Benguin said:So presumably their 'diagnoses' suffer the same fundamental weakness that their 'treatments' do?
They have no way of confirming the correctness and so simply fall back on credulousness and incredible confidence in their own instinctive judgement?
exarch said:You have to activate your account by clicking the link in the confrmation e-mail they send you ...
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Slightly distinct issues here. A basic tenet of homeopathy is not to enquire into causation of disease. All they are supposed to do is match remedy symptom lists to the patient's symptoms. They are supposed to eschew normal diagnoses because there is no single treatment for, say, congestive heart failure so having that label applied to a patient should be utterly irrelvant to them.
However, some of them break their own rules, but because they just sit in a room with a plant pot and a coffee machine and most are not doctors, they can't go ordering ECGs and blood tests, so if they did want a medical diagnosis someone else has to give it to them. But, that doesn't alter the fact that they are supposed to avoid pigeon-holing their patients.
However again, because most are doctor-wannabes, they really like the big talk of real diseases they can treat and it flatters them to say they treat eczema or diabetes. If they didn't apply those labels they would have no shorthand to describe their cases. What they are supposed to say is, "I had an interesting Rhus Tox case today", then reel off a hundred or so symptoms they reckon aligns that patient with the list of symptoms under Rhus Tox. Bearing in mind that for them "hates green wallpaper" or some such nonsense is meant to be on a par with "weak thready pulse and pale mucous membranes" in concluding what to give the patient. Indeed it is the "uncommon" symptoms taht are supposed to provide the most important matching parameters.
I really have been spending too long in these people's company!
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Might I refer my Antarctic friend to the Monkey's Sig Line?
I don't have a lot of sympathy for Snoopy, whom I consider to be a dangerous lunatic. To the best of my knowledge it was she, under her own name, who wrote the following:flume said:I'm sympathetic to Snoopy's reaction to the sig line though. It's clear in context for people who have followed the thread, but not accurate in itself. A few more words would reduce its impact but make it more fair. Happy to be helpful
Now, if I'd used her real name in my sig line, and/or if I hadn't provided the direct link to the thread so that anyone who was at all interested or concerned could read the whole thing, maybe that would have been a bit much.People always come to us last. By the time they get here, they've already been poisoned, mutilated, and relieved of their life savings. Nonetheless, they believe they've taken the right steps in seeing the "real" doctors first. If only they knew that the modern medical paradigm is built on a faulty premise!
.... What Hahnemann is trying to say here is, see a homeopath first.
Noting of course that it was Naturalhealth herself who posted the "fiction" at H'pathy, without which none of this would have happened in the first place, and also that her own H'pathy sig line readsWOULD YOU REMOVE THIS AS IT IS BOTH UNTRUE ABOUT SNOOPY AND IS QUITE FRANKLY A LIBELOUS STATEMENT ABOUT HER BASED ON YOUR FICTION!!!!
which we know to be both untrue and an illegal claim to a qualification she doesn't have.Medical homeopath MFHom
Rolfe said:Wow, who would have thought such a little pebble as asking Kumar if he knew what Addison's disease is could have caused so many ripples!
I suppose they are really. And it doesn't matter, does it? Because they're prescribing water, called many different names except water, but that's what it is, so no matter what they prescribe, the effect will be the same.Originally posted by Ralph
In other words-----they're all just winging it.
Rolfe said:Yes, it doesn't matter, except that when did you hear them going on about the magical memory of the sugar pill?
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
You're right. The whole issue of 'memory of water' seems even less plausible when one remembers that there isn't any water.
Wow, they're just making it up as they go along! Interesting treatment of the question of the alcohol content though.flume said:Here's a handy way to convert liquid remedies to pellets.

Rolfe said:I don't have a lot of sympathy for Snoopy, whom I consider to be a dangerous lunatic. To the best of my knowledge it was she, under her own name, who wrote the following:Now, if I'd used her real name in my sig line, and/or if I hadn't provided the direct link to the thread so that anyone who was at all interested or concerned could read the whole thing, maybe that would have been a bit much.
...