Most people who are using traditional methods are just reacting to the real message that 'drugs are bad' and it may be useful for look for other methods, even the effect of those methods cannot be quantified. It is of great benefit to the pharmaceutical companies to put a child on ridlin and guarantee a customer until death does them part, but is it beneficial to the child? And this is not a think of the kids moment. Adults are being injured every day because of the beliefs that drugs are good. Just remember when everyone was taking Pseudoephedrine for even mild symptoms of cough and cold. The amount of damage done is incalculable.

    If someone wants to take about the best way to take care of patients, this is a good conversation If someone simply wants to defend prescription drugs as savior of humankind, while there is truth in it we do not need to bow down before the gods of the pharmco. If we want to talk about the decline of the university, I think it would behoove us to analyze how the pharmcos have contributed to that decline in research integrity.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
  112. Re:Fundamentalists by turgid · · Score: 1

    Hogwash, poppycock and santorum!

  113. Homepathy first step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife is asian. In her culture when someone isn't feeling well, they go to a homeopathic person. If they cannot help, than they will go to the hositpal. In this culture, we go to the ER for most things.

    Homeopathy therapy isn't as effective as more modern medical but many times it is cheaper and safer (less drugs). What this is about is about making making money, the medical industry is worried that someone is cutting into their pie.

    If someone can be helped with some over the counter herbs, why not? And why do you care you still can go to your doctor which will give you medicines which will cure you and of course destroy your liver.

    1. Re:Homepathy first step by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homeopathy therapy isn't as effective as more modern medical but many times it is cheaper and safer (less drugs).

      Correction: Homeopathy isn't effective at all. And it's safe only to the extent that, if practiced according to how it's supposed to work, homeopathic drugs are nearly pure water which cannot hurt you. If you try to use it for something which would not ordinarily cure itself (i.e. something for which you need treatment better than placebo effect), its potential for harm is to delay real treatment.

      If you're not familiar with why these things are so, let me educate you. The two core theories of homeopathy are:

      1. The best way of treating a disease is to ingest a substance which, if taken by someone who does not have that disease, induces the same symptoms. Usually (but not always), this substance is an herb.

      2. After identifying such a substance (through a lot of nonsensical and frankly crazy rigamarole which I won't go into here), you should dilute it to increase its potency. The result is a homeopathic remedy.

      Both of these ideas are complete nonsense. And the second means that proper homeopathic remedies are just water, because the degree of dilution specified for nearly all homeopathic "medicine" is such that the chance of getting even a single molecule of the "active" substance in any dose is quite small. (You might be thinking, what about the pills? Pill form homeopathic medicine is still made by diluting the "active" substance in water until there's nothing left. At the end of the process, the water is infused into a sugar pill instead of bottled.)

      What this is about is about making making money, the medical industry is worried that someone is cutting into their pie.

      That's the lie spread by people who stand to profit from homeopathy, yes.

      In reality, they're afraid that they won't be able to scam people any more. Of course, lots of them have managed to honestly delude themselves into really believing in their own garbage, but in the end, the effect is the same. Both the deluded and the scammers resist educating the public about what homeopathy really is. Both resist having it scientifically tested, because of the long history of total failure of homeopathy when put to the test. And both types spread these ridiculous lies such as the one you've just repeated.

      In truth, it's the homeopaths who are worried about real medicine cutting into their profits -- if more people realized that homeopathy has utterly no credibility whatsoever, they wouldn't get any business.

      If someone can be helped with some over the counter herbs, why not?

      Now we're into a second topic -- you probably think that homeopathy equals herbs, but see above for the reason why homeopathy is actually a total scam even if you believe in herbal remedies, because homeopathic preparations of herbs don't have any herb left.

      As for herbs, the reason why not is that most herbs which actually have any potential to work also include a ton of other pharmacologically active substances, and usually those are poisonous to some degree. The concentration of both the good and the bad stuff can vary wildly depending on season, soil, weather, and a billion other factors. Which makes it easy to under- or over-dose on the desired substance, and sometimes you might get the dose of the good stuff right but have a large dose of something bad.

      That's why, when scientific medicine looks at herbs which seem to have real effects, the first thing done is to identify the active substance(s) responsible, and the second thing done is to either figure out a process of extracting them from plants or synthesizing them chemically so that the proper dose can be determined and administered in a controlled way.

      And why do you care you still can go to your doctor which will give you medicines which will cure you and of course destroy your liver.

      Dr

  114. Policing the boundaries of science by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is amusing that the construction of "normal science" in the article is so poor, given that medical "science" appears to have fundamental problems in policing its disciplinary boundaries.

  115. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ha! Xenu showed you not to brag about scientology...

  116. Mod parent FUNNY by catchblue22 · · Score: 1

    Homeopathic economics...LOL

    --
    This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
    1. Re:Mod parent FUNNY by ynp7 · · Score: 1

      Homeonomics...LOL

      FTFY

  117. Re:Fundamentalists by lgw · · Score: 2

    Well, science isn't good at giving emotionally satisfying answers to "why" questions. A few generations ago, it was expected that it would be. Modern science is great at predictive models (for the most part), but the promise of explaining the universe in terms of a few simple "first principles" remains elusive.

    And people want elegant answers! That's what motivates a lot of people to study science in the first place, after all.

    Plus as we've come to understand complexity and chaos, we now know that even if we had some simple first principles, they'd only explain good engineering practice in some philosophically distant way. Understanding the physics of the interaction of individual gas molecules was useful in going beyond the basic gas laws of a century ago, but a good theory of quantum gravity would add very little to the design of a refinery. (It makes me sad to realize that.)

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  118. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

    Some chiropractors have also broken people's necks. Do you really want them messing with your children's not-fully-formed spines?

    I'm glad I'm reading this now, and not back when I was in 2nd grade when I slipped a disc in my neck. I was in horrible pain for the latter half of the day and couldn't sleep, so my mom took me to a chiropractor who reopened his office to see me. He did an adjustment to my neck and the relief was instant, though not complete until some days later when my muscles stopped spazzing out. Admittedly, that was scary.
    In this case, it was a win, but I can imagine someone not really knowing what they're doing having paralyzed me.
    I think chiropractic has it's place, it's like massage for the bones, but it's certainly no substitute for vaccinations and other medical treatments. If, in the strange event your bones are actually out of alignment, as mine were, fine; beyond that though, it starts sounding quackish.

    --

    Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
  119. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Human perception has proven itself to be pretty much useless many times

    Are you sure you perceived that proof correctly?

  120. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... they seem to crawl out from under their rocks whenever a story like this comes up.

    ...says the pseudoscience crackpot crawling out from under its rock on a technology-based site.

