new drkitten,
That covered things pretty damn well! Yes, risk versus benefit.
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Beth,
But, if we apply the same standard and logic to the other side of the argument, verified incidents of people being cured after taking homeopathic medicine would be justification for saying that homeopathy (or at least a belief in homeopathy ) is a contributing factor is bringing someone back to health.
You keep missing the point (deliberately or otherwise - I can't tell). The basic contention is :
belief -> action -> result
We have two specific cases of this general principle, which are :
1. belief -> action - > harm
2. belief -> action -> benefit
With the first case, the result being harm, you're not questioning the harm (as best I can see), and not questioning the action, or the link between the action and the harm. And you're not questioning whether they actually had the belief?? So you're questioning the move from belief to action?
Fair enough, it's hard to "prove" that link. Although in these cases the link is supported by the direct testimony of the particpants themselves, and there seems no real viable alternative. It seems a reasonable conclusion to infer the link.
In the second case, where the result is benefit, you are claiming a hypocritical approach from most posters. You are questioning why a testimony about homeopathy doesn't work just as well in support of this second contention as the previous 'result = harm' anecdotes do in support of the first.
The answer is simple - it does!
I accept the same link between 'belief' and 'action' in both cases, supported by the anecdote. It seems perfectly reasonable to conclude that the belief is what lead to the action. That's the good news for your case! However, I dispute the link between 'action' and 'benefit' in the homeopathy scenario - and the anecdote does nothing support this link.
So that's about as clear as I can get in explaining why you've got this wrong - you're asking "if an anecdote supports the link between belief and action in one scenario, why doesn't it do so in another?" And the answer is "it does!".
The problem (misunderstanding?) is because you're framing the question as "if an anecdote supports the link between belief and action in one scenario, why doesn't it support the link between action and result in another?" Hopefully, it's clear why it doesn't.
(edited for spelin)