Interesting Ian
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2004
- Messages
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What really annoyed me is that the presenter unaquivicably accepted accupuncture.
Wha .
What really annoyed me is that the presenter unaquivicably accepted accupuncture.
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She was more skeptical than me.
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details hereAnyone remember the name of any of the scientists?
II
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She was more skeptical than me.
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Mid
That's not really a ringing endorsement.
Wha ..?? She was a skeptic! She said a couple of times that her prior expectation was that acupuncture wouldn't work -- indeed couldn't work. She was more skeptical than me. I have no surprise at all it worked. On the other hand, if the beneficial results had proved to have been all due to the placebo effect, again that would not have surprised me at all. I really know absolutely nothing about this subject.
aah diddums![]()
I have to say that it appeared to me that they were opening that girls torso just below the liver in a horizontal incision - isn't heart surgery usually performed with a vertical section - hence the 'zipper club'?
Point taken. In fairness if the data is from the 3T MRI the acupuncturist would have to shout very loudly his disbelief as the patient must wear ear defenders. I have never used MEG. But I agree that there could be non verbal cues. However it's hard to think of a way of double blinding it effectively unless the points are in a mass of non-descript flesh [insert your own joke here].Possibly the 'acupuncturist' muttering under his breath how it wasn't going to work when doing the control might have had an influence?
I thought the start (operation aside) was fairly good although a bit more reference to suggestion and placebo wouldn't have gone amis. What I am particularly annoyed at is the build-up culminated in the complete failure to present the results in a transparent manner. I agree that the program makes the suggestion (to the viewers) that there is "something to acupuncture" if that's what you meant. But how one can reach that conclusion from the barely presented experiment is beyond me - if you disagree please explain exactly what you think this experiment demonstrated.All together an excellent programme which strongly suggests there is something to acupuncture.
And then when she skipped out the hospital a few days later, she had a whopping great scar down her chest - the zipper club you mention?
Actually I was after the names of the scientists in the MEG/MRI study at the end of the program.details here
XXX.annals.org/cgi/reprint/141/12/901.pdf
Actually I think that was the MEG scanner - they said it was to isolate the room from the earths magnetic field.I had to laugh when the volunteer was being put in the MRI and they were explaining how they would get them out if the machine broke down! I've had MRIs and all they said to me was, "Lie there and keep very still"!!!
Hang on a sec, Rolf described her as a creduloid (and airhead). How can she be a creduloid if she is more skeptical than me?? If I am not a creduloid, then a fortiori she can't be either.
I'm currently considering sending some comments about this shoddy affair to both the BBC and the Open University who are jointly behind it.
http://www.open2.net/feedback.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/feedback/
Good stuff.You can also contact Kathy directly through the Bristol Uni site. I have emailed her specifically asking about the heart surgery. With a bit of luck, when she's got through the three thousand emails asking for a signed picture, she'll get to mine and send a reply. I'll post any correspondence here.
She is apparently a respected physicist, although she obviously has a career ahead as a TV presenter - no compliment intended.