CFLarsen said:How is your migraine doing?
ERGO: Scatterbrain. You claim it is temporary, which I doubt.Sarah-I said:Yes, Hans, I know very well about burden of proof. I am neither dishonest or a scatterbrain, but I cannot post for the timebeing as I have the migraine from hell, which is possibly why that last post was so all over the place.
You are still not getting this are you? Yes I know this is the 4th time I have said this but why do you ignore direct questions? Do you have the slightest idea of what scientific investigation really is? The point you are totally missing is that a credible body of knowledge has to show that CST does work. It is not a matter of anyone having to prove it doesn't - the onus is on you to provide evidence that it does. Your last sentence amply demonstrates your woeful lack of understanding. Even the best-accepted orthodox therapies will have some results somewhere suggesting they don't work - there are never any absolutes in medical research. Now I am going to ask some more direct questions and I guarantee that you won't give direct answers.Sarah-I said:Craniosacral therapy has never been demonstrated not to be true. In fact, to the contrary, Upledger has done research over the last 20 years that proves the opposite.
He has teamed up with other scientists, the physicist Zvi Karni and Upledger conducted research together, with Karni even making a machine for measurements that correlated everything on the graph that Upledger was feeling whilst treating patients.
So no, craniosacral therapy has never been demonstrated not to work.
Sarah-I said:Yes, Hans, I know very well about burden of proof. I am neither dishonest or a scatterbrain, but I cannot post for the timebeing as I have the migraine from hell, which is possibly why that last post was so all over the place.
clarsct said:Did you get psychic on us, Larsen, or am I missing a clue?
Or are you really that good of a cold reader?
Just curious.
In all fairness, I never met anybody who got migraines at convinient times.CFLarsen said:
MRC_Hans said:In all fairness, I never met anybody who got migraines at convinient times.
But, as you also notice, Sarah's seem to be rather continuous.
Hans
CFLarsen said:One might get the idea that these migraines are caused by uncomfortable questions.
Well, some have it with diesel oil, some with certain kinds of food. So why not uncomfortable questions.
OTOH, we might then say that Sarah actually gets her migraines at very convinient times.
But, no, that can't be, because why would Sarah then complain so much about her migraines rendering her unable to respond if she seems to be able to beat that migraine, only to post about how she cannot post because of her migraine?
Let's see .... mmm .... ehr .. I suppose so![]()
wollery said:Sadly a lot of people whinge about having migraines, when what they actually have is a fairly bad headache.![]()
Asolepius said:You are still not getting this are you? Yes I know this is the 4th time I have said this but why do you ignore direct questions? Do you have the slightest idea of what scientific investigation really is? The point you are totally missing is that a credible body of knowledge has to show that CST does work. It is not a matter of anyone having to prove it doesn't - the onus is on you to provide evidence that it does. Your last sentence amply demonstrates your woeful lack of understanding. Even the best-accepted orthodox therapies will have some results somewhere suggesting they don't work - there are never any absolutes in medical research. Now I am going to ask some more direct questions and I guarantee that you won't give direct answers.
1. Which reputable researchers have verified Upledger's results, and published them in peer-reviewed journals?
2. How many of the PubMed citations (now 23) on CST show that it works?
3. How many of those 23 citations verify, using rigorous methodology, that CST practitioners can detect what they claim to detect?
CST is not science, and your postings show that it is far closer to a religion. We are not going to get you to change your mind, because your belief is based on irrationality and emotion. My heart sinks if this is what guides the human race today.
Sarah-I said:Yes, Hans, I know very well about burden of proof. I am neither dishonest or a scatterbrain, but I cannot post for the timebeing as I have the migraine from hell, which is possibly why that last post was so all over the place.
If her claim that posting an explanation of homeopathy would violate patient confidentiality isn'tBadly Shaved Monkey said:...her majority tactics are these more indirect forms of evasion.
Mojo said:If her claim that posting an explanation of homeopathy would violate patient confidentiality isn't
a) blatant evasion and
b) obviously untrue
then, to quote Ian Hislop, I'm a banana.
(bolding mine)By complementing the body's natural healing processes, CST is increasingly used as a preventive health measure for its ability to bolster resistance to disease, and is effective for a wide range of medical problems associated with pain and dysfunction, including:
Migraine Headaches
Chronic Neck and Back Pain
Motor-Coordination Impairments
Colic
... (list continues)
Ashles said:Oh look, here's an interesting thing:
http://www.craniosacral.com/
From the front page of the international Craniosacral site:
(bolding mine)
Migraine headaches are described as the very first ailment which this 'preventative' therapy can help.
Mojo said:If her claim that posting an explanation of homeopathy would violate patient confidentiality isn't
a) blatant evasion and
b) obviously untrue
then, to quote Ian Hislop, I'm a banana.
Edited to add this link to my most recent request that Sarah posts the "full explanation of homeopathy" she claims to give all her patients when they arrive for their initial consultation.
How about it, Sarah?