Can you explain how testing homoeopathy using controlled trials is invalid?
It's not invalid.
Can you explain how testing homoeopathy using controlled trials is invalid?
Materialism is also changing - it's no longer trying to explain everything with discreet particles bouncing around, but now (the current rage) is information being implemented in various squirrelly material substrates - ie a "baseball bat" is implemented in wood, and wood implemented in molecules, and etc. Information is not exactly matter and matter is not exactly information. Materialism has its share of fairy dust as well.
Moving the goals posts again?
Not is doesn't, everything is just behavior. behavior of energy...
A selfless universe doesn't mean that the 'validity' of the 'statement' 'homeopathy is effective' can't be 'evaluated'
It's not invalid.
Anytime you wanna discuss homeopathy, start a thread for it. I'm game.
Hans
What if it finds that something "which people perceive as working for them" doesn't work?
Depends if the people asserting that it does work believe this.
Materialism is also changing - it's no longer trying to explain everything with discreet particles bouncing around, but now (the current rage) is information being implemented in various squirrelly material substrates - ie a "baseball bat" is implemented in wood, and wood implemented in molecules, and etc. Information is not exactly matter and matter is not exactly information. Materialism has its share of fairy dust as well.
please unpack this for me, especially regards the scientific method.How so?
Yes. But when you ascribe extra validity to a position because it has been objectively evaluated you are crossing a line. You're using an illusory social construct for a task where it has no authority.
I already said it is a behavior, did I stutter?Did I say otherwise? It can be evaluated, but the evaluation is just a behaviour.
Materialism is what? Your sources are lacking
That is just more straw it seems
Define mental states as opposed to brain states.
Hans
The brain is not equal to the mind. The brain produces the mind.
Could you point me to that? Thanks
Well, let's just consider two metal bars of the same material in a vacuum, not in direct physical contact with each (not touching each other) and at different temperatures. Each emits infrared radiation and each receives infrared radiation. If the system is closed so the total energy of the system doesn't change. Then the hotter bar tends to emit more energy than the cooler. As a result the cooler bar tends to gain energy and heat up as the hot bar tends lose energy and cool off. Eventually equilibrium is reached somewhere between the two temperatures of the bars at the start. In a physical sense this is because the bars can observe or interact with each other through infrared radiation. In the simplest physical sense that is all observation means, interaction. As a result of interaction changes in physical properties (in this case average energy and thus temperature) can occur. Naturally more complex systems can interact in, well, more complex ways but at its simplest basic physical form observation is just interaction.
I expect not as well. However, that is the material or materialistic basis of observation, changes in physical properties due to interaction. If whatever approach Nick227 wants to use to arrive at "observation" doesn't, at the very least, include that then it just isn't a material or materialistic approach.
Well, I'm thinking of starting one along the lines - "Integrated Information Theory - have scientists gone ◊◊◊◊◊◊* crazy or what?" IIT makes homeopathy, channelling, the Second Coming, and Reiki look thoroughly reasonable by comparison.
I mean how these loony Ph.Ds have the temerity to criticize homeopathy whilst believing in IIT is beyond me.
Whaddya think? Any mileage in it?
Marplots,
You have to understand the importance of the situation here, usage basically. The observer is utterly valid in a host of social and related situations. Trouble comes when you think it's real at an ontological level. It's not. Good for communication, not good for making assertions about the relative efficacy of treatments.
If someone says "I feel bad and I want to feel better" - they're using language in a way that is absolutely compatible with what it was created for.
If someone else says "You should take this medication, and not that remedy, because it has been objectively validated and therefore better" - they're crossing a line.
Marplots,
You have to understand the importance of the situation here, usage basically. The observer is utterly valid in a host of social and related situations. Trouble comes when you think it's real at an ontological level. It's not. Good for communication, not good for making assertions about the relative efficacy of treatments.
If someone says "I feel bad and I want to feel better" - they're using language in a way that is absolutely compatible with what it was created for.
If someone else says "You should take this medication, and not that remedy, because it has been objectively validated and therefore better" - they're crossing a line.
I just quibble here with the use of the passive voice. Language evolved, it was not 'created', was it, unless you are referring to vocabulary here.......they're using language in a way that is absolutely compatible with what it was created for.