• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Any value in acupuncture?

This is a follow up for any of you who might be taking yrreg seriously. I’ve taken a few days to form some rational responses free of aggravation. I find yrreg’s arrogance reinforced by his ignorance to be very frustrating.

Sorry if this is a little long-winded. :)

Is the National Council Against Health Fraud (NCAHF) national in scope and actually a council? Yes, it has 20 board members from 13 states. Is the information found on its site trustworthy? Yes, the site has been independently certified to provide academically honest and trustworthy health information by HON. (I’ll address HON later.) Should this convince you to accept the NCAHF as an authority on health information? No, you’ll have to decide that yourself. The HON code only says that the health information on the site is written by qualified personnel, provides proper citations for data presented, and supports it claims with appropriate, balanced evidence. Keep in mind that the NCAHF is primarily concerned with identifying fraud, and you may interpret that as you wish.

The Health on the Net Foundation (HON) is an internationally recognized organization that has been granted special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations (ECOSOC). Frankly, I find yrreg’s questioning of HON without looking into it proof of his willful ignorance on the matter.

Here is a link to the ECOSOC site. More specifically here is a link to the guidelines for association between NGO’s and the UN. (Warning: the guidelines are in PDF format so may take some time to load.)

Here is an interesting paper on why an organization like HON is needed and a little about why it was created.

Also, my statement earlier about the NIH not subscribing to HON code was misleading. While it is true that the site www.nih.gov is not certified by HON, it has no reason to since it doesn’t provide any health information directly. It only links to separate more specific institutes’ web pages. Each of which is in fact certified by HON. I apologize for the misleading information; I was too quick to jump to conclusions in my last post.

Now, back to the topic of acupuncture as an acceptable option for treating medical conditions; here is another paper that was published just this month, February 2006. In the paper it says:
Some of the original concepts of traditional acupuncture are not supported by good scientific evidence. Several plausible theories attempt to explain how acupuncture works but none are proved beyond doubt. The clinical effectiveness of acupuncture continues to attract controversy.

Some of the controversies may be resolved through the use of the new 'placebo needles' which enable researchers to adequately control for placebo effects of acupuncture. The majority of studies using such devices fails to show effects beyond a placebo response.

In conclusion, acupuncture remains steeped in controversy. Some findings are encouraging but others suggest that its clinical effects mainly depend on a placebo response.
The abstract may be viewed on PubMed here, and the full paper here.

“Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.”

This is how yrreg originally phrased his commit. However, he later stated this was just his opinion. This statement is quite wrong and misleading. If you are at all concerned about evidence then at best you could make a statement like:

“Acupuncture is a still controversial option for dealing with subjective symptoms associated with certain medical conditions.”

There is a big difference between medical conditions and symptoms associated with them. There is zero evidence that acupuncture successful in treating any medical conditions. All evidence supporting acupuncture is for symptoms, more specifically only subjective symptoms. There is zero evidence for acupuncture being successful with objective symptoms. I am unsure if yrreg was intending on being deceitful or if he didn’t know or consider the difference between medical conditions and symptoms.

Let me provide an example.

Being infected with Hepatitis C is a medical condition. There is zero evidence to support acupuncture being able to cure or even delay the progress of Hepatitis C. The virus causes liver inflammation and can lead to cirrhosis of the liver. These are objective symptoms of a Hepatitis C infection. They will happen regardless of what you think or how you percieve them. There is also zero evidence that acupuncture can treat these symptoms in any way. The virus can also produce symptoms such as fatigue, headache, sore muscles, or abdominal pain. These are subjective symptoms. They will vary greatly between people and even within the same person depending on things like mood or how they percieve the symptom. There is evidence to support acupuncture in treating these type symptoms. However, the evidence is rather inconclusive right now, but evidence is growing that shows acupuncture only provides a placebo response to relieve these symptoms. Also, you should note that while acupuncture has no evidence to support the treatment of Hepatitis C, it can spread the infection if proper sanitation practices are not conducted.

As I pointed out above, there is growing evidence showing that acupuncture may be producing only a placebo response. Perhaps a thread about the ethical ramifications of using placebos to treat subjective symptoms might provide a good discussion. My opinion is that placebos are not an acceptable way of treating subjective symptoms.

I expect yrreg to accuse me of breaking some of his imaginary rules to attempt to discredit this post. Perhaps he will start challenging authorities, but authority just comes down to which you would belive over another. I have no problem accepting papers written by qualified personnel, with proper citations for data presented, and claims that are supported with appropriate evidence over yrreg’s anecdotes for acupuncture.
 
