Acupuncture Minneapolis, MN 55419
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www.orientalmedcare.com Acupuncture Minneapolis, MN 55419. Acupuncture testimonials at Minneapolis clinic Complete Oriental Medical Care. Learn how acupuncture treats pain, depression and other health problems. Licensed acupuncturist Steven Sonmore explains acupuncture and Chinese medicine.
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June 27th, 2010 at 5:52 pm
alternative medicine
Melocarbon, you seem to be well read in history, I’ll give you that although @ age 17 you should also realize as I stated above that history is flawed so I wouldn’t take what you read as the gospel. Please, I do not need to be chastised by someone who is so inexperienced @ life, besides, this whole thing started with me backing the very videos on your you tube site - I know for a FACT in closing that history is flawed and science will back me up!
June 30th, 2010 at 10:21 pm
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The arabs were from amongst the first cartographers, they always depicted the world/earth as round, WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN? And yes, many of these maps have been historically/scientifically attested to be pre-columbus…READ MORE…Europe is not the beacon of civilization, they didn’t and still do not, to some degree even accept acupuncture as a genuine discipline. Does that mean that it is not???
July 2nd, 2010 at 3:32 pm
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It’s actually in all of the history/geography books of the chinese,arabs,etc. Europeans were the last to explore the world! This is also in the authentic history books. Some of the earliest world travelers were the chinese,arabs,ethiopians,phoenicians, and many more…Before you make statements, at least be able to back them up with factual proof…
July 4th, 2010 at 2:26 am
alternative medicine
well you don’t know that for a fact now do you? Our history books are filled with false information - I’m not saying I’m right - I’m saying you don’t know that FOR A FACT! So you can do all the research you want - it will not provide exactly what the ancient people believed - we can only guess. I’m not interested enough to actually research that comment - sorry.
July 5th, 2010 at 10:23 pm
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thank u
July 7th, 2010 at 4:17 pm
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False! Only Europeans believed that, not the whole world! Please do more research…
July 10th, 2010 at 10:07 pm
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The needle is very slimsy. if the acupuncture on the right press point, you will feel very relax~ I was afraid that before too, but after i tried once, guess what, i begin to love it~
July 12th, 2010 at 1:42 am
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everyone the world was flat. Before Albert Einstein developed the theory of relativity - common sense (I should say in some people claiming they knew it all) said his theory was wrong. My point is simply this - don’t debunk something if you know nothing about it. I know you know nothing about EFT because of your statement.
July 15th, 2010 at 1:14 am
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Blah blah blah. Fact of the matter is: there is no scientific evidence whatsoever that proves acupuncture does anything besides release small amounts of endorphins.
July 18th, 2010 at 11:54 am
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you are an expert in common sense? Are you also an expert in the human body nervous system and electrical system? Do you know how many people have been helped by this? If one would apply common sense to something they do not understand their common sense would tell them to research the subject a little more before they make a blanket statement to indicate they are an expert on the subject - without knowing anything about the subject. Several hundred years ago “common sense” told - contd
July 20th, 2010 at 5:11 pm
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Common sense.
July 21st, 2010 at 5:08 am
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and you know this because you are an expert in what field?
July 23rd, 2010 at 9:41 am
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It wont cure anything at all, either. Go to a fucking doctor.
July 23rd, 2010 at 4:02 pm
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The World Health Organization and The National Institutes of Health both endorse Acupuncture for 81 illnesses while the Mayo Clinic and most major US Hospitals have an Acupuncture Department, and The UCLA and Stanford Schools of Medicine both teach it MDs as continuing education. None of these experts could do any of these actions if it was “merely” a placebo. It would even be ILLEGAL for healthcare practitioners to bill insurance for it, yet they do. Good day.
July 26th, 2010 at 6:19 pm
alternative medicine
it helps alot
July 27th, 2010 at 4:10 pm
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If it is done right, it shouldn’t hurt at all.
July 30th, 2010 at 11:37 pm
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doesnt it hurt?
August 2nd, 2010 at 3:12 pm
alternative medicine
For it to be a placebo you must beleive contrary evidence- which the above study did not provide. The neutral stance, which may be better descriptive of yourself, is a true skeptic (one refusing to pass judgment).
As for the How: How do quatum bits work? You can’t measure those either.
August 3rd, 2010 at 6:51 am
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cont.
And I’d love for such a study to be released, acupuncture is a minimally invasive procedure which claims to be able to cure/treat a wide range of afflictions which cause people to suffer.
I would love acupuncture to work.
But no one can say HOW acupuncture works, nor IF it works with any certainty, in fact, when measured, it always looks like it doesn’t. Therefore, I don’t think it does.
August 5th, 2010 at 8:33 am
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Of course, and don’t think that I believe that acupuncture can’t POSSIBLY work.
When I say I don’t believe in acupuncture, what I’m really saying is “It has not yet been shown to have anymore effect than a similarly administered placebo”
If a reliable study is published to the contrary, or the mechanism for how it could work are identified, I’ll change my mind on the issue.
August 8th, 2010 at 8:29 am
alternative medicine
Scientific method is an outlet of logic and must obey logic, unless it only considers a scientific methodology in its study (which is a very narrow scope) and speaks only in those terms. In those terms “law” is a “the way we guess that all things are because we see it sometimes is…” and principle is “most likely what happens is.”
Science is great…. but its methodology isn’t everything. Science must yield to reason.
August 11th, 2010 at 9:50 am
alternative medicine
As for the pain pill, this is not necessarily true, but we consider in our limited knowledge scope and for the sake of a face-paced money making culture of medicine: It is possible that the pain killer does not work, and it seems that there is a probability that it holds no significant value.
August 13th, 2010 at 4:04 pm
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Both other situations worked better than the control itself. Just because it isn’t a variable doesn’t mean it logically is not responsible to its involvement.
August 13th, 2010 at 10:38 pm
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Correlation is part of what a controlled study does. It shows one thing and puts it up against what happened in another situation. That is correlation. This is an inductive reasoning method. In this case, it does not prove a causal link because some other principles entirely could be at work beyond the scope of the study.
As for MD treatment you wrote:
“Group 1 received only M.D. care
2 received M.D. care and true acupuncture
3 received M.D. care and fake acupuncture (random toothpick pokes)”
August 15th, 2010 at 9:19 pm
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It’s not a correlation, it’s a controlled study, big difference.
You’re missing the point a controlled study. As with every treatment ever conceived, it has to be measured against a placebo for efficacy.
If I give one group a sugar pill, and a second group a new pain killer, and both report similar improvement, we can conclude that the pain killer doesn’t work.
How does it show a lack of worth for MD treatment? MD treatment wasn’t a variable.