  121. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i dont know what u mean. their is no xenu that is jus somthing tht got made up to make scientology look bad by other ppl who r jealus of teh power of it. so zenu cant make anybody do anything cause their is no such thing. but i think u r just makin fun cause ur jealous of teh power too be free and happy like in seaorg where you can have disiplin or even for every day ppl who can lrn lots abuot making mind over mater. u should try be audioted it can help u w ur life us just have too beleive and good things will hapen.

  122. Re:Fundamentalists by jollyreaper · · Score: 2

    I think you're missing a piece - the measurement of the health of a human is well within the realm of human perception and instrumentation. The goals of standard medicine and alternative medicine are the same: improve the health of a human. If standard medicine works and alternative medicine doesn't, well, you should be able to figure the rest out from there.

    Seems reasonable. I'm completely open to testing the healing power of prayer. Double-blind study, various religions, an assortment of deities. We don't even have to propose a mechanism of action: you either get a result or you don't. If we can prove prayer helps patients, then we can ask whether it's a) some paranormal stuff humans can innately do and there's no god involved b) an intercession with a higher power and c) what sort of mechanism is actually interacting with the body to achieve healing.

    But these studies have been done over and over and prayer doesn't work beyond a placebo effect. Certainly there is a mind-body connection that can be utilized in medicine, i.e. helping the patient help himself, but there's no evidence of prayer or faith-healing working.

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
  123. What a relief: Paleo Diet Edition by cmholm · · Score: 1

    In general, there's nothing wrong with the concept of eating as our pre-agricultural fore-bearers did. What's open to question is whether it's the best way, which is the claim at issue. Hunter-gatherer societies don't have to live to be 100, they just have to live and be healthy long enough to reproduce, get their children to reproductive age, and plug them into their culture. That left a lot of slack in the system as to what kind of diet would work. Some worked just fine. Many pre-contact indigenous Australians could expect to live to 70, baring accidents or warfare.

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
  124. Missing the point by slew · · Score: 1

    So people wonder why there is the preponderance of people studying the likes of Homeopathy, Chinese Herbal Medicine, Accupuncture, Chiropractic Studies... But I don't think it's a mystery. It's really an extension of the primal "need" of societies to have shaman and oracles, and for people to aspire to be in those positions in society.

    Staying alive is hard, staying healthly is even harder. There's no textbook that can tell you how to do those things. Sure, there are lots of theories and scientific practice that goes around, but of course none of it is 100% appplicable to your situation. So you seek out advice and treatments, from... and this is where it gets interesting.

    Of course "western" medicine and science has conquered quite a bit of the big-ticket stuff that has ailed the human race, but you have to look under the hood a bit to see exactly how this has been done. Sure there's some anatomy and bio-chem going on, but to a large extent modern medicine has been just about refining protocols. The stereotypical protocol is something like this: if you have these symptoms, and I make this diagnosis, do this treatment (often a dose of a chemical) for this amount of time. How was the treatment found? Usually at first purely by trial and error (in fact many therapies are initially "off-label" drug use), and later by refinement using differential testing... That sounds very scientific, but the catch is, how was the diagnosis done? That's a big part of the protocol and then you start to realize that most of western medicine is really just probablisitic. If you have these poorly defined symptoms, you probably have this diagnosis and this treatment probably helps, but if it doesn't, this treatment probably helps, etc, etc.... You can't do a clinical trial on yourself, and not everyone is the same... In this light pseudo-science is just a different set of probablities, coupled with a strong history and the equally strong placebo effect (w/o the scientific backing). It's just like "western" GP dispensing anti-biotics for a cold (but probably less harmful)... If medicine was practiced by science instead of protocol, by they time the virus or bacteria was cultured and analysed, you'd be over it and on to your next ailment...

    But that doesn't answer why do these alternative medical practioners exist at all? I personally believe it's a combination of two things: a certain segment of the population aspires to be the folk who are consulted for advice and the opportunity to "buy oneself" into a status profession like a medical profession. But what if you aspire to be "consulted", but don't have the money or the academic background to get into medicine? That's right, you get yourself into pseudo-medicine. It's almost the same status and you get to fulfil your need to be the authority consulted for advice on being healthy.

    But why do the patients come to them (and the TV talk shows interview them)? It's because they tell the patients what they want to hear (as opposed to many "western" doctors which apparently aren't trained to listen very well and as a group tend to treat small ailments in binary fashion as either "in-your-head" or "we-have-to-order-lots-of-invasive-tests-to-make-a-diagnosis"). You can call it holistic medicine or whatever you want, but often folks are just seeking the small advice about staying healthy and loathe the binary decision tree protocol. If standard "western" medicine would do a better job at offering advice, these types of alternative medicine practices wouldn't be as successful as they are.

    And for the the people wanting to give advice? They'd have to seek out some other status profession... Maybe pseudo-techno-geek? ;^)

  125. Re:Fundamentalists by Hatta · · Score: 1

    Wow, so confident that alternative medicine doesn't work. So how do you explain all the intelligent people using it?

    Fads.

    until a scientist can get in your head with you and see your perceptions, science will never move forward into this domain.

    Why do you think it's necessary for a scientist to "get into your head"? If you're making a claim that X treatment has an effect on outcome, all you have to do is measure the outcome.

    If all you're claiming is that alternative medicine can change your perception of the disease process, then I don't think you'll find many who would object to that. If you claim that alternative medicine can change the outcome of the disease process, that can be studied in scientific terms.

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  126. Re:Fundamentalists by tibit · · Score: 1

    In the US, the law says that anything that is used to cure, prevent, or ameliorate disease is by definition a drug.

    I guess it's good to know that (insert random surgical procedure here) is a drug. No, sorry, you don't know what you're talking about, you have no clue.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  127. Re:Fundamentalists by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    So how do you explain all the intelligent people using it?

    [citation needed]

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  128. Re:Fundamentalists by IceCreamGuy · · Score: 2

    Totally fair point. But I still believe that providing a science degree in acupuncture is misleading. A biologist studying why acupuncture worked so well with your son using scientific methods is certainly science. But the practice of acupuncture itself is not scientific; as far as I know (and I may not have the most up-to-date information, so please excuse me if that is the case), there are no known mechanisms which can explain how or why acupuncture works, and indeed, again to the best of my knowledge, when double blind studies are performed comparing acupuncture to standard western medicine there is no statistically significant correlation between the application of acupuncture and positive effects beyond those of a placebo. That being said, acupuncture is the only thing that, at least temporarily, alleviated some joint pain my mother was experiencing. But anecdotal evidence is not scientific evidence. It's because of these reasons that people are up in arms about acupuncture degrees being classified as science degrees.