Invitation to a new thread on acupuncture, Facts and Fictions in Acupuncture

Well, guys, this topic, "Any Value in Acupuncture?, is really so absorbing and challenging, for a most enjoyable exercise in the investigation of the paranormal apparently at least.

That is why I have decided to start a new thread on acupuncture, namely, "Facts and Fictions in Acupuncture."

Facts are independent of man's mind. Fictions are to be found in man's mind and then enacted outside.

Now, we want to find the facts and explore the fictions in acupuncture, using all the stock knowledge I have in regard to critical thinking, specially whetted by scientific skepticism.

Please check this forum for the appearance of that thread.

In the meantime, apologies to everyone who think that I am an arrogant son of my mother; actually if you were my roommate you would know after one hour together as roommates, that I am the humblest most unassuming chap in the universe.

Yrreg, aspiring Fat Laughing Buddha

---------------

From Nirvana with love, Butai.
putai26eo.gif
 
Your response, Ryokan, is unworthy of your profession as a Buddhist, it is too emotional, even the word 'crap' already precludes you from taking a serious look at acupuncture.

This guy is like Troy Brooks lite. Minus the God complex, of course.

Yrreg you should start your own little hole-in-the-wall website, where you could insist that all other posters conform to your standards, else be banned.

Good luck.
 
In the meantime, apologies to everyone who think that I am an arrogant son of my mother; actually if you were my roommate you would know after one hour together as roommates, that I am the humblest most unassuming chap in the universe.
Hey, you forgot modest.

Yuri
 
In the meantime, apologies to everyone who think that I am an arrogant son of my mother; actually if you were my roommate you would know after one hour together as roommates, that I am the humblest most unassuming chap in the universe.
Now he's beginning to sound a bit like Mark Lewis
 
I did not say that acupuncture is immune to scientific explanation. It is not immune only we have to study more thoroughly this phenomenon of acupuncture to discover the science that is its underpinning, whatever its a-scientific explanations found in its traditional presentation as a medical system and practice.

Yrreg

How about replacing the small needles with huge ones the same size as 3 inch nails of about 3 or 4 millimetres diameter? If the important thing are the points in the body where the needles need to be poked into that matters, then theoretically the size of the needles (4 millimetres) are irrelevant to the acupuncture treatment. I can volunteer to poke those 4 mm diameter needles on an acupuncturist to prove that not the size that matters but the locations of those nerve communications centre in the body that is important.
 
I am asking Buddhists here about their knowledge and attitude in regard to acupuncture, seeing the folks who bring you Buddhism also bring you acupuncture.

How do you reason that?

Your response, Ryokan, is unworthy of your profession as a Buddhist, it is too emotional, even the word 'crap' already precludes you from taking a serious look at acupuncture.

I'm sorry that I called a spade for a spade, and not a manual digging device.

*Mind over matter -- here is an anecdote told by my favorite skeptic, Pes Oir Amsus, ala B. Russell:
What is mind? Mind is not matter.
What is matter? Never mind!​

If B.Russell is Bertrand Russell, then that's a misquote.

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=1449257#post1449257
 
Last edited:
à la B. Russell, à la Yrreg, à la Ryokan, à la D. David, etc.

Originally Posted by yrreg:

*Mind over matter -- here is an anecdote told by my favorite skeptic, Pes Oir Amsus, ala B. Russell:

What is mind? Mind is not matter.
What is matter? Never mind!​
-----------------

How do you reason that?

I'm sorry that I called a spade for a spade, and not a manual digging device.

If B.Russell is Bertrand Russell, then that's a misquote.

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=1449257#post1449257

Good friend, Ryokan, we are certainly of very different tempers. You are from some northern part of Europe? And I am anywhere of a disposition that sees everything in the light of humor.

Even my posthumous mother-in-law [posthumous, literary license, hahaha] sometimes wondered why I always seem to find everything just hilarious; and I had to explain to her that my mind works that way, always into all kinds of flights of fancy, seeing all kinds of associations, even of the most irreverent kinds -- but as your master, Buddha, I am sure would put it, everything is connected or in our mind connectible.

That word particle ala in ala B. Russell, is my way of writing together the French preposition à and the French article la.

So, ala B. Russell means in the style or manner of B. Russell; yes, that favorite philosopher and skeptic of my routine authority in life and in learning, Pes Oir Amsus.

