- Apr 30, 2013
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Nonphysical realities with no evidence for them.
The evidence is sufficient for the purposes of Chinese medicine.
Keep in mind, nobody has seen an electron, ever. So I guess electrons don't really exist either.
Well then it should be testable, to show it has more affect than placebo. If it works, but it should be promoted. It doesn't seem to be part of normal medicine though.
Doctors use medicines and treatments every day that haven't undergone rigorous double-blind testing. Demanding that level of verification is a naïve view of how medicine works. Much of medicine rests on clinical experience, and this is true as well in Chinese medicine as much as western medicine.
What has it got to do with what nation you come from. Horoscopes and bad luck from breaking mirrors are superstitions too, and they are common here. Well at least the horoscopes are.
Labelling something that you don't understand how it works "superstition" is the sign of a closed mind.
Truth is understanding reality... that's what it means. Wisdom is in how well we live.
Reality is too mysterious and expansive for any of us to understand it exhaustively. Again, this is the delusional scientism showing up in your thinking.
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