  129. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by tibit · · Score: 1

    Vioxx has side effects, but then, hey, quite a few chemotherapy drugs have even worse side effects. The brouhaha about Vioxx was that it was overprescribed. IMHO it should have never been taken off the market. There are quite a few patients for whom the potential side effects are acceptable, given their quality-of-life improvements. IOW: they gladly trade off risk of death for better life before death. I think this decision should be ultimately left to the patients -- for some of them there are no alternatives to Vioxx. And I have nothing to do with pharma anything.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  130. The lazy reliance on statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see this as a lazy reliance on statistics. Don't get me wrong, statistics are great. I just wonder how many drugs are passed over because they only help a statisticly insignificant number of patients. For all we know, those patients carry some combination of genes that interacts with the drug in ways that could lead to greater understanding and a cure for the rest.

    The "we think it works by..." mentality you describe is also particularly prevalent in drugs for treating mental illness. I think there's still some lingering lack of respect for the mentally ill.

    Yeah, so you've got an excess or a defficiency of some chemical in the brain they say. Pictures or it didn't happen. Come up with an affordable non-invasive test for that, and then maybe we can start popping pills.

  131. Re:Fundamentalists by tibit · · Score: 1

    many current sciences do much of their work without them (psychology, anthropology, social sciences, to name just a few).

    Ekhm, I think mathematicians would like to have a word with you. Computer scientists, too. They don't need any instruments for measurement, all you essentially need is a comfy chair and paper and pencil. Instruments come not for measurements, but for reducing the tedium.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  132. Re:Fundamentalists by SecurityGuy · · Score: 1

    but if you're talking about reducing pain, then it gets complicated.

    Good morning, Mr. Patient! Please rate your pain today on a scale of 1 to 10...

    You simply do that for a population of patients who get the test therapy and a population that gets a placebo. There's this magic stuff called statistics that lets you tease out how likely any difference between the populations is a result of chance. When it's more than 95% likely it is NOT the result of chance, we get interested.

    but what do we do in the case of conditions where a "placebo" works very well for a significant fraction of people? shouldn't we fund some research into why the placebo works?

    Yeah, why not, but here's the thing. In order to start using a treatment, we generally insist on proving it works at least as well as the stuff we already have. If you propose people eat orange peels to cure cancer, it would play out like this: Group A eat orange peels. Group B gets chemo and radiation. Group A's average survival time is dramatically lower, and your proposed treatment is quickly binned. Apply to your placebo argument. You have some therapy. I have a sugar pill. They cost about a penny each. Your therapy involves paying some quack to give you water at a high price. Both our treatments work at about the same rate (which is to say not at all--they are placebos). Which should we use? The cheap one. Duh.

    We should not encourage the use of expensive therapies that don't work any better than a placebo because they are essentially scams designed to separate the desperate from their cash. This is a bad thing. Don't do it.

  133. Re:Fundamentalists by Aguazul · · Score: 1

    until a scientist can get in your head with you and see your perceptions, science will never move forward into this domain.

    Why do you think it's necessary for a scientist to "get into your head"? If you're making a claim that X treatment has an effect on outcome, all you have to do is measure the outcome.

    If all you're claiming is that alternative medicine can change your perception of the disease process, then I don't think you'll find many who would object to that. If you claim that alternative medicine can change the outcome of the disease process, that can be studied in scientific terms.

    We cannot clone a person in an instant to let the two outcomes unfold, both with and without treatment. If an alternative treatment corrects a problem before it becomes measurable with current instruments there will be nothing for science to measure -- so no scientific proof available. Statistics can't be used when we can't measure the initial condition either. Then the only option is to get into the practicioner's head and figure out what he/she considers that he/she is manipulating and measure that. Science cannot yet get into someone's head. So unfortunately science is not yet able to help us determine whether or not the given treatment is valid or not, as it does not yet have the tools. The only forms of proof available are through personal observation with personal perceptions. This has been more than enough proof for many historic cultures, e.g. Chinese, Tibetan, Indian, etc, but it is not considered enough for Science. So all Science can reasonably say is "I can't answer this question because the required measurements cannot yet be performed".

  134. Re:Fundamentalists by hamster_nz · · Score: 1

    Not arguing either way, but how how about using exercise to treat depression? - link here

    It works (see here) but is viewed as an "alternative therapy".

    If I was to walk into a doctor, get told "you have clinical depression", and the medicine was "go out for a bike or run every day" I would personally be quite happy - but it would be very unconventional given how many people I know on antidepressants.

  135. Re:Fundamentalists by Tom · · Score: 1

    They use tools, yes. Heck, you could argue that a pen is an "instrument".

    The GP argument was that instruments are fundamental and that science is limited because there's things we don't have physical instruments for.

    Of course we use instruments. But "uses an instrument" isn't a very good definition of what science is.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  136. Re:Fundamentalists by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    You are very wrong, the goals of standard and alternative medicine are completely different.

    Standard medicine is there to improve the health of man kind

    Alternative medicine is there to improve the wealth of man;

    I have to assume you're not referring to the pharmaceutical industry in your description of "standard medicine" (maybe it often falls into the "alternative medicine" category). I think there is plenty of evidence that,

    1. 1) Drugs are marketed and sold that do more harm than good in order to profit from them, and
    2. 2) High-quality clinical trials are so expensive that they are almost never conducted unless there is a patent involved.
    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  137. Re:Fundamentalists by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

    It's actually even worse than that. As illustrated by the Red Yeast Rice discovery, the FDA will even effectively ban natural, healthful products in order to protect the pharmaceutical's industry's ability to market expensive, patented alternatives.

    --
    "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
    --- Jerry Garcia
  138. NewPseudoScientist! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This coming from the site that continually links NewPseudoScientist as if it were a real source.

    Pseudoscience... you mean like the art of medicine? Medical schools teach biology. Biology is not science.

    Medicine gives science a bad name. The public does not know any better, they think doctors are scientists.

  139. Re:Fundamentalists by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

    While this is true, there are two aspects to "alternative medicine":

    1. The completely made-up "magic" stuff (e.g. wearing magnetic wristbands will make you more energetic). This is the part we tend to focus on and make fun of.
    2. The "medicine" part... This is the part we should focus on and worry about.

    Some of these "medications" have physiological effects that are real. However, they are frequently not well-studied, are completely unregulated by the organizations that are in place to ensure the safety of our medicines, and may have important, undocumented interactions with other "alternative medicines" or regulated drugs.

    Seriously, do people wonder why they are consuming a whole plant, instead just single chemical it contains that has valuable medicinal properties?

  140. Re:Fundamentalists by snowgirl · · Score: 1

    Tim Minchin knocks this out of the park ... alternative medicine, by its definition, has either been not proven to work , or proven not to work. Alternative medicine that has been proven to work is called ... medicine..

    Actually, acupuncture has been proven to be efficacious. However, even randomly performed acupuncture has been shown to perform as well as properly performed acupuncture.

    As well, some homeopathic formulations have been shown to be efficacious. All of the zinc cold formulas have scientific studies showing that they're more effective than placebo, and yet are homeopathic... of course they're at only 10% and 100% dilutions, not the crazy dilutions that some other things are at. (How can they contain some of the original substance if they're homeopathic? It turns out that homeopathic treatments can contain any GRAS substance available, and zinc acetate is GRAS.)

