I think you misunderstand what is happening here. The subject of this discussion is not about making homeopathy available on the NHS. It is about licensing. The regulation of medicines is far from perfect, it sometimes fails, but it is at least based on the need to support a claim with evidence. I tend to avoid the word `proof', because there are no absolutes in medicine, only varying degrees of uncertainty. The purpose of the MHRA is to protect the public by minimising uncertainty. What is momentous about the present fiasco is not just that uncertainty is now tolerated, but positively encouraged.
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You need to do a bit more research. For a start, the NHS is not the MHRA. But while we are on the subject, the <snip> nhs website admits that there is no evidence that homeopathy works. Actually this has very recently been updated as a result of many of us protesting at the misleading information it was providing before. At the same time as admitting this, the NHS continues to spend millions on homeopathy. Do you think that is honest?
I am quite shocked at your degree of cynicism and disdain for science. It's not perfect either, there are many abuses and errors, but it's better than fantasy. Why don't we tell people there are fairies at the bottom of their gardens that will grant them their wishes for good health?
I am not a believer in talking round in circles and I think I have said my piece on this matter.
My main point is that public policy will never and can never be based solely on scientific evidence. We live in a social world composed of people whose primary logic is not objective or scientific. It is both inevitable and proper that public policy will be significantly swayed by the general public's own perceptions. The public's choice of placebo may change but for now, I would let the NHS prescribe these things.
I will close with a few statements which you can agree with or not as you will.
1. Doctors have always prescribed placebos and, since, I have never heard of any doctor being prosecuted for this act, its legality, or otherwise, seems to me immaterial.
2. I have my own research programme which, as indicated in my web site, is bioepistemic evolution and its implications; researching the administrative structure of the British health service is not part of that programme and, accordingly, I respectfully decline your suggested research project.
3. I am not at all disdainful of properly conducted science - in my judgment science is the best source of objective knowledge available to human beings.
4. That is why I do not like to see science sullied; that is why I am disdainful of some scientists who, in my opinion, are demonstrably either incompetent or deceitful, or both, and whose professional opinions seem to be driven purely by self-interest; that is why I am disdainful of the manifest trash, the "garden fairies," that those people present as "quality controlled" science and that is why I am disdainful of scientific institutions, and I mean most scientific institutions who, fully knowing about the behaviour of such staff, respond to protests about it with indifference and with cover ups.
5. Finally, I am concerned by organizations such as "Sense about Science." I suppose I should be glad to see their efforts at maintaining high scientific standards but, on the other hand, they do represent exactly the same institutions that engage in these cover ups and that leaves some real doubts in my mind. I would have more confidence in the elevated scientific standards of such bodies if those standards did not vanish in a puff of platitudinous rhetoric whenever questions were asked about their own, or their institutes', behaviour.