Guest guest Posted March 30, 2005 Report Share Posted March 30, 2005 , I enjoyed reading your reflection. I have a tendency to “skim” over thoughts experiments and rarely post when there is such discussion. Often I view many of them as extrapolation well outside of the known observation space – they may (and have) lead to discovery of other observation spaces. The observation space tends to be: · There are infections – how can we detect them[tests], what has been demonstrated to treat them. · There are coagulation issues – how can we detect them[tests], what has been demonstrated to treat them. · There are deficiencies issues – how can we detect them[tests], what has been demonstrated to treat them. From my early days with learning the coagulation ropes, I still remember the Primrose Oil revelation: Mixed reports of improvement and deterioration from using it, it turns out that it impacted different types of coagulation in different ways. In short, every medicine and supplement impacts a very large number of items (for example Vitamin D impacts > 130 body processes), and trying to do a thought experiment on just one of these 130+ body processes gets a bit reckless. Ken Lassesen, From: Schaafsma [mailto:compucruz@...] Warning: this is a longish piece of reflection, containing no medical data of any kind. 1. Thought experiments get out of hand 2. Ambition In A Time of Crisis 3. When I said " Do something, someone! " I should have been more specific. 4. Medical Messiah 5. Group Think 6. 'We'll Make A Believer Out of You Yet!' 7. Where We Are 8. A Third Way: Bringing Together Research and Patients 9. The Terms of Life Must Be Honored Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2005 Report Share Posted March 31, 2005 > > Warning: this is a longish piece of reflection, containing no > medical data of any kind. > > 1. Thought experiments get out of hand > > This idea of a determinative balance between 'Th1' and 'Th2'is not > so much a statement about the immune system as an statement about > how medicine can usefully augment or enhance the immune system. > > This puts it in a different class than statements of fact or > opinion. What we are really seeing is a statement of intention. > > In real life, medical research often operates like this: 'what > happens if I define my goal in these terms?' > > The problem with such thought experiments is that one can so easily > forget that is all they are. > > That can happen to the same people who conceived the thought > experiment in the first place. There is even a word for it: > reification, which means assigning an independent reality to > something that is really just an idea in my head. > > The potential for confusion increases when people outside the > research discipline (and this would include, to my mind, both myself > and the creator of the MP) 'listen in' on its conversations in a > piecemeal fashion, often relying on abstracts where qualifying > statements tend to be omitted. > Hi I also enjoyed your reflection and can see exactly where you are coming from. Only yesterday I was reading that doctors and scientists in particular will always try and fit pieces of data/information so that it fits their particular scenario but often ignoring other factors that don't fit their model and this can be quite danagerous because of course it can be done for many different reasons some I have to say more to do with their own Ego rather than progressing medical knowledge although of course sometimes there will be a very positive end result. People with long term illnesses are at particular risk when listening to such people for obvious reasons, nobody wants to continue with suffering when there would appear to be a relatively easy answer. However I always want to stand back and look at things from every perspective, always having a questioning mind which sometimes get me into trouble!! This questioning mind/instinct is a result of years of suffering but also hard work to try and improve my understanding of basic psychology and I think in general it has been a definite advantage that has saved me from the more extreme treatments that are offered. However I have found a definite resistance/denial amongst chronically sick people to look at every angle of a protocol/their illness but I do understand where this comes from. When you are feeling so sick and unwell it is definitely a kind of hell and it is probably more than some people can bear to accept that this latest protocol might end in failure or not indeed turn out to be the answer to their prayers. This is their level of functioning at that moment in time and entirely understandable. Personally I cannot get away from wondering how much of the immune dysfunction that we are trying to deal with doesn't stem from the massive stressors that our put on us as children, young adults, workers, mothers, fathers, etc etc, by just being a member of society at this moment in time. Maybe the answer is that some of us are just far more predisposed to developing these illnesses. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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