    Of course in the later case, the people selling cold treatments are more exploiting homeopathy to provide cheap treatments, rather than having to go through extensive drug trials... so, one could easily make the argument that they're actually only homeopathic in the legal sense...

    --
    WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
  141. If homeopathy worked diseases wouldn't exist. by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    If you think about he dilutions used in homeopathy, then that would mean the planet earth has already been "treated" for every conceivable ailment.

    Every time this topic comes up I always think of the old James Randi joke: "A homeopath recently overdosed. He forgot to take his medication."

  142. Re:Fundamentalists by sorak · · Score: 1

    If the effects of homeopathy cannot be detected or measured, then how do you know if the professors are doing it correctly?

  143. Not just Australia... by mgscheue · · Score: 1

    When my wife was studying for her BS in nursing, she had to take a course in which nonsense like "touch therapy" and such was discussed in a completely non-skeptical way. She was horrified and so was I.

  144. Re:Fundamentalists by Hatta · · Score: 1

    We cannot clone a person in an instant to let the two outcomes unfold, both with and without treatment.

    Very true!

    If an alternative treatment corrects a problem before it becomes measurable with current instruments there will be nothing for science to measure -- so no scientific proof available.

    You can say the same for conventional medicine. Diet and exercise can fix problems before they happen, and yet this is amenable to statistical analysis. Why then do you claim alternative medicine is not amenable to statistical analysis?

    Statistics can't be used when we can't measure the initial condition either.

    Sure it can be. Take a random population. Randomly assign them to two groups, one that gets alternative treatment and one that gets a sham treatment. No diagnosis is necessary.

    At the end of a sufficiently large time period are there significantly more people alive in the alternative treatment group? If so, you've just demonstrated the efficacy of an alternative treatment.

    Not only does this method not require measuring what goes on in a person's head, it doesn't even require measuring what goes on in the clinicians exam room.

    The only forms of proof available are through personal observation with personal perceptions.

    Which, as science has shown us, is no proof at all.

    This has been more than enough proof for many historic cultures, e.g. Chinese, Tibetan, Indian, etc

    Thankfully, we've learned a lot since then. Why should we go back to the dark ages before empiricism?

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  145. Don't take the effects of a placebo lightly. by Trax3001BBS · · Score: 1

    What a person believes can keep them healthy, be it a belief, ritual, or drug.

    Are these courses a placebo? I don't know, I've never had acupuncture but I
    believe it has merit (a belief) and can block signals to the brain.

    The subject courses and other avenues can (and should) be used according to a patient's belief in conjunction with "stuff" that works.

  146. Re:Fundamentalists by mikael · · Score: 1

    Or a magnetic field as well - which decreases in strength by 1/d^6 - not squared, cubed, double-squared, but just raised to the power of six, which suggests that what would seem to be empty or solid space at our dimension, would be like swiss-cheese at sub-atomic scales.

    I'd imagine both cases are a form of induction - you create a field in one point, and adjacent points realign or stretch to balance out the differences in gravitational or magnetic potential and alignment. There are infinite ways of trying to produce a visual way of representing what is going on - superstrings, vortices, sinks and sources. It's just a matter of finding the right experiment.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  147. Re:Fundamentalists by mikael · · Score: 1

    Five things we don't understand:

    quantum entanglement, gravity, protein folding, quasi-period crystallization, mystery rock movement in deserts (Why can't someone just put a satellite phone and webcam on a observation box and solve this once and for all?)

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  148. Accupunture by DrYak · · Score: 1

    there are no known mechanisms which can explain how or why acupuncture works, and indeed, again to the best of my knowledge, when double blind studies are performed comparing acupuncture to standard western medicine there is no statistically significant correlation between the application of acupuncture and positive effects beyond those of a placebo

    The part of accupuncture that work is starting to be known. It's actually playing with well known nerve tricks. And although doing an "accupuncture placebo" is difficult (its difficult to organise "needles" vs. "no needles", unlike making pills that can contain a drug vs. only sugar. Its still pills in both situation) studies tend to show some effect in some specific cases.

    One of the key mecanism behind it, is an actual neurophysiological phenomenon called "gate-control".
    Alert and information stimuli tend to be incompetition. In practice that means that sensory information can override pain information comming from the same body region. (The neural network responsible for that phenomenon in the spine is well documented). That's why we tend to rub the body part when we're having pain (like massage a leg after having hurt it). It really soothes the pain because of the competition of the sensory stimulus (the rub) over the pain.

    Another phenomenon is the "referred pain". Sometime, when both nerves from the surface and the internal organs arrive at the same region, the brain tend to confuse them an map everything to the surface, because the brain is used to the fact that information comming from this way usually comes from the skin (because getting surface stimuli is a normal everyday stuff, whereas its rarer to get stimuli from the internal organs, usually only when you're sick, so the brain is used to interpret the informations that way). Thus for example, when having a hearth attacks, people refer the pain to the left side of the neck, the left shoulder and the left flank. Because the nerves coming from these region end-up at the place (cervical nerves plexus) as the nerve (phrenic) coming from the sides of the hearth compartment (perdicard), and the brain is used to the fact that when "pain" info comes from there, it's usually due to you having hit your shoulder rather than a hearth attack.

    When you combine those too, it means that you can alleviate pain including internal pains, simply by making a sensory input at the correct place.
    This could work with lots of stimuli. Including skin contact (that's how massages help ease muscle pain). Including electronic nerve stimulation (that's the principle behind TENS), etc.
    And that works also for accupuncture: the needles are really small. So tiny, that in fact they don't cause much pain. They mostly stimulate the skin, and thus through "gate control" will override and mask most pain, including pain coming from internal organs ("referred pain").

    Now, in addition you need to understand that a lot of pain phenomenon can get self-sustaining:
    - that can be local chemical change in the spine. that's how phantom limb pain (pain referred to a limb which actually isn't there anymore but was amputated, or replaced with a prothesis), specially before surgeons started to systematically do spinal or regional anesthesia in addition of full narcosis. even if the patient isn't hurt (due to full narcosis), the pain information from the amputation could reach the spine where the spine gets increasingly sensitised. (also, it doesn't help that an absent limb can't send any sensory information and thus no gate control at all even with the normal basal level of stimuli).
    - there can also be some negative feed-back : sore muscle are painful. but the pain increases muscle tenderness. and contracted muscle in turn increase the pain. But by stoping the pain (either with drugs or massages, etc.) you break the self sustaining cycle and the muscles start to relax and stop causing more pain.

