Homeopathy & critical non-thinking

The molecules of snake venom are usually too large to pass through the walls of the digestive system, yes?

But water can pass through just fine. If water truly remembered the properties of the snake venom, then drinking diluted snake venom would be much more dangerous than drinking snake venom itself.
 
Peter Morris said:

The doctors in the test drank a dilute solution of snake venom, and didn't die. But Randi has commented that drinking pure snake venom "isn't necessarily dangerous."


So what? You also appear to have forgotten that the mixture contained arsnic so even by the logic you are using your position is not very strong. I have stated above the flaw in your logic.
[/B]
 
princhester said:
Read this thread, peter. See what you've spent much time arguing about. And now since what you've been arguing has been shown to be a load of nit picking bollocks,

you are living in a fantasy world.

you are trying to pretend you haven't spent the best part of a page arguing about it.

Another lie from princhester. I deny nothing. I still say what I said at the start, the test Randi comments on is seriously flawed, and proves nothing - Randi's own words help show that.

The only thing I have changed, is that I have modified slightly is my understanding of homeopathy, thanks to geni's correction. You might have a read of that, princhester, it shows the results of civilised, logical discourse., rather than your usual practice of simply spewing out your obsessive hatred.

You are a joke, peter. If only you were funny.

Once again, princhester has no logical response, and he resorts to insults.

Same old, same old.
 
Wrath of the Swarm said:
The molecules of snake venom are usually too large to pass through the walls of the digestive system, yes?

You could be right. I don't know the science. I thought I read somewhere that the venom is neutralized by stomach acids, but I wouldn't swear to it.

But water can pass through just fine. If water truly remembered the properties of the snake venom, then drinking diluted snake venom would be much more dangerous than drinking snake venom itself.

Except that homeopaths don't claim that "the water remembers the properties of the snake venom"

What they say is that the water takes the opposite properties of the snake venom. That is an important distinction.
 
Peter Morris said:
What they say is that the water takes the opposite properties of the snake venom. That is an important distinction.

Wrong. They make to claim that in health indivdual it will cause some symptoms (not nesscerlary the same as those caused by snake vemon poisening). It is only in sick people that it will have the oposite effect.
 
Peter Morris said:
Except that homeopaths don't claim that "the water remembers the properties of the snake venom"

What they say is that the water takes the opposite properties of the snake venom. That is an important distinction.
No. They do indeed claim that the water takes on properties of the substance in question.
 
Wrath of the Swarm said:
No. They do indeed claim that the water takes on properties of the substance in question.
Would you mind posting a reference for that? I've heard a lot of strange explanations, including this amazing carp, but that precise claim is one I can't immediately place.

Rolfe.
 
Peter Morris said:
Oh? And in what way am I doing that, then princhester? How am I "deliberately trying to find a way to interpret what the other said in a way that will mean that [Randi] is wrong in some way?"
Peter, you said:

"Randi himself has often claimed that snake venom isn't poisonous when swallowed, its only dangerous when injected into the blood directly through a bite. So, even if the solution was a poison, the doctors could drink it safely."

Whereas Randi actually said"

"Since ingesting this substance isn't necessarily dangerous and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth, we declined the idea on ethical grounds."

Randi didn't say it "wasn't poisonous", he said it is not "necessarily" poisonous. Since Randi then went on to say "and yet might kill the man", I consider you have seriously misinterpreted Randi to imply he said it was "safe". (Unless you have a definition of "safe" that means "might kill".)

You then went on to say:

"Randi claims to be a critical thnker. Not so at all. He's highly critical, but not at all skilled at thinking. He'll believe anything you tell him, as long as you are speaking against the paranormal."

…which fits my definition of "will mean that [Randi] is wrong in some way".

So it seems to me that princhester summed your posts up pretty accurately.
 
Oh, that's so superficial it's not really true. Finding out what (and how and even if) they really think is a whole new world of surrealism. Try some of these....

Walach, 2000
Weingärtner, 2003
Milgrom, 2002
Milgrom, 2003a
Milgrom, 2003b
Walach, 2003
Thoresen, 2003

The one I linked to in my previous post (direct link here) seems to incorporate an impressive range of quantumzoid hyperbole.

If you show any of these to a real physicist, however, they're unlikely to stop laughing for long enough to explain the joke.

Rolfe.
 
Peter Morris said:
Another lie from princhester. I deny nothing. I still say what I said at the start, the test Randi comments on is seriously flawed, and proves nothing - Randi's own words help show that.

Two backflips in four posts. That's pretty impressive, even for you, Peter.
 
RichardR said:
Peter, you said:

"Randi himself has often claimed that snake venom isn't poisonous when swallowed, its only dangerous when injected into the blood directly through a bite. So, even if the solution was a poison, the doctors could drink it safely."

