People believed that crap before Germ Theory. God Bless the French. *Salutes the French*lacktheknack said:I don't understand the logic of how it came about. The medicine gets more effective the less you give to the patient? Ah... Right.
People believed that crap before Germ Theory. God Bless the French. *Salutes the French*lacktheknack said:I don't understand the logic of how it came about. The medicine gets more effective the less you give to the patient? Ah... Right.
But... how did it come about? Didn't people just notice that taking a large slice of willow bark in their tea was more effective at curing their headache than a sliver of it?TheIronRuler said:People believed that crap before Germ Theory. God Bless the French. *Salutes the French*lacktheknack said:I don't understand the logic of how it came about. The medicine gets more effective the less you give to the patient? Ah... Right.
It was a theory. Apparently radiated water could cure lots of things in your system, believe it or not - CERTIFIED pure!lacktheknack said:But... how did it come about? Didn't people just notice that taking a large slice of willow bark in their tea was more effective at curing their headache than a sliver of it?TheIronRuler said:People believed that crap before Germ Theory. God Bless the French. *Salutes the French*lacktheknack said:I don't understand the logic of how it came about. The medicine gets more effective the less you give to the patient? Ah... Right.
The post you quoted already gave you possible explanations.babinro said:I completely agree with the idea that diluting something makes it less potent. This is common sense.
What I don't understand is what that has to do with the treatment that worked for my mother. Are you saying that 100% of homeopathy treatments involve diluted medicine?
If so, then perhaps the treatments given to my mother for her migraines were always to strong to work. As such, a diluted version of that medicine was all she needed. Either way, the end result was success.
Did your mother's treatment include any aroma therapy? Any herbal supplements?babinro said:I guess I'm one of 4 people who said No.
I say this only because of my mother's personal experience. She suffered from migraines all her life. Despite seeing several different doctors and trying various different treatments, nothing helped her out.
After about 40 years of that she finally tried homeopathic medicine and it worked for her. Her migraines were entirely gone save a few normal headaches on occasion.
I find it hard to believe this could have finally been the one placebo effect that actually worked. As such, I choose to believe that homeopathic medicine genuinely worked for my mother.
.Fuhrlock said:It always amazes me what proportion of people are willing to throw science and reasoning out the window to believe in this crap. What worse is when they argue based entirely upon annecdotal evidence and forget that repeatable results that are distinguishable from a placebo are even remotely important. As I currently look at 4.9% (just under 1 in 20) believe in this scam, please let my faith be rewarded and make that number go down