    Thus by using accupuncture, not only do you momentaly cause a decrease of pain, but you

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
    1. Re:Accupunture by wootcat · · Score: 1

      I know very little about acupuncture, but it seems to me it would be possible to perform "placebo" tests. I thought acupuncture was based on areas on the body corresponding to other parts of the body and they didn't always seem to corelate (I'm just making stuff up here, but for instance, the left shin corelates to the liver). Seeing as most people don't know or understand these corelations, it seems like a placebo test could apply acupuncture to unrelated areas. You could then measure results and see whether you get an acceptable or unacceptable placebo rate as compared to those who had the acupuncture administered correctly.

      --
      I'm really a low 5-digit Slashdotter, but this ID is where I am now.
  149. Wah wah wah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Science based" or, perhaps you mean "Reactive Pharmaceutical"?

    Science is so heavily abused in concept it's like we're at a social-stand still as everyone is quick to call something science and discount something else when at all points there's little genuine science involved at all.

    Now, does anyone wanna buy some viagra IV bags?

  150. Faith x Science by etinin · · Score: 1

    Well, while is is true that the descartian way of thought closes some doors, it opens many more. People are too willing to have faith in some treatment because they want it to work. Often belief is enough for it to present results, but you don't need an elaborate placebo "science" for that. Some german doctors were even prescribing placebo/vitamin pills to patients who thought they were sick and obtained great results (I believe there was a slashdot article about it). Unfortunately I happen to be studying medicine in one of the few serious institutions around the world that include homeopathy as an obligatory subject in medicine. And whenever I bring up the subject, someone claims that homeopathy works because they know someone whose symptoms were cured and improved. People really do underestimate the placebo effect.

    --
    "I decided I could write something better than everything out there in two weeks. And I was right." - Linus Torvalds
  151. Re:Fundamentalists by MidGe · · Score: 1

    :...So how do you explain all the intelligent people using it? ..."

    Umm. I have to revise my definition of "intelligence". methinks.

  152. Re:Fundamentalists by tibit · · Score: 1

    Instruments, as in instrumentation, that's the stuff that's usually meant for measurement. If you insist that a pen might be a scientific "instrument" in a general sense, then I'd say a leather sofa and the leather toilet seat is, too ;)

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  153. Re:Fundamentalists by terjeber · · Score: 1

    There are lots of things that work without the benefit of science

    Sure it is, but they work.

  154. Huh? by multimediavt · · Score: 1

    The same way a course in "Star Trek" makes its way into Georgetown University. Or "Art History" or "Golf Management" or dozens of other courses at dozens of other universities. Because higher education stopped being about actual education and more about a) making money and b) making the students feel good about themselves.

    Probably started around the time Philosophy classes stopped reading and teaching Neitzsche, Bacon, Aristotle, and Kant, and started being about... well, slacking off, wondering randomly about whatever, and getting high. Biggest contributing factor, IMO, was when people started to feel they need college degrees, but weren't smart enough or dedicated enough to actually study seriously. So, colleges started making up stupid courses people could take, without requiring them to actually do any work. This allows everyone to get a degree, but makes half of them worthless. But hey, now most people at least have a college degree, right?

    First, since when is art history a made up course to only make money? Just because it might have been filler for your course of study doesn't mean it's insignificant to others who are in creative/arts side of the university and need to understand the history and driving forces in their field. Second, when was the last time you looked at a current Philosophy course catalog? Still digging away at everyone from Plato to L. Ron Hubbard. Not sure what you would classify as a university, but there aren't a lot of slack courses at the one I attended and taught at. Insightful my fanny!

  155. Re:Fundamentalists by terjeber · · Score: 1

    My relationship with my wife. There are obviously things that "work" without science, but they work. As opposed to homeopathy, which we know doesn't work, because we have checked.

  156. Re:Fundamentalists by terjeber · · Score: 1

    You don't know anything at all about science, why are you talking about it? Science doesn't deal with knowing positives at all (outside of a limited area such as maths, where knowing is actually possible). Science deals with theories (no, any wild idea is not a theory), and the process of falsification (proving that those theories are wrong.

    Did you see that last word? Science doesn't actually (with the mentioned exception) actually do much proving of anything at all, but it dis-proves, falsifies, a lot of stuff. You see, there is exactly an infinite things you can not prove. I can not prove that there are no flower-patterned tea cups filled half full with Whiskey in orbit around Pluto right now. I can't prove that they do not exist. Assuming they do is moronic however. Likewise, it is actually impossible to prove that homeopathy works, however it is quite possible to prove that it doesn't work. We have well established procedures in place to see if stuff works. There is lots of technical jargon like double-blind etc, but it all basically comes down to this: Let's give it to him and see if he gets well. If he doesn't (objectively) get well, it didn't work.

    When it comes to homeopathy, nobody ever got well. Seriously. Nobody. Assuming it works is as dumb as assuming that there are in fact half-full tea cups flying around Pluto. In fact, it is dumber, since I haven't yet proven that there are no such flowery cups.

  157. Re:Fundamentalists by chichilalescu · · Score: 1

    don't worry, I agree with you :)
    but I liked serviscope_minor's reply more. i.e. I think we should try to understand why placebo's work, and actively use them when it seems they have some effect; obviously, we should recognise them as placebos and not pay more than they're worth.

    --
    new sig
  158. Re:Fundamentalists by chichilalescu · · Score: 1

    what is the stuff you use daily, and how do you know that something is happening if you can't measure it?
    by the way, if the patient says they're feeling better, that's something you can measure (and you can write it down, like SecurityGuy told me above).

    --
    new sig
  159. Re:Fundamentalists by terjeber · · Score: 1

    Wow, so confident that alternative medicine doesn't work

    Yes, It's been tested. They got the treatment. They didn't get better. It didn't work.

  160. Re:Fundamentalists by neonKow · · Score: 1

    Citation please. I see nothing anywhere that says that is true of magnetic fields, and this is the first time I've ever heard of it.

  161. Re:Fundamentalists by jd · · Score: 1

    I know a witch-doctor (well, several), and I think his cure for one person's hangover would probably be different to his cure for another person's, depending on the case. For your study, you'd want all the treatments to be the same, right? I don't think it's going to happen, not when it is so personal. So I guess we're not going to get the straightforward proof you're looking for. But whose fault is that? If you require very strong independent standards of objective proof, you're excluding all treatments which might work but are difficult to study or analyse.

    Well, that depends on what you'd want to study. I tend to be of the school of thought that you want like treatments for like causes, not necessarily like treatments for like effects. Thus, if there are N ways to get a headache, I would expect N treatments. In other words, I would expect that if I looked at the underlying cause (which will presumably be electrical, chemical and/or blood pressure related, where any possible magnitude and permutation of those is entirely valid) that if two people had absolutely identical underlying causes that the treatment would always be absolutely identical (ie: the treatment isn't random) and that if I monitored that underlying cause, there would be a change in state between before treatment and after treatment.

