Revision as of 16:36, 11 January 2015 editJytdog (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers187,951 edits →AE request closed: my thoughts, for what they are worth← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:50, 11 January 2015 edit undoKww (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Rollbackers82,486 edits →AE request closedNext edit → | ||
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* the use of acu as a complementary medicine in the situations mentioned above is discussed in medical textbooks (it doesn't get more mainstream than that) and is widely practiced. some of that is driven by market demand but medical centers wouldn't offer it if there wasn't some rationale (the clinical evidence) for it | * the use of acu as a complementary medicine in the situations mentioned above is discussed in medical textbooks (it doesn't get more mainstream than that) and is widely practiced. some of that is driven by market demand but medical centers wouldn't offer it if there wasn't some rationale (the clinical evidence) for it | ||
I believe that Middle 8 gets all that, which is rare around here. A reasonable article about acu would be anchored on those facts and I think if Middle 8 had the article to himself, it would look that way. But you get acu-proponents constantly making insane claims about acu and the quack-fighters pushing back way too hard. The article is a wasteland, and there is no way to make the extremes step away. So I stepped away. That's my view, again, fwiw. (and none of this excuses Middle 8's poor judgement in bringing the AE) ] (]) 16:36, 11 January 2015 (UTC) | I believe that Middle 8 gets all that, which is rare around here. A reasonable article about acu would be anchored on those facts and I think if Middle 8 had the article to himself, it would look that way. But you get acu-proponents constantly making insane claims about acu and the quack-fighters pushing back way too hard. The article is a wasteland, and there is no way to make the extremes step away. So I stepped away. That's my view, again, fwiw. (and none of this excuses Middle 8's poor judgement in bringing the AE) ] (]) 16:36, 11 January 2015 (UTC) | ||
:I agree that the social issue of whether a placebo is worth paying for confounds the issue, but it doesn't confound it much in my eye. If someone with chronic hives is helped by a sugar pill, I'm not about to endorse putting any statements that say that sugar is effective for the treatment of hives into ]. Similarly, if the placebo effects of acupuncture help someone with chronic nausea, that doesn't make me inclined to put any statements into the article that says it helps with nausea.—](]) 16:49, 11 January 2015 (UTC) |
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Acupuncture and Biomedical Correlate
- Review request for a review on the acupuncture page, first paragraph. See the Talk page, "Physical correlates of acupoints" section and "Physical correlates of acupoints, Part Two." I am concerned that an ethnocentric bias on the part of editors has prevented a simple edit. The editors stand by some very shaky references and will not accept references from the most prestigious universities in the world, including those in China. At issue, the current article reads inaccurately, "Scientific investigation has not found any histological or physiological correlates for traditional Chinese concepts such as qi, meridians and acupuncture points," and yet I have sourced numerous peer reviewed studies from reputable sources showing MRI brain activity, hemodynamic and oxygen pressure correlates. Please review, I think you will find the research interesting. TriumvirateProtean (talk) 13:33, 22 May 2013 (UTC)
- Thanks for the note; I've been very busy and only read it just now. I will have a look, but can't get into anything very intense for another week or so. But I will have a close look. This is an important area and we need to get it right. --Middle 8 (talk) 16:46, 27 May 2013 (UTC)
- Note to self and Acuhealth aka TriumvirateProtean: believe it or not, I haven't forgotten about this, which is why I didn't archive it. Besides being occupied elsewhere, I've been waiting for good sources: not just studies, but reviews (per MEDRS). Looks like we have some now. --Middle 8 (leave me alone • talk to me • COI?) 20:09, 11 May 2014 (UTC)
- Thanks for the note; I've been very busy and only read it just now. I will have a look, but can't get into anything very intense for another week or so. But I will have a close look. This is an important area and we need to get it right. --Middle 8 (talk) 16:46, 27 May 2013 (UTC)
YEAH SCIENCE!!
