Okay, so let's look at one of your favorite topics: OTC cough medicines. According to the article "Systematic review of randomised controlled trials of over the counter cough medicines for acute cough in adults" --
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/abst...9ee4dd03a3731c5f0787b1db&keytype2=tf_ipsecsha --
"Included studies: All randomised controlled trials that compared oral over the counter cough preparations with placebo in adults with acute cough due to upper respiratory tract infection in ambulatory settings and that had cough symptoms as an outcome.
"Results: 15 trials involving 2166 participants met all the inclusion criteria. Antihistamines seemed to be no better than placebo. There was conflicting evidence on the effectiveness of antitussives, expectorants, antihistamine-decongestant combinations, and other drug combinations compared with placebo."
None of those studies are an example of "a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial has proven something or other, only to have that finding contradicted down the road by another randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial?" If you think that any one of those studies contradicts any of the others, specify which ones.
What, exactly, is that disconfirming evidence?
You (very conveniently) provide an example in the paragraph below.
But your claim of having a cat is no more evidential than your claim of having a unicorn.
Right. I need 100 points to establish both claims. 99 of those 100 are already available for the cat, so I only need to provide one more point. None are available for the unicorn, so I need to provide all 100.
Similarly, a research finding that establishes at the 1% level of statistical significance that a non-controversial hypothesis is correct should be treated no differently than a research finding that establishes at the 1% level of statistical significance that a controversial hypothesis is correct.
I agree that a research finding at the 1% level of statistical significance is independent of whether or not the underlying hypothesis is controversial or not. But I have already explained to you (in detail) that the use of that bit of information to establish whether or not a hypothesis is correct is
a completely separate step. Ivor the Engineer recently started a
thread on this very issue. And it is well-established and non-controversial that these are two separate steps. The controversy is only over the extent to which researchers are aware of and make a distinction between these two steps when reporting their conclusions.
And this is an example of you failing to address disconfirming evidence. I have explained to you in detail the difference between the two and provided links to supplementary information. You even had an independent statistician (Beth) weigh in on the subject who confirmed this. Yet you continue to completely ignore it, even though it is one of the most crucial pieces of evidence against the paranormal/supernatural.
What you're supposed to get is that what you were taught in school about the Michelson-Morley experiment was inaccurate: Michelson and Morley did not in fact obtain a null result in their original experiment, nor did that experiment irrefutably establish that there is no ether.
I was never taught that in the first place. None of that supports the author's conclusions.
No, but a rational approach does not, in my opinion, mean throwing out evidence from 100 years ago on the basis that credible individuals were all mistaken or that a spontaneous healing must have occurred. Rather, a rational approach means broadly examining all evidence, even if it has not been tested in a laboratory or, indeed, is not even amenable to being tested in a laboratory.
I agree. Do you have any reason to think that I don't do that?
I think I can better address your points if you answer this question: If you were Tommy House's doctor in February 1909, would you have administered Cayce's recommended treatment?
My answer to that question will not allow you to address my points since 1) the EBM movement has had almost no influence on how I practice medicine (so my response cannot be taken as an example of EBM), and 2) you are perpetuating the same mischaracterization of EBM that the wikipedia article promotes and the article I linked to tries to counteract.
I realize that you wish to establish that the insistence on the use of evidence in medicine will lead to negative outcomes, as Tommy would have died under those circumstances. And whether or not it's true in Tommy's case doesn't matter because it has already been established to be true. There are occasions where decisions based on the best evidence available have turned out to be wrong and harmful. We can strive towards perfection, but a complex system imposes limits. Again I ask, what is your alternative? And do you have any reasonable justification for abandoning this system and for adopting your alternative?
Linda