    This isn't too difficult to study, merely time-consuming. The law of large numbers only works if, well, you've large numbers. In science, you'll sometimes see people talk about the "confidence level" or the "sigma level" of a result. The systems are slightly different but they boil down to the same thing - the odds that what you are getting isn't a real result but just pure statistical fluke.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_deviation

    The more numbers you have, the greater your confidence that what you are seeing is real. Now, my way of thinking is absurdly simple - if you can demonstrate a high level of confidence that f(given treatment, given underlying cause) = (given underlying effect) and f(!given treatment, given underlying case) = (!given underlying effect) then you have established that the treatment - when applied to that cause - produces that effect. How it does so is a matter for theorists.

    Now, I'm very careful to state "underlying cause" and "underlying effect" because there can be zero correlation between what underlies a symptom and the symptom itself. That is entirely valid -- and rather common. The greater the distance between what is actually happening and what is actually being observed, the greater the chance of you missing whatever is actually going on. True, you can't always make direct observations of the underlying cause, so you do the best you can and minimize the gap. You can safely ignore any study where the gap is ignored or even increased because you know for a fact that the researchers cannot have considered the uncertainties introduced and therefore cannot have an accurate idea of how confident you can be in the results. If you don't know how good the results are, what use are they?

    Now to go back to your other point:

    But just to point out that human perception is all that we've got. It is our only direct input, despite its flaws. Everything else is second- or third-hand.

    To some extent, I've covered this in discussing the level of directness (or lack thereof). However, it is worth examining this point a little closer. Yes, as Descartes (and indeed R. D. Laing) noted, human perception is indeed all that we've got. Furthermore, indirectness (as noted) increases the number of places errors can be introduced. As a result, you want to keep things as direct as possible.

    Equally, though, quantitative data can be more precisely compared than qualitative data. When comparing qualities, you introduce all kinds of other types of error. Unquantifiable kinds. It's another reason I regard symptom-based treatments

    --
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  162. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like Steve Jobs?

    It really worked out well for him. By the time he came to his senses his cancer had metastasized and the situation was dire. Then it was too late. There was a good chance he could have been treated successfully if he had sought proper medical help in the first place.

    This actual, real, practicing oncologist blogger (known for his virulent attacks on scam cancer treatments) disagrees with your claims. Especially "by the time he came to his senses his cancer had metastasized". He doesn't think it's possible to know whether the delay allowed the cancer to metastasize or not, and actually thinks there must not have been any signs of it at the time Jobs got his original surgery (because such a surgery would usually not be done if there was known metastasis).

    http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2011/10/did_steve_jobs_flirtation_with_alternative_medicine.php

    TLDR: did Jobs hurt himself by delaying real care? Possibly. Is it an open and shut case? No. Is there enough public information to say one way or the other with absolute certainty? No.

    For that matter, no matter how fast the treatment, could Jobs have ever been treated successfully, where by "success" I mean "lives till death of other causes"? Hopefully I summarize Orac correctly in saying "Probably not". Having read a lot of what Orac's said about it, even though Jobs' cancer was the rare "nice" version of pancreatic cancer (i.e. not the normal kind which is basically a 1yr death sentence regardless of treatment), the chances of surviving more than 10 years are poor.

  163. Hello Mr Boehner by shiftless · · Score: 1

    That would be easy to solve with a new law

    Are you a politician?

    1. Re:Hello Mr Boehner by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, I'm just not a Teabagger, so I recognize that society needs some laws to function smoothly, and that it already has existing laws that regulate the medical profession that do work properly to a certain extent (at least for preventing bad doctors from continuing to practice and harm people), so it's entirely logical to reason that modifying those laws to apply to other people who call themselves doctors is not unreasonable.

  164. Deregulate it by shiftless · · Score: 1

    I dunno, but are you arguing for total deregulation of medicine?

    Yes. I want to be able to make my own decisions about whether a person is competent to be a doctor. I don't need Big Brother's "help", but thanks for offering.

    1. Re:Deregulate it by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So you think you're an expert on medicine, pharmacology, surgery, etc. and you think you're qualified to make a decision about whether someone is competent to perform surgery on you or prescribe the correct medicine?

      Did you sleep at a Holiday Inn Express too?

    2. Re:Deregulate it by shiftless · · Score: 1

      So you think you're an expert on medicine, pharmacology, surgery, etc. and you think you're qualified to make a decision about whether someone is competent to perform surgery on you or prescribe the correct medicine?

      I don't need to be an expert on any of those things in order to judge a person's apparent competency. Do I need to be an expert on tax law to hire an accountant?

      Furthermore, who says the government must necessarily be involved in order for this trade to regulate itself? Ever heard of a guild? Tradesman will naturally find ways to come together for the purposes of honing their crafts. They might even come up with some, you know, certifications whose purpose is to be displayed prominently, reassuring would-be customers that at least a group of actual experts (rather than lawmakers) is familiar with this person and feels he is competent to bear their stamp.

      Involving the government in things usually causes just as many problems as it solves. The FDA is a prime example.

  165. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think chiropractic has it's place, it's like massage for the bones, but it's certainly no substitute for vaccinations and other medical treatments. If, in the strange event your bones are actually out of alignment, as mine were, fine; beyond that though, it starts sounding quackish.

    Well, here's the thing: we don't actually need chiropractic to train physical therapists to do therapeutic massage. So why grant chiropractic the status of an alternative sort of medical degree? If you didn't know, they literally operate their own medical "universities" which award doctorates in quackery. A "doctor" of chiropractic is not held to anything like the standards required of a normal doctor.

    And make no mistake, it's not merely quackish. Chiropractic theory is pure quack, of the highest order. It literally rejects the germ theory of disease and claims that all disease is caused by misalignment of the spine. That's as quacky as it gets. So are the manipulations of the spine it teaches as cure-alls for everything which ails you, because chiropractic is built on an elaborate (and not even internally self consistent) system of pseudoscience concerning the spine.

    The GP wasn't kidding, btw. Chiropractors have literally killed children, and even adults, with spinal manipulations. Now, it's not like real doctors haven't killed patients either, but the problem with chiropractic is that it happens because of systematic ignorance. To the best of my knowledge, there are no accreditation requirements requiring all chiropractic schools to teach at least some science-based medicine. You're basically lucky if your chiropractic "doctor" has learned enough about real neurology, spinal anatomy, and symptoms of neural trauma to trust with powerful physical manipulations of your spine. (Many of the patient killings happened because the "doctor" involved simply wasn't trained well enough to recognize the symptoms of nerve damage or spinal bleeding, and thus continued to violently manipulate the spine after damaging it, instead of rushing the patient to an ER for emergency surgery.)

    That's not to say there are no chiropractic schools which teach those things. The problem is, there aren't consistent standards and requirements. You're basically lucky to get anything beyond placebo out of its practitioners. The sensible thing to do would be to tear it all down and just train would-be chiropractic doctors as physical therapists / massage technicians, using an evidence-based curriculum instead of pseudoscience which was exposed as a fraud over a century ago.

