Frederick Troteville said:
Not quite the correct response. Obviously it would be sensible not to believe it. But it's the rigidity of skeptical thinking I'm addressing here. Take the 17th century. We had the mechanistic philosophy. All change in the world is accounted for by the push/pull effect. So television would of course be absolutely impossible under that paradigm of thinking.
But you see I suspect that the skeptics of the day wouldn't just think to themselves, "yes it seems that the world operates on mechanistic principles and any such phenomena disobeying such principles (TV or whatever) therefore is very unlikely to exist". This is how I would have thought if I'd lived in the 17th century (and actually I might well have done since it is likely that reincarnation occurs). The skeptic, you see, goes much further. I imagine the 17th century skeptic would have thought that it's not just very likely the mechanistic philosophy is true, but to deny it was self evidently absurd. How could something affect something else if they are not actually touching?? I suspect that this is why it took so long for Newtons theory of gravitation to be accepted. It is skeptics impeding the march of progress.
Just to clarify-
1) Are you claiming that if I took a television and a video camera etc. (equipment to set up a small video studio,) and set it up in 1650 somewhere in a gathering of "skeptics" of that era, and gave a demo of how the equipment worked, you believe they would deny that it worked, although it was very clear that it did? 2) Further, is the theory that if I did not bring the equipment back in time, and explained television, electromagnetism etc. to these skeptics, it would be the equivalent to skeptics now opposing homeopathy?
I think that you are walking a very slippery slope here. Why do I know so many people for whom homeopathy has failed miserably, and why do my observations of homeopathy match that of the so called skeptics? Am I missing something here?
I find it very difficult to believe you could sympathize with skeptics of the middle ages, or that you are terribly knowledgeable about the history of science. I could be wrong here, but you clearly do not understand the modern objections to homeopathy (it has no physical effects, and has failed direct testing,) never mind what someone from four centuries ago would have thought. I do not see a historical perspective being productive here, lets drop it.
3) Are we rigid? All we want to see is the homeopath pick the homeopathic solution out of a blind mix of non succinated, chemically identical solutions, or, under blind controlled conditions cure a statistically significant goup of people of the allopathic disease of their choice with better results than control, placebo, and current evience based medicine. This should be the easiest thing to do, as they claim to do it every day. Is this a fair test? What are the problems? What is your explination of the avoidance of homeopaths to do these protocols?
The way I see it, I want to see some good will from homeopaths before I change my mind. And hey, a million bucks too, thats quite a tempting offer. Whats the problem?
PS: The homeopaths would be allowed to practice homeopathy as they see fit, except no drugs or chemicals would be allowed to be used which are not homeopathic as defined by the HPUSA and USP.
This eliminates the "the study did not tailor the treatment to the individual patient" excuse.