No, "Pes Oir Amsus, ala B. Russell" is not meant by yours truly to convey "Pes Oir Amsus, aka or alias B. Russell."


Okay, can you now just have a good laugh with me?

Hahahahahahaaaaaaa!

Yrreg, aspiring Fat Laughing Buddha

---------------

From Nirvana with love, Bude.
putai26eo.gif


-----------

I am now off to find out how the friends here interacting with me on acupuncture are getting more emotional or adjusting to an academic mode and mood.

About Buddhism and acupuncture, I certainly like to go into such a topic for a thread, because I think your Far Eastern Buddhist colleagues from Buddha's lifetime to the present still employ this medical skill and art, and discuss it in the most favorable light.


Yrreg
 
That word particle ala in ala B. Russell, is my way of writing together the French preposition à and the French article la.

Aha. I was wrong, and I apologize.

Who is Pes Oir Amsus? I have never heard of him, and I'm curious, and would love to get enlightened on the subject :)

About Buddhism and acupuncture, I certainly like to go into such a topic for a thread, because I think your Far Eastern Buddhist colleagues from Buddha's lifetime to the present still employ this medical skill and art, and discuss it in the most favorable light.

Some of 'my' Far Eastern Buddhist, yes, no doubt. That doesn't mean there's a connection between the two, however. No more than there is between Christianity and homeopathy, just because they're both mainly found on the same continents, and many, if not most, who believe in homeopathy are from traditionally Christian countries.
 
No need to swing that club all the time

Don't read this, unless you have a sense of humor and can use polite and courteous language.

You know I'm almost tempted to take this guy off "ignore" just to see how far he is prepared to sink into his own stupidity, but then again, I don't think my blood pressure (or my faith in the human race) could take it.

Okay, Brodski, let's have a laugh over what I am going to say next.

Stop swinging that club around, stupid and stupidity personified; I am absolutely certain that your good mother taught you before you went on your own away from her, not to use impolite and discourteous language but just keep a well-mannered silence, if you have nothing positive or intelligible to say in a conversation.

[This is an experiment, but subject consistently to date returns a negative result.]


Yrreg, aspiring Fat Laughing Buddha

---------------

From Nirvana with love, Bude
putai26eo.gif
 
Touche, with acute accent mark ( ‘ ) on the ending e.

Ryokan, thanks for your quick comprehension.

That bit about Christians and homeopathy vis a vis Buddhists and acupuncture, it's very good -- no flattery intended.

See, Ryokan, we can understand and be nice to each other because neither of us carry a club to swing it all the time, and in fact not at all, unlike some people who just have to carry one all the time. They should go back to their caves.

Hahahahahaaaaaaaa.


Okay, I have to control my laughter, for it can also disrupt serious conversation.


Yrreg, aspiring Fat Laughing Buddha

---------------

From Nirvana with love, Bude
putai26eo.gif
 
What about the other claim I am supposed to have made?

( . . . . . )

“Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you." [ -- Yrreg ]​
----------------------------

This is how yrreg originally phrased his commit. However, he later stated this was just his opinion. This statement is quite wrong and misleading. If you are at all concerned about evidence then at best you could make a statement like:

“Acupuncture is a still controversial option for dealing with subjective symptoms associated with certain medical conditions.”

( . . . . . )
Dear good friend, 3logic:

Thanks for reproducing my text [comment or opinion in your words] in its entirety; because when you you first presented it, you chopped off a very critically and crucially vital part:


3logic's earlier citation:

[Referring to me] "You claimed, 'Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical conditions.'”


Here is my complete text which he now displays in his post above:

“Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you." [ -- Yrreg ]​


Portion omitted in 3logic's earlier citation:

if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you."

That is the very critically crucial vital part that you chopped off, which totally and wrongly distort the sense and mood of my original complete text.


I am telling you again, you have got to be very meticulous with language precision and integrity or completeness, to the very commas and periods and other punctuation marks in the original excerpt.

---------------

What about the other claim you alleged that I made, namely:

[3logic to Yrreg] I assume your position is that no studies are accurate unless you perform them yourself or they agree with what you already believe.


Did I make that claim? Please go over my posts again where you found that claim, and read more carefully and more thoroughly; then with a mind for meticulous precision in language, tell me if I made that claim.

Now, this is just in jest: Otherwise you could be charged with criminal neligence or suspected of bad faith.