    Which basically means, no, there is no "place" for chiropractic in a sane world.

  166. So much hate by benlwilson · · Score: 1

    The whole concept of pseudoscience is the study of things outside basic scientific principles.
    Arguing about it using scientific knowledge only proves to show an inability to understand the concept.

    It's inherently only ever provable, the fact that this may never happen is beside the point.

  167. Re:Fundamentalists by shilly · · Score: 1

    If only life were that simple. Sadly, we have no way of knowing if one person's five is another person's five, or their ten, on the scale.

  168. Re:Fundamentalists by BeaverCleaver · · Score: 1

    I don't think anybody here is claiming that a degree in nutrition is a scam. We're talking about degrees in homeopathy. Also I don't know where in Western medicine food allergies aand sensitivities are "rarely" investigated. In my experience (.au, us, and uk) allergies and sensitivities are well known and routinely investigated by most general practicioners.

  169. Don't Condemn What You Do Not Understand ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If homeopathy didn't work for u, then its not the failure of the System. Its the failure of the Doctor.

    Homeopathy is Science...

    Extremely scientific...

  170. Re:Fundamentalists by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    I've heard that about the UK. Over here in the US, our experience has been that food sensitivities are completely ignored by GP doctors.

  171. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    America's far-right government agenda

    Poppycock. America has been trending left for a century, and if Obama is re-elected we'll be in leftist slavery before he leaves office.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  172. Carl Sagan was right by mykos · · Score: 1

    I think that "The Demon Haunted World" should be required reading for anyone who wants to criticize science in favor of pseudoscience.

  173. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... what? I assumed you were a troll, but skimming through your recent comments you seem to be a plenty reasonable person.

    The United States is certainly further to the left politically compared to the start of the 20th centry (see: The Jungle), but it very far to the left compared to, say, most of Europe. Barack Obama is barely to the left of the Republican nominees, although I suppose you might believe they are also too far to the left. Anyway, I don't know what the heck "leftist slavery" is unless you mean higher taxes=slavery or something like that.

  174. Re:Fundamentalists by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 1

    I find this really frustrating because I am trained as a scientist and I use that model to understand what I perceive. So I use scientific principles in a domain that science rejects.

    Then at the risk of offending you I feel I must point out that you are demonstrating you have learned nothing significant from your scientific training.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?
  175. "The Conversation" is NOT doing Research, right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there any -research- to back-up these claims? If not, are the authors of this paper writing about things they have expert knowledge of? We know that "The Conversation" was promoted (in AU) as a place that hires "aging" academics to write & publish, but I doubt that they have any research facilities or do any new research into the questions / issues they "pontificate" about.

    If this is -only- an "opinion" based article, I'd say: this is likely an example of "the pot calling the kettle black."

    --- Getting back to the effects of non-Science students being catered for at Australian universtities:

    In any case, it's NOT - IMO - that these pseudoscience students consume Science / Medical School resources (any more than, say, Dance, etc. do). IF the universities wanted to boost their Science & Medical faculties, they might allocate funds from such "popular" courses for the latter -important- ones. Not finding ways to do that puts some responsibility on them, not the students.

    It's more likely that the -ease- with which the alternative medical "practitioners" find gullible -paying- customers (a.k.a. "patients"), after just a -few- years of study in the "black arts" of alternative medicine, means even "smart" people are drawn to shorter & lower-cost course (compared to Med School + internship), if they can be assured of being well received (& well paid) by a market of -believers-

    --- Australia tends to look after its "alternative medical" practitioners, in the most unique ways:

    Eg, on Groote Eylandt (Northern Territory), an NT gov't school hired a man from Germany (who happened - before then - to be a Homeopathist, in an Eastern Australian state, apparently unable to earn as much after the Global Financial Crisis hit clients' bank balances), as a Science teacher.

    We understand that gov't School let this Science teacher invite locals (including high-income miners & their familes) to give "info presentation" in a room at the School.

    Before the presentations, that Science teacher had been allocated a 2 bedroom principal-class house (from the gov't housing stock), which he occupied alone, until - 1 or 2 days later, and before the start of their first teaching term - another new teacher arrived & needed housing, when no other suitable housing was available.

    Eventually, he placed ad's in the town's newsletter (published by the Mining company's contractors (who, eg, ran the store, etc.) offering Homeopathic Services.

    While sharing house with the other teacher, but -after- advertising the info sessions and/or Homeopathic services, the Homeopath asked the -other- teacher if she'd mind his providing those services in the house, eg, in the lounge room.

    After the other teacher made it clear that she felt that would unduly limit her access to hallways, kitchen & the same lounge room, the School issued the newer teacher with an Eviction Notice (offering her an much older, long-time unoccupied (at least teachers had refused to reside there), unmaintained house, even before it could be refurbished & made ready for occupation.

    When the newer teacher appealed the Eviction Notice to the School's Principal (who also held the title of Housing Officer), she was told that the very fact that the Science teacher had "additional" skills, "useful" in the Groote Eylandt community made him -more- desirable, so that it was in the interest of the School & Dep't of Education (as well as the Mining Company) that this Homeopath be given exclusive access to the fine principal-class gov't house... with its beautiful, flowering tropical back garden, etc.

    In the end, the newer teacher, being threatened with forcible eviction (ie, the principal told her that Police would be called) had to move out; disappointed & insulted by her treatment, she also left Groote Eylandt (and her teaching contract), a week early.

    (The newer teacher had begun to teach at that School on the -same- day of the -same- school term, but had arrived a day or two later

  176. Re:Fundamentalists by zigge · · Score: 1

    "When it comes to homeopathy, nobody ever got well" Well, it might work for dehydration...

  177. I'm going to kill myself... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have some first hand experience of this. My partner (been togethor almost 10 years) used to be 'normal' and was never sickly or prone to complaining of health issues. About 4 years ago she was diagnosed with 'Cushings Disease'. It wasn't that big a deal in my mind, overnight in hospital, lapriscopic surgery, remove a small tumor on the adrenal glands, take some hormone replacement drugs for a couple of weeks, and bob's you uncle, life goes on.

    Well, to put it bluntly she has turned into a card carrying, raving hypochondriac! Its ~4 years since and she just won't let it go, she still thinks she is sick, and comes up with a new chronic ailment every couple months to keep it all rolling. She turned to 'natural medicine', supplements, natropathy, osteopaths, chiropractic, healing massage, acupuncture...the works! I tried telling her that it's all a bloody scam, and they a ripping her (well me, I'm the dickhead footing the bills) six ways.

    She just won't listen, she seriously believes that the all the supplements she scarfs every day are the only thing keeping her alive.

