sunmaster14
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2014
- Messages
- 10,017
Off-topic, ignore me at will but what pseudoscience are you talking about? Innoculation proponents based their case on empirical observation.
Edward Jenner and the history of smallpox and vaccination
http://http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1200696/
Well, by modern standards, it was pseudoscience. There were no careful controls or rigorous statistical techniques employed. There was evidence, yes, but there was probably evidence that bloodletting and exorcisms worked too.
"I suppose one can see." "One could say." Handy phrases, those. If you can point to a source that supports your elliptical analogy to homeopathy please do.
People survived smallpox by being exposed to smallpox in microscopic quantities from a smallpox pustule. That strikes me as similar to homeopathy, although obviously different in crucial ways. Actually, the development of homeopathy came a few decades after the widespread use of smallpox inoculation, and almost at the same time as the development of the cowpox as a vaccine, so perhaps there really was an influence there.