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Bodhi shared this on the science-site, just thought I'd post it here- comments? Agree? Disagree? General thoughts? Might provide more good discussion.
Alternative Therapies Debunked or Denounced in 2009
http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20091212/sc_livescience/alterna...
If there's a silver lining in the continued popularity of non-scientific healing techniques, it's the fact that the scientific community is at long last putting these so-called treatments and potions through vigorous testing. And one by one they fail to live up to their purported benefits.
Here are five alternative therapies that were debunked or denounced in 2009.
I found this quote from Albert Einstein the other day and I'm spreading it around on several of these discussions:
"The most beautiful thing we can experience is the mysterious. It is the source of all true art and all science. He to whom this emotion is a stranger, who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead: his eyes are closed."
RE: Julianna's post
(great post by the way).
I find it very interesting that you are married to a scientist who believes that science just hasn't discovered how it works YET and yet you say that it will never happen. I want to know why you believe that. Why can it's mystery never be unveiled?
Vlad, if it's any consolation, he asks me the same thing. A few years ago, I wrote to a scientific research group in Japan about their research on something they said they discovered - light emitting photons that emanate from the hands. They claimed to have measured it. It really peaked my interest as scientific validation of energy work. They sent me the entire paper, which I was unable to decipher alone. My husband reviewed it and said some of it was fluff. But still, there was something to it. I've since lost the hard drive that I stored the paper, otherwise I'd find a way to post it.
The reason I think it's not possible to measure is that it's like proving the existence of a force, call it God (or not). Reminds me of that Star Trek movie. Or articles about the God particle. It's not that my mind is closed. I'm willing to be part of experiments and validating it has some interest to me. If you talk to many physicists, most believe there's something about a magnificent mind that created all this, that wasn't human. They simply call it nature instead of God. They say it's natural. But once you start talking about energy work, metaphysics (my husband jokes no such thing exists, but he's serious in his outlook). He says nothing exists outside of nature. I appreciate differing viewpoints than mine. I love getting together with a group of physicists and bringing up some of these topics. They're entertained by muddy thinking like mine, and assuredly think I'm a bit naive. But I still challenge their thinking. It's one reason my husband said he fell in love with me.
It always amazes me when people stress the limitiations of science on the internet which was put together by a bunch of computer scientists. Would you ever have thought that the communications we have today would have existed 20 years ago? Would you have ever dreamed that you can play chess wirelssly with some dude in China? Granted that this type of science is in creation and not unveiling, but how much has science unveiled in our everyday lives?
Remember, I said surely science has brought many good things. I think science has a good and valid place. I even met my husband through the Internet - he in Germany and me in the US. But sometimes I have to question if some things we consider a step forward are in actuality keeping us from human contact, connections, and humanity in general. We sit inside our isolated boxes we call home, in front of boxes we call TV or the computer - and yes we communicate like this but it's not the same as in person. Technology is most often abused by governments for the purpose of war. After all, they're the main ones funding science.
Is the negativity towards science not a form of lack of open-mindedness too?
Here's the original article that interested me, so I wrote to Misuo Hiramatsu in Japan to send me the entire research paper.
A study by Misuo Hiramatsu at Hamamatsu Photonics in Japan discovered that human hands emit light all the time, in particular the fingernails. Other parts of the body that emit light are the forehead and bottoms of our feet.
http://handlines.blogspot.com/2005/10/human-hands-emit-light.html
Here's the original article that interested me, so I wrote to Misuo Hiramatsu in Japan to send me the entire research paper.
Thanks Julianna,
The findings are published in the Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology (For a price)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleListURL&_method...
More free info:
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/health/HealthRepublish_1455010.htm
http://www.lifescientists.de/members/hiramatsu.htm
Julianna Holden Mohler said:Here's the original article that interested me, so I wrote to Misuo Hiramatsu in Japan to send me the entire research paper.
A study by Misuo Hiramatsu at Hamamatsu Photonics in Japan discovered that human hands emit light all the time, in particular the fingernails. Other parts of the body that emit light are the forehead and bottoms of our feet.
http://handlines.blogspot.com/2005/10/human-hands-emit-light.html
Julianna Holden Mohler said:Here's the original article that interested me, so I wrote to Misuo Hiramatsu in Japan to send me the entire research paper.
The link from the website to the study didn't work. Finding the paper, however, in PubMed (15935689) indicates the it is among papers measuring oxidative skin stress via observing ultra-weak photon emissions from the chemical reactions. I also found another paper (18211608) with an abstract giving further background on what's being measured. Chemiluminescence is a pretty well-know phenomena, witness the light-sticks in use at Halloween.
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