Left as an Exercise

June 24, 2010

Empirical Surrender

Filed under: Denialism, Philosophy of Science — Michel F @ 6:25 am

I am a skeptical apatheist, strict materialist, and avid follower of  the likes of P. Z. Myers and James Randi. I also believe in the effectiveness of acupuncture and other traditional Chinese medicine.

I admitted it. Then, I thought ‘Now what?’.

It took me a while to reconcile these positions. The first thing I realized, immediately, is that excuses for how skeptical I can be in all other cases won’t do. To the skeptic who is convinced I am holding a belief irrationally, my willingness to follow the evidence in other cases doesn’t justify the case in which I don’t. I hold that antivaxxer nonsense is dangerous, faith healing illusory, and homeopathy a waste of time. I don’t believe in any New Age superstitions. I’m a strict materialist (everything is either physical or information on a physical medium), and I disagree with any explanations of TCM or concepts of chi that involve magical energies. While I agree that most explanations of the phenomena behind TCM are unscientific, I do believe that there is an actual phenomena there that can be exploited for medical purposes (and eventually explained scientifically). I even have a very limited amateur hypothesis attempting to explain how it can work, that is consistent as I can make it with my layman’s understanding of the science. I have standards and heuristics for evaluating TCM practitioners, and only visit those who are both well versed in Western medicine and referred by members of the martial arts community whom I trust. All of this is besides the point. Those who insist on the strictest consistent standards of proof must say I’m cheering on a placebo. That I degrade other placebos does not change that fact. Moreover, without objective and rigorous evidence, I cannot prove them wrong. There’s still a debate on the efficacy of TCM going on in the academic circles, but in this case “still in debate” means “not enough objective proof yet”.

So, then, why do I not change my opinion? I came to believe in the efficacy of TCM for a reason, after all. A personal history of effective TCM treatment, as well as similar histories with people I knew personally, was where I first became convinced. My practice with the internal (‘soft’) martial arts and studies in cognitive science eventually led me to form a hypothesis of my own on how the mind interacted with the body, and how TCM utilized this. I do have evidence - but it’s anecdotal. I do have an explanatory framework - but it’s personal. What I can use to make sense of the phenomena in a way that convinces myself is utterly inadequate for convincing others. Yet I have no reason so far to doubt my own judgment or senses. Is there a solution? (more…)

By Way of Introduction

Filed under: Uncategorized — Michel F @ 6:21 am

Hello everybody. Brian’s such an awesome individual, he’s invited me post on this blog. He’s been extremely busy and Internet-compromised over the past few months, which is why he couldn’t take the time to write me an intro post. I don’t hold it against him, so I figured I’d do it myself.

I am a friend of Brian’s with a background in cognitive science and adult language instruction, though my interests run to many broader subjects (which I’ve discussed and debated Brian on, if you’re wondering why he lets me post here). I’ll leave this as a comment thread for anyone who wishes to make more specific inquiries about myself and my part on Left as an Exercise.

Best wishes and happy reading to you all.

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