    It's driving me crazy, she is sucking the life out me, both mentally and financially. She won't work, and routinely spends +$1,000 per month on all the doctors/scam artists and supplement voodoo crap. I sometimes think of dying so I can get out this fucking nightmare.

  178. Re:Fundamentalists by Tom · · Score: 1

    Like the other guy, your examples are not anti-science or science-is-so-limited in the least.

    All of these are areas where science has given us better understanding than any other approach, and is still moving forward.

    We do not yet fully understand these topics, but we do understand quite a bit of it, and a lot more than we would without science. And given time, our understanding will improve.

    I fail to see how any of these qualify for a general criticism of the scientific method. Just because you are still on the stairs doesn't mean that walking doesn't work or that the kitchen doesn't exist.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  179. Re:Fundamentalists by tbannist · · Score: 1

    Actually, I seem to remember several studies have produced statistically significant negative results. The studies found that praying for people actually made them slightly less likely to recover. If I remember correctly, the scientists conducting the studying said the effect need further study but hypothesised that the patients and their praying guardians tended to be overly optimistic about their chances and were more likely to refuse treatments that had more serious side effects in preference for less effective treatments with no side effects.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  180. Homeopathic marketing by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

    Many people think that the word "homeopathic" means "natural medicine" or "herbal medicine" because it is marketed as such.

  181. Re:This is why we need to improve science educatio by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    America has been trending left for a century

    Thus explaining the massive increase in the training and use of paramilitary law enforcement squads, the numerous attacks on the bill of rights, and the various favors and hand-outs the government gives big corporations? For decades, the executive branch of government has been expanding its power, to the point of being able to make and enforce laws. You think Obama is on the left? Then perhaps you can explain his support for ACTA, for the DEA and other war-on-drugs efforts (under his administration, the DEA has unilaterally declared numerous drugs to be illegal, without any democratic process), his support for killing citizens without due process, etc.

    In America your choices are "extreme right wing" or "right wing." Leftists are few and far between.

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  182. Re:Fundamentalists by wootcat · · Score: 1

    Good points. I know next-to-nothing about acupuncture, but I do know it requires a lot of study. It's not just poking needles in random places on people. So a "degree in acupuncture" I could see and agree with. A "SCIENCE degree in acupuncture" I'm not so sure. It depends on what the implications are behind the "science" label. I think there is a science to acupuncture, it's just not something that we can define using Western understanding which hasn't been through the rigors we place on Western medicine.

    --
    I'm really a low 5-digit Slashdotter, but this ID is where I am now.
  183. Scientific Establishment feels threatened by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

    The Scientific Establishment feels threatened - that's why they are fighting so vigourously.

    Just like faster than light, and alternatives to Einstein's theory, and how they used a claim of a bad cable to whitewash result that showed faster than light effects.

    Look at the mainstream Cancer Establishment, still using barbaric toxic chemotherapy with nothing else to offer - the only thing they have to offer is a different way to die.

    It would be like using amputation for weight loss.

    This all makes leeches look good - in fact leeches are useful (I mean the animal, not the members of the Medical Establishment).

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  184. Re:Fundamentalists by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    Disclaimer: I run an 'alternative medicine' company selling products with quantifiable results. I know something about what I am talking about.

    Then post something that is quantifiable, and stop being an AC. I don't disagree with some of your comments, but you can't just toss out a statement like this w/o additional evidence, and expect to be taken seriously.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  185. Re:Fundamentalists by mikael · · Score: 1

    Magnetic field strength decreases with the cube of distance

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnet

    I must have been thinking of some other formula to get power of six, but still, it's fascinating that the magnetic field is bipolar while gravity is basically monopolar.

    The "strong nuclear force" doesn't diminish with distance

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  186. I call those "feel good about yourself degrees by rhalstead · · Score: 1

    Yup! Those "feel good about yourself degrees" with no jobs and no contribution to society...except the coffers of the universities. Then the students run up huge debts getting advanced degrees in "feel good about yourself" because they didn't have enough ambition to earn a real degree and then demonstrate against "the system" because they can't find work and can't pay their bills.

  187. Re:Fundamentalists by Mister_Stoopid · · Score: 1

    Why would the organizers of this study even tell the patients which group they're in? Hell, you probably shouldn't even tell the patients they're part of a study. Just pick 100 random suitable hospital patients; pray for half of them; don't pray for the other half.

  188. Australian "Universities" harming Australian Unis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many people may not know it, but the "universities" listed in the article aren't really universities in the sense of being actual respected universities.

    Most of them are glorified "technical colleges" and "institutes of technology" that used to sit somewhere between TAFE (vocational college) and university (academic) for "soft" professions like nursing and teaching.

    In the 1990's, governments decided to scale back how much money they were spending on tertiary education by allowing educational institutions to cash in on Australia's reputation for quality education by allowing in lots of "full fee paying" overseas students.

    You see, in Australia going to university is practically free: students pay about 25% of the cost either up-front or via an interest-free government loan that you don't need to pay back until you start earning a certain level of income.

    Before this "deregulation", universities were only able to offer a certain number of places for each degree based on how much the government was funding them. After this was changed, they started offering extra positions alongside the government funded ones to anyone who could pony up the cash - even if academically you wouldn't have made the cut everyone else had to meet. Such fee-paying positions were priced higher than the actual cost of delivery and the profits were used to prop up the departments that the government didn't like funding and other such things.

    Having now struck upon a gold mine, educational institutions started renaming themselves as universities and milking foreign students' families of their hard-earned in exchange for the "prestige" of an Australian University degree.

    The situation is so bad that anyone can start a "university" today. In the couple of years leading up to the global financial crisis, the hot new source of foreign students was India. Scandals were had like where in one city it was found that Indian migrants had started an "international college" that was offering qualifications in being a chef, mechanic and so on and the students were not actually doing any studying, but were instead working shifts driving taxis that the owners of the "college" had bought up.

    There are but a handful of proper universities in Australia, they are commonly known as the "Sandstones". There's 7 or 8 of them. Under that is the second-tier like what one of the authors of the letter is from. Everything after that is just a degree mill that shouldn't be allowed to call itself a university as it is damaging Australia's reputation.

  189. Re:Fundamentalists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem here is that you're talking about "concrete" things which aren't concrete; in fact, you could just be spouting pure bullshit for all anyone knows.

    Even if I assume that your story of "healing" the guy is true, at least in the facts, as you told them, and even if we assume that it's not 100% placebo effect... if anything helped, it was probably the heat and pressure from your hands (both of which are already accepted as standard treatments for certain types of pain/injury), not the mumbo-jumbo of his head's "energetic form". Which, of course, is not a "scientific category" no matter how you might describe it as one. If you can find an objective way to measure it - objective meaning that anyone can observe it, consistently, either personally or with the help of scientific instruments - then it's scientific. Until then, it isn't.

    (And you wonder why your karma has been nuked.)