-----------------------------

About your probe into the NCAHF and the HON which are your authorities: the first you adduced to justify your antagonism toward acupuncture, because acupuncture is rejected by the NCAHF; and the second to buttress the authority of the first.

Can you probe further in regard to the exact materials over which they are authorities, and on what grounds or works they have done and are still doing.

Please search more extensively and intensively for any discrediting or even just dismaying actuations from the part of the NCAHF in particular; for not so much as any suspicion of any dishonor should be possible at all in Cesar's wife.

Remember that the NCAHF is a human collectivity and therefore heir to all kinds of human self-interest or complicity with parties of interest.


Yrreg


Annex:​

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=1443772&postcount=51
3logic said:
I assume your position is that no studies are accurate unless you perform them yourself or they agree with what you already believe.

You claimed, “Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical conditions”.

[etc. etc. etc.]

I will go right away to the main concern of this post; I just want you to know that you have made two assumptions about me and my mind or claims, which you have to prove, because I am challenging you to do so: namely, that those two assumptions alleged by you are my positions or my claims:

1. I assume your position is that no studies are accurate unless you perform them yourself or they agree with what you already believe.

2. You claimed, “Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical conditions”.

Please then produce texts from me that I have those two assumptions above, or made those two claims.
 
Dear good friend, 3logic:

Thanks for reproducing my text [comment or opinion in your words] in its entirety; because when you you first presented it, you chopped off a very critically and crucially vital part:


3logic's earlier citation:

[Referring to me] "You claimed, 'Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical conditions.'”


Here is my complete text which he now displays in his post above:

“Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you." [ -- Yrreg ]​


Portion omitted in 3logic's earlier citation:

if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you."

That is the very critically crucial vital part that you chopped off, which totally and wrongly distort the sense and mood of my original complete text.
You appear to be saying, then, that acupuncture is not an acceptable option for people who can afford conventional medicine and who are suffering from conditions that are treatable by conventional medicine. Why do you feel that it is not an acceptable option for these people?
 
You got me there, but... you are wrong.

You appear to be saying, then, that acupuncture is not an acceptable option for people who can afford conventional medicine and who are suffering from conditions that are treatable by conventional medicine. Why do you feel that it is not an acceptable option for these people?

Is this a case of damn you say it and damn you don't say it? Hahahaha?
---------------

Actually, Mojo, you are a latecomer here.

Everyone here including the author of the thread are bashing acupuncture mercilessly, as though they are not genuine skeptics -- for genuine skeptics of true scientific temper don't stick to any one position fanatically, as to not even let some door ajar in their mind for the opposite stand.

Not me, I always keep an open mind for the opposite side in a controversy, where there are experiences of people to vouch for the opposite side, as in acupuncture.

So I find myself the lone voice here giving some representation on the side of acupuncture, and they could not shout me down; and that is what they are essentially doing, shouting and almost cursing even, instead of thinking and writing calmly and intelligibly.

Anyway, all this is just for fun, just for a good exercise in jousting with your wits -- on my part; for the anti-acupuncture parties maybe they had been conditioned to react frantically against acupuncture, by their bandwagon psychology of siding with what to them is more glamourous to their un-skeptical mindset, notwithstanding their pretenses at scientific skepticism.

Shall we have a hahahaha together. Okay, together: hahahaha!

-------------------

About my paragraph 1 from my post 18 which is a reproduction of my first post here, post 9, where I started drawing hostile fire without any pause:

1. Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.

You are asking whether for objecting to the truncated citation by 3logic, I mean that for people who are not saddled with these two downturn conditions: "you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or conventional scientific medicine has given up on you" -- I mean namely "that acupuncture is not an acceptable option for" them?

Not at all. Such people can also try acupuncture.

There is no rule in logic which dictates your conclusion that I am against acupuncture for people who are financially capable and conventional scientific medicine has not given up on them. Your conclusion is what in logic I would call an illegitimate conclusion.

I have to look up my books on logic, but I don't think your conclusion is legitimate and valid; because you would not draw such a ridiculous conclusion in a more simple situation like this hypothetical advice from me:

You can use syrup for honey-chicken, if you don't have money to afford honey and your neighbors won't lend you any.

Anyway, for the kind of people who can afford conventional scientific medicine and such medicine has not given up on them, I have also these suggestions for them in favor of acupuncture in my same post 18, reproduced from my post 9 (see both posts below in ANNEX):

5. And they [acupuncturists et alii] cost in most instances less than 20% or even less of what scientific medical practitioners will cost you, with all kinds of drugs, procedures, and equipment expenses and hospitalization. (Addendum: the sky is the limit in professional fees, unless you enjoy socialized medicine.)