The E=mc² Barnstar | ||
YO BITCHES, this barnstar is awarded to Middle 8, for making poison out of rice and beans, saving our lives in the desert by building a battery out of spare change, and because I went through nearly every edit over the past year on Acupuncture and saw Middle8's profound mastery of scientific understanding. Some of his excellent edits may have been reverted, but they haven't gone unnoticed. Thanks for your excellent contributions! LesVegas (talk) 06:09, 8 September 2014 (UTC) |
- @LesVegas: WOW! Thanks man, that made my day! Truly appreciated... YEAH BITCH !!! ... cheers! --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 07:08, 8 September 2014 (UTC)
Natural Science Article
Agree with your point about re-appraising the inclusion of Materials Science within the Natural Science article - many scientists pull their own hair out at this constant incursion of technology into the study of the natural world around us. CaptPeacock15 (talk) 12:34, 4 October 2014 (UTC) |
- @CaptPeacock15 -- Thanks for the coffee! Yes, it's interesting, the way the border between "pure" and applied research blurs. That reminds me of an anecdote I read (I think in one of those popular science books written by or about an eminent physicist) recounting a conversation between two graduate students. One said that he was switching from physics to math because the former was too "messy" and an insufficiently fundamental approach to studying reality. The other replied that he was switching from math to physics for the very same reasons. :-) --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 14:21, 4 October 2014 (UTC)
Wikibreak
Pity. I was looking forward to a few days less stress. Nevermind. ;) -Roxy the dog™ (resonate) 15:07, 27 October 2014 (UTC)
- Don't worry, just had some loose ends to tie up, you'll get your break. ;-) BTW, still waiting for your answer to this.
- I also want to say that, if it isn't apparent, most/all of this "jousting" is meant in good fun. I generally like and respect anyone who's intelligent and applies their gifts toward something useful, which much of WP is. I only get annoyed when people who know better get obtuse/disingenuous. That would not be you or most editors I've encountered. That would be QuackGuru. You have to admit -- nobody who can read a journal article can be so stupid as to say that Cherkin's toothpick study found for anything but the null. And yet. Rubbish. --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 15:23, 27 October 2014 (UTC)
Happy New Year Middle 8!
Happy New Year!Middle 8,
Have a prosperous, productive and enjoyable New Year, and thanks for your contributions to Misplaced Pages. LesVegas (talk) 22:44, 3 January 2015 (UTC)
- Hey, LesVegas, thanks, and to you the same! You do great work here; don't let anyone (cf. recent events) discourage you. --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 10:14, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
About your AE filing, about scientific consensus
You do understand that consensus ≠ unanimity I take it? The view that w.r.t. acupuncture the "consensus view that the weak positive results are fully consistent with the null hypothesis" is a perfectly reasonable viewpoint. One which I know you are bound to disagree with mind you. To launch an AE about this view expressed in an Arbcom case seems - extraordinary. It is not as if mainspace article text was being edited. You, on the other hand ... Alexbrn 13:59, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
- Alexbrn -- Sure I understand that consensus ≠ unanimity, and I never meant to suggest otherwise. I meant to say that there's no evidence for any single consensus; thanks, I'm going to clarify that. And we both know that the article has been edited multiple times with the view in mind that there is a single consensus that says what Guy and Kww say it does. Actually, I agree it's a perfectly reasonable stance (and I also believe that it's reasonable to disagree with that view, as some sources do), but that has nothing to do with meeting the burden of proof that it's the consensus view. And yes, I know you think that I shouldn't be editing the article except under WP:COIU, but that's not a consensus view on WP. :-) (Or at least isn't demonstrably so -- Jytdog and Guy Macon don't agree, for example.) --Middle 8 (contribs • COI)
- hello?, anybody in? ... Echo... echo... echo. -Roxy the dog™ (resonate) 15:53, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
- @ Roxy the dog - Would you like dressing with that salad? (No neurological judgement passed, just grammatical -- should go without saying; said anyway.) --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 17:17, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