Whereas Randi actually said"

"Since ingesting this substance isn't necessarily dangerous and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth, we declined the idea on ethical grounds."[/b]

Randi didn't say it "wasn't poisonous", he said it is not "necessarily" poisonous. [/b]

Its the same thing. You are desperately trying to see trivial differences to try and make me wrong in some way. You are doing the very thing princhester accused me of doing

Since Randi then went on to say "and yet might kill the man", I consider you have seriously misinterpreted Randi to imply he said it was "safe". (Unless you have a definition of "safe" that means "might kill".) [/b]

Please read what I wrote.

Note that I said " its only dangerous when injected into the blood directly through a bite"

See, I said in my original post that it's dangerous if it enters the blood directly.

And Randi said "and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth,"

See, the point about having a cut in the mouth is that it allows the venom to enter the blood directly.

Which is what I said.

You then went on to say:

"Randi claims to be a critical thnker. Not so at all. He's highly critical, but not at all skilled at thinking. He'll believe anything you tell him, as long as you are speaking against the paranormal."

…which fits my definition of "will mean that [Randi] is wrong in some way".

So it seems to me that princhester summed your posts up pretty accurately.

except that princhester accuses me of twisting Randi's words to vmake him appear wrong.

What I'm doing is quoting him on what he really did say to show that he really is genuinely wrong.

(wrong about the homeopathy test, that is, not wrong about the snake venom)

I have no need to twist Randi's words.

I quoted him as saying that snake venom is safe to drink, but could be deadly if it enters the blood directly through a bite.

He really said that snake venom is safe to drink but could be deadly if it enters the blood directly through a cut.

You are altering the meaning of what I said, desperately trying to make me appear wrong, and then you accuse me of doing the same as you.

Randi fans are a strange bunch.
 
Peter Morris said:
Its the same thing. You are desperately trying to see trivial differences to try and make me wrong in some way. You are doing the very thing princhester accused me of doing
LOL, I just pointed out in a totally calm way that you are doing exactly what princhester accused you of.

Peter Morris said:
Note that I said " its only dangerous when injected into the blood directly through a bite"

See, I said in my original post that it's dangerous if it enters the blood directly.

And Randi said "and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth,"

See, the point about having a cut in the mouth is that it allows the venom to enter the blood directly.

Which is what I said.
And you accuse me (twice) of being desperate? - "see" "see" "Which is what I said". "nah nah na nah na". LMAO you betray your own desperation.

I actually find it funny to see you torturing your words and those of Randi, until they have the meaning you require, namely that Randi is "highly critical, but not at all skilled at thinking". Ironically, in doing this, you betray your own lack of critical thinking skills. Face it, you overstretched in trying to turn Randi's words back on him, without checking first what it was he actually said. Claus Larsen called you on it. Now you're in a fix, trying to retrofit Randi's actual words to what you need him to have meant. Give it up. Or not, it makes little difference.
 
All,

This is what Randi said.....

"ingesting this substance isn't necessarily dangerous, and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth"

"ingesting this substance isn't necessarily dangerous" means the same as "ingesting this substance is ususally dangerous but not always". This is not correct. Ingesting snake venom is NOT usually dangerous. It is usually SAFE. But occasionally it can prove dangerous. Anyway, how does it make sense to follow this with "and yet might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth". I mean, we are waiting for an example of how ingesting snake venom is NOT dangerous but are given instead an example of how ingesting snake venom IS dangerous. This is why I think he should have said something like....

"ingesting this substance isn't necessarily SAFE because it might kill the man if he had a cut in his mouth"

This is correct and it is what Randi meant to say but it is not what he did say.


BillyJoe
 
Peter, can I start by saying that in my first post in this thread I suggested that you were trying to interpret Randi's comments in a way that made him wrong. In fact that is a simplification in this particular instance. You are trying to interpret his comment in a way that will impeach a particular "stunt" that Randi mentions in a positive light, so as to attempt to work up some sort of suggestion that Randi is being inconsistent. I apologise for the looseness of my criticism. I will try to aim my barbs more accurately, if that's what you would prefer.

Peter, if I told you that you could have unprotected sex with someone with HIV and wouldn't necessarily get HIV unless you had a lesion on your genitals, would you say that I had said that unprotected sex was safe? Would you say that I had said that HIV was only dangerous if you injected it?

That is the equivalent of what you said at the outset. A total distortion. If Randi did such a thing you'd nail him as a fraud and a liar, but you do it all the time.

And by the way matey, you want to accuse me of not understanding English and I'll provide a link for all the girls and boys to a thread in which you argue furiously for a bizarro interpretation of some damn thing that Randi said, only to recant finally when the pressure of opinion (from here and the SDMB) became too great. Do you really want me to do that? Knowing, as you do, that you are quite unable to find a single instance (here or on the SDMB) of any instance at all that you can link to of me being similarly wrong?