6. I said that if you don't have enough money for conventional scientific medicine or this kind of medicine has given up on you, you can and might profitably try acupuncture, and I will add also Chinese medical practitioners working with herbs and drugs directly sourced from herbs, including natural components from organic and mineral origins.

7. I will also add that if you want to experiment because you are not in an urgent medical situation, try the Chinese medical practitioners, you might just save a bundle of money and get the successful lasting treatment for your medical problem.

So, not to worry at all that my paragraph 1 might mislead people away from acupuncture, because they can afford conventional scientific medicine and its practitioners.


I invite you to my thread on Facts and Fictions in Acupuncture.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=52212

Yrreg, aspiring Fat Laughing Buddha

---------------

From Nirvana with love, Bude
putai26eo.gif



ANNEX​
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=1437823&postcount=18


Shall we proceed item by item, calmly, please?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Originally Posted by yrreg :
Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.

[ etc. etc. etc. etc. ]

Please proceed outside this quote box for specific invitations from yours truly for your calmly considered reactions.


[Kindly give careful attention to phrases in bold.]
----------------

1. Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.

2. I might be wrong with this suspicion, but if you make a survey of medical complaints treated by acupuncture and treated by conventional scientific medicine, you might just find that the number of successful cases and lasting duration of the successful treatments are quantitatively the same.

3. This rough study means you get people who are treated with acupuncture and people treated with conventional scientific medicine, on the same diseases or medical complaints.
Is this a valid approach for a study? Never tried that; as I said, it is just my almost arbitrary suspicion.

4. Actually I have seen Chinese doctors using their Chinese medical procedures, with herbs or concoctions made directly from herbs, heal patients in cases where conventional scientific medicine has given up.

5. And they cost in most instances less than 20% or even less of what scientific medical practitioners will cost you, with all kinds of drugs, procedures, and equipment expenses and hospitalization. (Addendum: the sky is the limit in professional fees, unless you enjoy socialized medicine.)

6. I said that if you don't have enough money for conventional scientific medicine or this kind of medicine has given up on you, you can and might profitably try acupuncture, and I will add also Chinese medical practitioners working with herbs and drugs directly sourced from herbs, including natural components from organic and mineral origins.

7. I will also add that if you want to experiment because you are not in an urgent medical situation, try the Chinese medical practitioners, you might just save a bundle of money and get the successful lasting treatment for your medical problem.

8. I would like to ask people here whether there are scientific studies of successful treatments done by Chinese doctors in patients given up by conventional scientific medicine.

9. I think that is a good approach for a study: round up people who had been treated successfully by Chinese doctors, who had been earlier given up by medical practitioners of conventional scientific medicine, and find out why the Chinese doctors succeeded where conventional scientific doctors had given up. In this manner conventional scientific medicine stands to gain new knowledge in medicine.

10. Allow me to point out that Chinese medicine is not to be equated with what people might think to consist in gestures and in orations executed by religious medicine men, maybe called tribal healers, who would treat sick people by appeals to invisible agents called spirits.

------------------

For my part I am searching the net for reliable accounts of people given up by doctors of conventional scientific medicine, but healed and still alive and healthy today, by Chinese medical practitioners using their traditional methods, and with herbs or concoctions made from materials of organic and mineral origins.


[Please remain calm and keep to rational mood with your reactions.]


Yrreg


Acupuncture is an acceptable option if...

Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.

I might be wrong with this suspicion, but if you make a survey of medical complaints treated by acupuncture and treated by conventional scientific medicine, you might just find that the number of successful cases and lasting duration of the successful treatments are quantitatively the same.

This rough study means you get people who are treated with acupuncture and people treated with conventional scientific medicine, on the same diseases or medical complaints.

Is this a valid approach for a study? Never tried that; as I said, it is just my almost arbitrary suspicion.


Actually I have seen Chinese doctors using their Chinese medical procedures, with herbs or concoctions made directly from herbs, heal patients in cases where conventional scientific medicine has given up.

And they cost in most instances less than 20% or even less of what scientific medical practitioners will cost you, with all kinds of drugs, procedures, and equipment expenses and hospitalization.


I said that if you don't have enough money for conventional scientific medicine or this kind of medicine has given up on you, you can and might profitably try acupuncture, and I will add also Chinese medical practitioners working with herbs and drugs directly sourced from herbs, including natural components from organic and mineral origins.

