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Now that is a very well put and interesting point....
Thanks Rick.
yes I see the analogy between wine tasting and energy work. Yep, get that. So, let's find a bunch of trained, experienced energy workers and a load of subjects and let's get testing. Simple enough lol
Yes, in theory it is pretty simple. In practice, perhaps a little more difficult, but still not that difficult. If the energy is there to be detected, and experts can detect it, we should get a reasonably high degree of agreement amongst them. And if we don't get that, we pretty much have to reject energy as an explanation for energy work phenomena. Wouldn't you agree?
Mind if I butt in here guys? I have a simpler idea for a comparison to test energy work, only because what you've decribed Rick, sounds more like what I experience as "end feel" for range of motion of a joint restriction; and knowing where to work the restriction is partly based on expertise and experience and is measureable to a certain extent. I may be missing your point Rick, and correct me if I'm wrong, but have found over the years, that it becomes difficult to distinguish between my experience and energy influence because it's all intermingled. Hopefully my defination of "end feel" is understandable?
What if we compared bruised areas on two or more people and used energy work on half the participants? Outcomes to compare would be how fast the bruising and swelling diminished. Expected outcome would be bruising and swelling goes away faster with energy work. Participants could be recruited from scheduled patient surgery with energy applied before and after.
Christopher A. Moyer said:Now that is a very well put and interesting point....
Thanks Rick.
yes I see the analogy between wine tasting and energy work. Yep, get that. So, let's find a bunch of trained, experienced energy workers and a load of subjects and let's get testing. Simple enough lol
Yes, in theory it is pretty simple. In practice, perhaps a little more difficult, but still not that difficult. If the energy is there to be detected, and experts can detect it, we should get a reasonably high degree of agreement amongst them. And if we don't get that, we pretty much have to reject energy as an explanation for energy work phenomena. Wouldn't you agree?
Not sure; help me out here; maybe ice only, oh I know, an ointment of some kind.
Robin Byler Thomas said:Not sure; help me out here; maybe ice only, oh I know, an ointment of some kind.
But even if 'energy' works, we don't know ahead of time if it works better or worse than those things. Also, the recipients' beliefs in those different treatments are likely to differ in ways that we can't accurately quantify.
It would be better to randomly assign all subjects to treatment and nontreatment groups, and then have blinding so that no one knows whether they've been treated or not. That would actually control for the placebo effect.
This might require every subject to place their injured limb under a screen which would prevent them from seeing whether or not they were being treated.
Robin Byler Thomas said:Not sure; help me out here; maybe ice only, oh I know, an ointment of some kind.
But even if 'energy' works, we don't know ahead of time if it works better or worse than those things. Also, the recipients' beliefs in those different treatments are likely to differ in ways that we can't accurately quantify.
It would be better to randomly assign all subjects to treatment and nontreatment groups, and then have blinding so that no one knows whether they've been treated or not. That would actually control for the placebo effect.
This might require every subject to place their injured limb under a screen which would prevent them from seeing whether or not they were being treated.
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