Up to you. Raise the stakes if you want to, but you might want to think carefully before you do.

But anyhoo, that is all pretty minor stuff.

The important thing (and I can't believe no one has commented so far) is the totally misleading way in which you stretch from what Randi's column linked in the OP actually says, to some sort of attempt to impeach his tests generally.

The article you link to consists of Randi quoting someone else describing an act by a few doctors that Randi calls, and I quote, a "stunt". I'll repeat that for the terminally thick:

A "stunt".

The relevant definition for "stunt" from the OED is: a "special effort, feat, show performance, display of energy, advertising device". Not a "test". Not an "experiment". Not something that Randi administers when homeopaths are trying out for the prize. Just a "stunt".

And yet you comment

Randi comments on a failed test for homeopathy.
Well, I'm no believer in homeopathy, but I do believe in giving extraordinary claims a fair test. With just a little bit of logical thought, it is obvious that the test described was grotesqely unfair, so poorly designed that homeopathy would fail the test whether it worked or not.

[My emphasis]

And then later you say

What I am saying, princhester, is that the homeopathy test in Randi's commentry was badly designed, and proves nothing - like many of Randi's own tests, in fact.

You probably know as well as I do what Randi's standing test offer is in relation to homeopathy and the million dollar prize. It has nothing to do with some "stunt" involving swallowing dilute snake venom and not dying. And yet you seriously attempt to segue from a "stunt" that Randi mentions, to an implied impeachment of Randi's testing techniques.

You criticise him for mentioning the "stunt" that these doctors did without pointing out the obvious flaws in it as a test

Did it not occur to you that the reason Randi didn't point out the flaws the "stunt" had, when considered as a "test" was because it was a "stunt" and not a "test", and Randi only considered it as such?

If Randi told a joke involving a ghost, a unicorn and a nun, would you start a thread pointing out that Randi is clearly a complete hypocrite because he's on record as saying there's no such thing as ghosts or unicorns?

Given that you are merely a fair and unbiased commentator, and not a rabid Randi hating malcontent, why did you pull this sort of nonsense, Peter?

And another thing. You will note from the passage that Randi quoted that the homeopaths objection to the "stunt" was that "the venom and poison had no effect, because homeopathic medicines have to be tailored to the specific individual"

So once again, Peter, we see you in a role in which you have placed yourself before: finding excuses on behalf of the proponents of the paranormal that even they don't raise.

Remarkable.
 
princhester said:
Peter, can I start by saying that in my first post in this thread I suggested that you were trying to interpret Randi's comments in a way that made him wrong. In fact that is a simplification in this particular instance. You are trying to interpret his comment in a way that will impeach a particular "stunt" that Randi mentions in a positive light, so as to attempt to work up some sort of suggestion that Randi is being inconsistent. I apologise for the looseness of my criticism. I will try to aim my barbs more accurately, if that's what you would prefer.

Which is what I've been pointing out all along.

At last, you tell the truth (almost) about what I actually said.

In fact, my criticism was somewhat stronger than that, but at least you have stopped directly lying.

Peter, if I told you that you could have unprotected sex with someone with HIV and wouldn't necessarily get HIV unless you had a lesion on your genitals, would you say that I had said that unprotected sex was safe? Would you say that I had said that HIV was only dangerous if you injected it?

No, Princhester, if you said that I would say that you were seriously misinformed.

In any case, that is totally different. The words "You wouldn't neccessarily get HIV" are not the same as saying "it's safe."


Lets have a better example.

If you had said "Unprotected sex isn't neccessarily dangerous but it might kill you if you have a lesion on your genitals" I would make the following comments:

1) your statement is factually incorrect,
unprotected sex always carries risks, for one STD or another. (I'll just qualify that by saying there are ways of reducing the risk, such as monogomy)

2) your statement is the same as saying "It's safe for anyone without a lesion on his genitals"

That is the equivalent of what you said at the outset.

No.

Princhester, this is very simple, please try to understand.

Someone approached Randi with a 'paranormal' claim that he can survive drinking snake venom.

Randi in response points out that drinking snake venom isn't at all paranormal. It's not poisonous when taken through the mouth. Almost anyone can drink snake venom safely.

But he adds a qualification that if he has a cut on his mouth, it might kill him.

That is the same as saying that snake venom is safe to drink in the vast majority of cases, only being dangerous in the rare case that someone has a cut on his mouth.

Which is what I quoted him as saying.

But you twist my words, and Randi's, to make me seem wrong. What a drongo.

