Rolfe
Adult human female
Evidence, please?Suggestologist said:Hypnosis is effective for smoking cessation;
Rolfe.
Evidence, please?Suggestologist said:Hypnosis is effective for smoking cessation;
Rolfe said:Evidence, please?
Rolfe.
Hence I'd pray "Forgive them, for they don't know what the're doing." The fact that you think you're not religious is causing you to act more religiously than before.If I were religious I would scream "Heresy!" and point a finger at you. But I'm not, so I'm not going to.
Suggestologist said:
Hypnosis is effective for smoking cessation; not sure about eczema.
Um... I don't understand this one, sorry. Are you saying that I'm religious and don't even know it? Should I start to pray? I don't know how. Should I start going to church? Which religion do I choose? There are so many. Which one would you recommend?Aster said:The fact that you think you're not religious is causing you to act more religiously than before.
Originally posted by Earthborn They do indeed argue that there is no need for alternative ways to things that have proven effective, since that would include things that have not proven effective.
Alternative medicine is a multi billion dollar industry. It is pretty ignorent (especially for an American) to say that there isn't a need (demand) for it. And you don't hear me defending the disputables amongst them, but there are charlatans and incompetent practitioners as much as brilliant minds in both camps; there always will be.
Rgds.,
Aster.
Powa said:
Um... I don't understand this one, sorry. Are you saying that I'm religious and don't even know it? Should I start to pray? I don't know how. Should I start going to church? Which religion do I choose? There are so many. Which one would you recommend?
Argh, you really messed up my life.
(I'm kidding of course)
If I were religious I would scream "Heresy!" and point a finger at you. But I'm not, so I'm not going to.
thaiboxerken said:Aster's ignorant assertion is that all people have a religion, whether they think so or not. It's simply just another restatement of the "everyone has faith" fallacy.
Aster said:
Hypnosis is one effective method that supports the therapeutic intervention that can be effective for smoking cessation, but it is the therapeutic intervention and process that does the works. In case of eczema obviously the same applies.
Rgds.,
Aster.
Rolfe said:Evidence, please?
Rolfe.
The most comprehensive collection of articles on the use of hypnosis in the treatment of the cigarette habit was published in Volume 18 of the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis (October 1970). The eight articles and discussions published in that issue won the society's award for best clinical contributions of the year.
Holroyd (1980) has published a prize-winning evaluative review of hypnosis for the treatment of smoking. In addition to participation in the October 1970 issue of the SCEH Journal, we have reported elsewhere on the effectiveness of hypnosis in the control of smoking addiction (Crasilneck and Hall, 1976). Many others have testified to the usefulness of hypnotherapy in the problem of psychological addiction to tobacco, which causes and aggravates so many medical problems (Bowers, 1976; Chiasson, 1982; Jeffrey, Gentry and Greuling, 1982; Klauber, 1982; Moore, 1982; Ringrose, 1980).
Spiegal, (1970) reported on his single-treatment method to stop smoking. The single session was 45 minutes. It was found that at least one of every five smokers could be helped. Dengrove (1970), in discussing Spiegal's paper, emphasized how behavioral modification techniques might be applied to the smoking problem.
Hollander (1959) was able to inhibit picking of the face in two women with excoriated acne. Motoda (1971) similarly inhibited scratching to enhance the effect of medication in an eczema case. Eczema treatment by hypnosis has also been described by Goodman (1962) and Portnoy (1961).
[The Marquis de Puysegur (1751-1828)] also felt that hypnosis was associated with clairvoyance, a speculation that served to maintain popular interest in the phenomenon.
Aster said:Alternative medicine is a multi billion dollar industry. It is pretty ignorent (especially for an American) to say that there isn't a need (demand) for it.
As are tobacco, herion and daytime TV. Just because there is a demand for something, that does not make it worthy or acceptable.
TheBoyPaj said:
As are tobacco, herion and daytime TV. Just because there is a demand for something, that does not make it worthy or acceptable.
Well, people have tried all sorts of things trying to cure themselves since the begining of mankind. So through experimentation they discovered many effective cures. I'm not saying that a weird looking root a shaman offers you is going to cure you, but you have a much better chance with a shaman than, say, a homeopath. Besides, modern medicine understands native cures and their effectiveness quite well. On the other hand there is NO evidence to support effectiveness of any form of "alternative medicine". That's the only reason why "alternative medicine" remains alternative, otherwise it would just be incorporated into the existing (working) medicine.Aster said:I wonder how skeptics view natural medicine practices like tribal medicine or native american practices. What will happen to you when you suddenly come down with an infection in the middle of the rainforest. A shaman tells you to eat this weird looking root, yet you say: no way! it's not scientifically proven to be effective ??
Aster said:
Not that all people have a religion, rather a natural base for religious/spiritual belief. Many people who say they're not religious do say they believe in 'something'. Skeptics, I assume, do not believe in anything, unless proven by science ?
On the other hand there is NO evidence to support effectiveness of any form of "alternative medicine". That's the only reason why "alternative medicine" remains alternative, otherwise it would just be incorporated into the existing (working) medicine.
Much of modern medicine comes from tribal methods. Science has just figured out what really works and what doesn't. What hasn't been proven effective stays in the "alternative" category.
Charlatanism or delusion. But you really should understand one thing. There's only one medicine. That which is proven to work. Acupuncture isn't proven to work. Homeopathy neither. Aromatherapy? No. And I could go on and on. Why do you think acupuncture is rejected by medical science? Could it be because it doesn't work? If the efects of "alternative medicine" are so evident it should be a piece of cake to prove it and add it to existing medical science.Aster said:But for example eastern medicine is often considered alternative medicine in the west. Never mind that in China acupuncture is a science based on the knowledge of thousands of years. Its component Chi however is defined as being undetectable by western science. So, does that mean that Chi, Ki, Reiki, Orgon, Ka or Prana and what have we, don't exist and that all cultural knowledge based on life energies are simply based on medical charlatanism?