How is that point relevant to our esteemed colleague Euromutt's contention that, if there were anything to Cayce's psoriasis treatment, it would have been conclusively proven by now?
I'd say "straw man," but I believe the description "lie" is more acurate. I have not contended that anything should have been
conclusively proven. I said of Craven's contention:
[At] least the idea was being properly tested in the interim, and that would have been enough for me to say "well, there may be something to it; let's see what develops."
Being open to the possibility of an idea, and accepting it completely are two different things.
So why would I have been open to the possibility of Craven being right, while being quite certain there is nothing to the Cayce/Pagano regimen? First, unlike the Craven hypothesis,
zero evidence has been produced with regard to the Cayce/Pagano conjecture ("hypothesis" is too charitable a word).
Mein's "pilot studies" don't cut it; even a layman can see their failings plainly (I don't understand why I have to keep explaining this). There was no placebo control, blinding or randomization. The test subject populations were woefully small, with the subjects likely drawn from sufferers more predisposed to give credence to the "leaky gut syndrome" conjecture. The primary factor in determining the "effectiveness" of the program was subject self-reporting, which is worthless in any test which isn't blinded, randomized, and placebo-controlled. As
patnray pointed out, six months is way too short to make any kind of determination, as anyone who is familiar with psoriasis knows the severity of the condition is highly variable, not least by season, amount of time spent outdoors, etc. And, of course, Mein recommends subjects not discontinue their conventional treatments--and conspicuously fails to make mention of whether, and if so, which, subjects did discontinue conventional treatment--thus further muddying the results. And if the results were suposedly so promising, as Main claimed, why did he not conduct a follow-up study or set up a proper clinical trial? Pilot studies are supposed to be preliminary exercises for the purpose of pre-testing aspects of the main research project (e.g. the feasibility of the protocol or the effectiveness of a particular research tool). But in the case of the Cayce/Pagano regimen, the main research project has never materialized. Hell, they haven't even managed to identify these supposed "toxins."
The aforementioned familiarity with psoriasis is a second point. I have little familiarity with cardiological matters, so I would have been hesitant to deliver an opinion on Craven's hypothesis. But as a sufferer of psoriasis, I
do have some insight into the current basis of knowledge of the disease, such as it is. And the whole "leaky gut syndrome" conjecture just doesn't add up in my experience, both direct and indirect.
Unless you are suggesting that Cayce actually recommended his psoriasis regimen as a treatment for something else entirely, and it has only been suggested as a treatment for psoriasis comparatively recently.
Ah, well, there we appear to have a problem. From what I can make out, the majority of elements of the psoriasis regimen attributed to Cayce--safflower and slippery elm bark tea, chiropractic adjustments, castor oil packs, colonic irrigations, avoiding eating just about everything except nuts and vegetables--he recommended for just about every malady under the sun. At the same time, however, going over
Cayce's readings, we find he is highly inconsistent in recommending particular treatments, or even in asserting what psoriasis
is. Thus:
Reading 3827-1 F (1922):
Cuticle psoriasis, a condition produced in the system whereby the body, through its blood supply, attempts to eliminate the toxins carried in the blood where they are not eliminated through their proper functionings on account of this condition. Names do not mean anything for the condition of this body.
So it's caused by the blood supply carrying "toxins."
Reading 2491-1 F69 (1942):
(Q) What causes and what should be done for psoriasis?
(A) As just indicated, the preparing and taking into the system of those properties that will aid in CORRECTING these nerve tensions, as produced by lack of the vital forces to produce the proper reactions.
Twenty years later, it's "nerve tensions" caused by a lack of "vital forces," apparently.
Reading 3032-1 F 35 (1943):
These [conditions], we find, are from an unbalancing of the eliminations through their proper channels, produced by thinning of the walls in the intestinal system. Thus the activities of the lymph and emunctory circulations through these portions carry that humor into the lymph circulation, which causes that irritation to the skin called psoriasis.
A year later, it's "eliminations," but now it's the lymph and emunctory systems, not the "blood system."
Reading 5016-1 F 25 (1944):
[Psoriasis] is always caused by a condition of lack of lymph circulation through alimentary canal and by absorption of such activities through the body.
And a year after that, the cause is "lack of lymph circulation." The guy just can't make up his mind, can he? Or, more likely, he can't keep track of the ◊◊◊◊ he made up as he went along.
Reading 1048-2 F 21 (1931):
(Q) Will the psoriasis infection which attacked me strenuously during the past year be recurrent?
(A) Not if the corrections are made that are causing or producing same, as has been outlined.
From context, it's clear Cayce means "corrections" to mean chiropratic manipulations. So that's the key to treating psoriasis.
Reading 2455-2 F 28 (1941):
(Q) Is there an absolute cure for psoriasis?
(A) Most of this is found in diet. There is a cure. It requires patience, persistence - and right thinking also.
And ten years later, treatment is mostly down to diet.
And check out reading 982-1 F 34 (1935). Cayce gives a rundown which sounds like a "textbook" description of Cayce's take on psoriasis prior to 1942: "deflection from normal eliminations" via the blood supply, caused by "a thinning of the walls of the intestines themselves." Now get this:
24. (Q) Is this condition what is commonly known as psoriasis?
(A) No. [Question 24 submitted by GD, as GD's wrong guess as to type of skin trouble indicated. This question and answer not included in Patient's copy.]
"GD" is Gladys Davis, Cayce's stenographer. At the time, she'd been sitting in on readings for eleven years. Why the "wrong guess" on her part? The most obvious explanation is that she'd heard Cayce rattle off that spiel for psoriasis over many years and drew the logical conclusion that he was also talking about psoriasis in this case as well. That she was "wrong" says more about Cayce's inability to keep his story straight than anything else.
But here's the real kicker:
Reading 943-17 M 40 (1932):
As is known, psoriasis is - itself - an infectious condition that affects the emunctory and lymph circulation, and causes an improper coordination of the eliminating forces of the system, as in this body.
Emphasis in bold mine. "Infectious"? And this is "known"? Do I need to provide more evidence that Cayce didn't have the first damn clue about psoriasis? The clinical picture has remained almost unchanged since it was formulated by Ferdinand Hebra in 1841, including the fact that it was not infectious. There is no excuse for not knowing this ninety years later, not when you're supposedly "treating" the condition.
So Cayce didn't know a damn thing about psoriasis, other than what his "patients" wrote in (note that the "patients" were not present for the readings; not only was he, like Pagano, not qualified to diagnose psoriasis, he was physically incapable of doing so). So why should anyone assume that there might be anything to a "treatment" based on this pile of garbage? At least Craven was an MD, unlike Cayce, and unlike Pagano. And unlike Mein, Craven actually treated patients.
Have we beaten this subject to death sufficiently yet?