Shrinker
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2004
- Messages
- 1,459
My dearly beloved is currently enjoying this book "The Field" [Amazon link: http://tinyurl.com/l8ryj]. I glanced at a random page, and saw some words about using advanced theoretical physiscs to prove the science behind homeopathy. I searched the contents at Amazon, and found over 90 pages with the word Quantum. (Like a good skeptic I then searched for "=" and got nothing - no math proofs then.) Randi gets a mention as an unqualified observer of Beneviste's experiments.
She's got an apparently antivax article here: http://www.whale.to/m/mctaggart.html and has another book "What Doctors Don't Tell You" [http://tinyurl.com/j5h6t]
Her book was followed up by a $100 "Living Field Masterclass" ("Learn how to heal yourself and others, forecast from your dreams, carry out remote viewing, fine out the effect of geomagnetic energy...") and she appears at conferences with the likes of Gary Schwartz [http://www.merrynjose.com/artman/publish/article_720.shtml]
So, naturally I laughed heartily and cruelly at the merest hint of anyone believing anything this "resepected journalist and speaker" had no say on matters healthy. And now I'm in the dog-house, and my penance is to read the damn thing and open my mind. Anyone got any good ammunition to get me out of this? I've got a Dan Brown I'd rather be reading. Bear in mind, my good lady refuses to dimiss homeopathy, an MMR/autism link, medical conspiracies, or any old hack's right to use the word quantum, so what sets off alarms for us, looks perfectly reasonable to her.
For example I found evidence of McTaggarts campaign against the EU's stricter regulation of vitamin supplement claims, and wondered if the woman has any financial interest in this issue. I predicted she'd have talks, workshops and newsletters in advance of any evidence so I may score a point there. Anything else would be great.
She's got an apparently antivax article here: http://www.whale.to/m/mctaggart.html and has another book "What Doctors Don't Tell You" [http://tinyurl.com/j5h6t]
Her book was followed up by a $100 "Living Field Masterclass" ("Learn how to heal yourself and others, forecast from your dreams, carry out remote viewing, fine out the effect of geomagnetic energy...") and she appears at conferences with the likes of Gary Schwartz [http://www.merrynjose.com/artman/publish/article_720.shtml]
So, naturally I laughed heartily and cruelly at the merest hint of anyone believing anything this "resepected journalist and speaker" had no say on matters healthy. And now I'm in the dog-house, and my penance is to read the damn thing and open my mind. Anyone got any good ammunition to get me out of this? I've got a Dan Brown I'd rather be reading. Bear in mind, my good lady refuses to dimiss homeopathy, an MMR/autism link, medical conspiracies, or any old hack's right to use the word quantum, so what sets off alarms for us, looks perfectly reasonable to her.
For example I found evidence of McTaggarts campaign against the EU's stricter regulation of vitamin supplement claims, and wondered if the woman has any financial interest in this issue. I predicted she'd have talks, workshops and newsletters in advance of any evidence so I may score a point there. Anything else would be great.