- German interview with Prof. Edzard Ernst: “Homöopathica are placebos”
- German: EsoBlog about a combination of mystic wishing, feng shui and homeopathy.
- Funny videos: Animator vs. Animation I and II (via aptgetupdate)
- And another video: A conference of fonts (by CollegeHumor; via Nerdcore)
The News
Alternative medicine does not help
Not even the finally arrested Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadžić:
“Until he was tracked down and arrested by Serbian special forces last night, Dr Karadzic was working as an alternative medicine specialist in a clinic in the suburb of New Belgrade using the false name of Dr Dragan Dabic.”
(Times Online)
Porn spammers can continue
After a court has dismissed the lawsuit by lesb–, erm, residents of Lesbos against all lesbians (that is, gay women) calling themselves lesbians, porn spammers – no matter if they spam via e-mail or blog comments – can continue their profession without fear of lawsuits from Lesbos for using this word.
None of the porn spammers could be reached for comment.
Links of the Week (2008/28)
- German: Der Wissenschaft verpflichtet (Committed to science) – Speech at the German society for internal medicine’s congress in 1997 about scientific medicine and paramedicine. Worth reading if you speak German, but the background color should be forbidden1… (via EsoBlog).
- PZ Myers about the questionable reactions on “holding a consecrated wafer hostage” – and reactions from readers.
- 50 remarkable nature wallpapers (via Blogwiese)
- or changed, be it with Firebug or by copying the text into an editor [↩]
Another kind of wishing
Recently in one of the local weekly ad papers (Pfaffenhofener Anzeiger from July 2; my translation):
Novena to St. Clara. Light a candle on 9 consecutive days and pray an Ave Maria, express two desires that seem impossible to you and one desire that is dear to your heart. Let the candle burn all the way down on the 9th day and publish this message. Your plea will be heard.
(If the candle industry is behind such ads? )
Can also be found in the same or similar words at various places – for instance in this astrology/mysticism forum of a German women’s site where someone expresses (for fun?) this plea, among others (again, my translation):
1. please stop these inexpressably pompous religious texts in mysticism forums!
As if mystics and astrologers never write pompous texts! And topically it matches quite well, I really don’t know what she’s complaining about…
No matter if it’s an imaginary “law” of the universe – as in various mysticism books that I already mentioned in my satire here – or imaginary heavenly helpers, I think it’s despicable to give people who may be in emotional or financial distress false hopes with more or less ridiculous rituals that their wishes would be fulfilled “just like that”.
May be that certain rituals may help some people to accomplish certain goals which they can actually influence themselves – do more sports, be more friendly, “become a better person”, etc. –, or also help for some minor illnesses through a placebo effect. But hoping that the world (the universe, heaven) would be at their service and grant arbitrary wishes is just a false hope that they are being talked into with such mystic or religious “methods”.
Particularly since this novena text (by the way, why an Ave Maria towards a Clara and not directly to Mary herself?) may make the impression which “lavendelmond” expressed in this women’s magazine’s site’s thread this way, though apologetically (my translation):
for me this sounded so “magically-forcing”… do this and that, then “the universe/MotherMary/the Lord” must do etc. etc.
it just reminded me of one of these many unbearable chain letters with false promises that float around the net, hence my comment, no offense meant ;-)
When she’s right… better said, was right, she renounced that opinion. Unfortunately, for where’s the difference regarding false promises?
Before, she had written:
why all this “ballyhoo” with the nine days etc.
????just pray, with all your heart, and trust that god’s will be good for us, even if we can’t recognize that immediately every time
Well, there’s the proverbs “Heaven helps them who help themselves” and “The Lord walks mysterious ways”? A nice excuse for nonfunctional prayers, I think, because those who already helped themselves, thus taking their fate into their own hands, can also easily do without heavenly intervention which he wouldn’t be able to recognize as such anyway, if it occured at all, that is.
Wirkungsloses und Placebos en masse?
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