I will also add that if you want to experiment because you are not in an urgent medical situation, try the Chinese medical practitioners, you might just save a bundle of money and get the successful lasting treatment for your medical problem.


I would like to ask people here whether there are scientific studies of successful treatments done by Chinese doctors in patients given up by conventional scientific medicine.

I think that is a good approach for a study: round up people who had been treated successfully by Chinese doctors, who had been earlier given up by medical practitioners of conventional scientific medicine, and find out why the Chinese doctors succeeded where conventional scientific doctors had given up. In this manner conventional scientific medicine stands to gain new knowledge in medicine.


Allow me to point out that Chinese medicine is not to be equated with what people might think to consist in gestures and in orations executed by religious medicine men, maybe called tribal healers, who would treat sick people by appeals to invisible agents called spirits.


[Yrreg]
 
Actually, Mojo, you are a latecomer here.
On the contrary, I have been following this thread from the beginning.

About my paragraph 1 from my post 18 which is a reproduction of my first post here, post 9, where I started drawing hostile fire without any pause:

Originally Posted by Yrreg:
1. Acupuncture is an acceptable option for dealing with medical complaints, if you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on you.

You are asking whether for objecting to the truncated citation by 3logic, I mean that for people who are not saddled with these two downturn conditions: "you don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or conventional scientific medicine has given up on you" -- I mean namely "that acupuncture is not an acceptable option for" them?

Not at all. Such people can also try acupuncture.
So you are saying that acupuncture is an acceptable option for people who don't have enough money for treatment and medication in conventional scientific medicine, or if conventional scientific medicine has given up on them and for people who can afford treatment and whose conditions are treatable by conventional medicine.

In other words, you are saying that acupuncture is an acceptable option for anyone.

So why are you objecting to I less than three logic's claim that you said this?
 
Everyone here including the author of the thread are bashing acupuncture mercilessly, as though they are not genuine skeptics -- for genuine skeptics of true scientific temper don't stick to any one position fanatically, as to not even let some door ajar in their mind for the opposite stand.

I don't believe this is true, Yrreg.

Show us one legitimate scientific research that concludes that acupuncture works, and we'll all change our minds, that's what sceptics do. So far the all the evidence points to it being, yes, crap, so that's what we're all sticking to.

But if you want to make a case for acupuncture, you'll first have to tell us what acupunture is and does. Why does it work?
 
I don't believe this is true, Yrreg.

Show us one legitimate scientific research that concludes that acupuncture works, and we'll all change our minds, that's what sceptics do. So far the all the evidence points to it being, yes, crap, so that's what we're all sticking to.

But if you want to make a case for acupuncture, you'll first have to tell us what acupuncture is and does. Why does it work?

At this pointy it is not really important "why" acupuncture works, we can theories for years and still get nowhere, the vital question is if it works, (for any reasonable idea of "work", which means that appeals to placebo just won't cut it). So far the acupuncturists ave been unable to clear this first hurdle.

I see you quotes Yrreg saying that because people here "stick to any one position fanatically, as to not even let some door ajar in their mind for the opposite stand." they are not true skeptics. Does he think that we should asses all claims like that?

Something along the liens of "OK well I know that we have had evidence for a spherical earth ever since people saw tall ships appearing over the horizon, and I know that we now have photographs of the earth as a sphere, but don't you even entertain the idea that it may be flat?"
 
At this pointy it is not really important "why" acupuncture works, we can theories for years and still get nowhere, the vital question is if it works, (for any reasonable idea of "work", which means that appeals to placebo just won't cut it). So far the acupuncturists ave been unable to clear this first hurdle.

I see you quotes Yrreg saying that because people here "stick to any one position fanatically, as to not even let some door ajar in their mind for the opposite stand." they are not true skeptics. Does he think that we should asses all claims like that?

Something along the liens of "OK well I know that we have had evidence for a spherical earth ever since people saw tall ships appearing over the horizon, and I know that we now have photographs of the earth as a sphere, but don't you even entertain the idea that it may be flat?"
I suspect that this won't turn out to be phrased to yrreg's liking either... ;)
 
At this pointy it is not really important "why" acupuncture works, we can theories for years and still get nowhere, the vital question is if it works, (for any reasonable idea of "work", which means that appeals to placebo just won't cut it). So far the acupuncturists ave been unable to clear this first hurdle.

I'm asking the "why", because when the "why" is provided I believe it'll be easier to show Yrreg why its humbug.
 

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