And by the way matey, you want to accuse me of not understanding English and I'll provide a link for all the girls and boys to a thread in which you argue furiously for a bizarro interpretation of some damn thing that Randi said, only to recant finally when the pressure of opinion (from here and the SDMB) became too great. Do you really want me to do that? Knowing, as you do, that you are quite unable to find a single instance (here or on the SDMB) of any instance at all that you can link to of me being similarly wrong?

I'd be interested to see that, princhester. AFAICR I've never 'recanted.'

I have on occasion dropped out of a thread after I could no longer stomach all the hatred and invective coming from you. Perhaps you think that you won something, it's certainly the nearest you have ever come.

As for pointing out instances of you failing to understand simple English, sure I can, my friend. (Hey, if you can call me "matey" ...)

Example No 1

Randi's exact words:
here

One of the more common claims by dowsers, he said, is that they can locate rivers of water underground.
"There are no streams of water flowing underground," he said. "There are large deposits of water that may seep through sandstone and move at the rate of 200 feet per year. There is no naturally flowing water underground except in caves. These people have delusions about underground rivers."

and Here

Besides, the "underground river" notion that dowsers maintain is sheer fiction, not supported at all by geological research.

These remarks made by Randi were quoted by several Randi fans, and interpreted by the Randi fans as "Randi says that underground rivers are fictional"

I responded by posting several links showing that underground rivers are a really do exist, as do burried rivers, which are slightly different.

This is when princhester first demonstrated his own unique interpretation of simple English statements.

According to princhester, the words "There is no naturally flowing water underground " is not a claim that there is no water flowing underground. Oh, no, a direct and literal interpretation of his words will not do at all.

In princhester's mind the real meaning of Randi's is : "dowsers think underground rivers are common, but actually they are very rare.

Well, folks, I consulted some geologists to check the accuracy of Randi's statements. I particularly asked them for their interpretations os what the words quoted above mean.

see here

Please do look through the entire thread.

Their interpretation of Randi's words :
It means that (a) dowsers believe that water flows in 'underground
rivers', and (b) the writer of the sentence agrees that this concept is
wrong (i.e. "sheer fiction") and has no geological evidence to support it.

i.e. they agree with my interpretation of Randi's words, and disagree with princhester's interpretation.

I invited them to be generous to Randi, and can they find any possible interpretation of his words that would make them correct. They could not.

Princhester's response to this?

He insisted that his interpretation of Randi's words is correct, that the geologists have poor reading comprehension, and would be agreeing with Randi if only they understood him properly. :rolleyes

Don't forget, princhester, that you began this 'poor reading comprehension' stuff.

Example No 2

Randi made a comment giving two arguments against astrology. There was no dispute as to the meaning of the words, only which was the more important of the two arguments. I said #1 was more important, princhester said #2 was more important.

Princhester, desperate as ever to prove a point, posted a question to another forum, asking people there to judge which was the more important.

He cut out a large part of Randi's text, and changed the rest, which had the effect of altering the slant of the words. For a start, his editing removed Randi's sarcastic tone.

And the replies he got:

Some of them said that argument #2 is the more important, but if the tone was sarcastic, then #1 is the more important. (The guy posting this didn't realise that the original WAS highly sarcastic)

Some said argument #1 is the more important of the two.

Some of them said that argument #2 is the more important.

Some of them said that they are of equal importance.

Some of them said that the thing was so badly written it is impossible to tell which is the more important.

Once I posted Randi's exact words, some of them commented on princhesters dishonesty in twisting Randi's words.

And whichever one of Randi's arguments was "more important", there was near universal agreement even from Randi fans that Randi's arguments were poor.

And Princhester? He smugly posted a link to the thread, and insisted that every single one of the replies agreed with him. No matter what they said, his reading comprehesion abilities interpreted it as an agreement with his position.

Go ahead, princhester, can you do better?
 
Peter Morris

Lets try this one more time. Chemical toxicty is not in any way relivant. the effect that was to be expected was what homeopaths call a proving. this has nothing to with whether the substance is toxic or not.
 
Geni, lets try this one more time.

Sometimes people approach Randi claiming to have magic powers, and they can drink snake venom without dying.

Randi's response is that drinking snake venom is usually safe, and not at all paranormal.

He qualifies this by saying that it might be dangerous in the rare instance that the person has a cut on his mouth.

This does not change Randi's main point that it is usually safe.
 
Peter Morris said:
Sometimes people approach Randi claiming to have magic powers, and they can drink snake venom without dying.

Randi's response is that drinking snake venom is usually safe, and not at all paranormal.

He qualifies this by saying that it might be dangerous in the rare instance that the person has a cut on his mouth.

This does not change Randi's main point that it is usually safe.

So what? This has nothing to do with homeopathy.
 

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