Your last line doesn't actually follow from the previous ones. Even if acupuncture is purely a placebo, that doesn't make it pointless, because placebos do work for things like pain. Even if you know it's a placebo.
Okay seriously people have got to stop trying to excuse every bit of medical quackery with "But... but the Placebo effect!"
By this logic no medical procedure, no matter how outrageous, should ever be restricted in any way because there's the chance some person out there might placebo effect themselves into briefly feeling a little better.
"I had really bad headaches so I started doing that Chinese thing with needles... whatsitcalled.... oh yeah heroin."
Who said that this electric treatment was science-based?
There are scientific reasons to suspect that it might work, but that doesn't mean it's scientifically based. Leaches sometimes work too, doesn't mean its early practitioners knew what the hell they were doing. Same with trepanning.
You by playing on the frayed-edge of the definitions of acupuncture.
"Anything connected to or having to do with the use of needles" is not necessarily acupuncture.
Those are your words, not mine.
"I had really bad headaches so I started doing that Chinese thing with needles... whatsitcalled.... oh yeah heroin."
Have you ever gotten a tattoo? It's a rush.If acupuncture works than tattoo artists should get paid double
Have you ever gotten a tattoo? It's a rush.
No-one's seriously trying to claim that tattooing is in any way comparable to acupuncture, are they?
But according to the basic premise of acupuncture, it would depend on where you got needled.
A head rush would ony occur if you got the tatt on your lower chest, an arm tat would relieve constipation, ear lobe relieves tobacco addiction.... Except your liver. Any skin puncture any where is good for your liver.![]()
What do you mean by "seriously"?Depends what you mean by "seriously".
No, I'm seriously complaining that someone might be seriously suggesting that tattooing might be in some way analogous to acupuncture, when the two procedures are completely different.Also, are you seriously complaining that someone might not be taking acupuncture (and/or tatooing) seriously?
What do you mean by "seriously"?
No, I'm seriously complaining that someone might be seriously suggesting that tattooing might be in some way analogous to acupuncture, when the two procedures are completely different.
With acupuncture, you have multiple needles that go into certain points prescribed by a particular theory and stay there for a while before being removed. With tattooing, you have a single needle that very rapidly pierces and is removed over a surface that depends on the form of the artistic creation.
Okay, yeah you got me. Technically, I was drawing a comparison. Even more technically I was drawing a contrast.Huh. Apparently I should have asked what you meant by "comparing". Because it looks like you're seriously comparing the two, yourself.
Millions of people across the world take it seriously, including - apparently - some of the people posting in this thread. If you don't consider it to be worth discussing, why are you discussing it?Anyway, I'm not sure I see the point of taking acupuncture so seriously as to complain about the comparison.
Quite likely, but we don't know that for certain. Nevertheless, that's how it was done in this case.
Suppose someone did decide to deliver vaccines through lots of tiny needles simultaneously. Suppose I called it acupuncture. What then? What terrible calamity would ensue?