- hello?, anybody in? ... Echo... echo... echo. -Roxy the dog™ (resonate) 15:53, 8 January 2015 (UTC)
See RSN or Mediation Committee
The right venue for that dispute is either reliable sources noticeboard or the Mediation Committee. If you haven't gone to the former I suggest you bring up the issue there. If you want to notify any editors make sure to follow the guidelines for appropriate notifications. --RAN1 (talk) 08:32, 9 January 2015 (UTC)
- @ RAN1: Thank, those are good. Maybe WT:MEDRS over RSN (and look, they've been having a meta-level discussion there about sources for scientific consensus). I'm also thinking RfC/A. --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 14:10, 9 January 2015 (UTC)
AE request closed
The result of this AE request, which you filed against JzG, is that both parties are to be warned. Accordingly, you are hereby warned not to file frivolous or vexatious AE requests or to use Misplaced Pages's conduct enforcement mechanisms in an attempt to remove an opponent with whom you are engaged in a content dispute. You are also warned to respect Misplaced Pages policies on neutrality, consensus, and verifiability as well as all other applicable policies. Should you fail to adhere to this warning, there is a high probability that you will face substantive sanctions in the future. This warning will be logged as a discretionary sanction at the appropriate page, as will the warning to JzG. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 01:12, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- (talk page stalker) I'd like to see far more serious sanctions against those such as you who disrupt the project. -Roxy the dog™ (resonate) 12:08, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- Well, Roxy, I'm sure that's mutual, and unless you have something really constructive (or at least interesting or amusing) to say on this page, please don't bother doing so again. --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 15:56, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- Given that JzG was warned, it's not clear in what sense this was a frivolous request. The warning suggests that there was indeed a behavioral problem. TimidGuy (talk) 12:25, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- TimidGuy, what they warned him for had nothing to do with why I filed the complaint. It turned into a "gotcha" fest, as these things do (I'd forgotten...). I thought AE would be better than that, but it still tends toward the same old B.S. -- a zero-tolerance witch-hunt -- find whatever looks bad, cherry-pick it, and depict it as a "pattern". At least the warning they gave me was justified; I should've inquired about whether such a posting was appropriate, but I was annoyed when I posted it, and had forgotten Bill Murray's advice to the groundhog ("don't drive angry"). ... OTOH, I suppose Guy deserved, in the bigger scheme of things, to get dinged for incivility, because he does do it too much, and unlike me, some people are truly bothered by it. (Gee, maybe that's part of why civility is one of WP:5P, ya think?) It can set a bad example and seems like bullying.
- The thing that does bother me is the IDHT in the face of MEDRS's that disprove skeptics' assumptions about scientific opinion. It sometimes seem like they can't imagine that the consensus in the skeptical blogosphere could possibly be different from the consensus in the scientific community. It doesn't compute. They think the burden is on other editors to prove there isn't a consensus that, say, acupuncture is as discredited as homeopathy. It's pervasive, and nowhere more apparent in Kww's Arbcom filing, where an imaginary "consensus" is simply asserted. Same thing in Kww's and others' initial comments at Talk:Acupuncture here.... but to Kww's credit, he seemed to back off his more extreme comments (which were that we should exclude any reviews with positive findings, including Cochrane-level reviews). --Middle 8 (contribs • COI) 15:56, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- fwiw, I think Roxy's post was infelicitous piling on. But I also think, Middle 8, that the AE posting was poor judgement. Not sure what drove you to do that but there was no chance that was going to fly, and that, along with the ill-formed RfC/U on QuackGuru, are establishing a pattern that is going to stick to you; you have pooped in your own back yard twice now. I'm sorry to see that. Jytdog (talk) 16:12, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- Actually, what I said in the first place was that we shouldn't include a laundry-list of individual reviews, because there's always a pressure from people to include the ones that are slightly positive and that distorts the perspective of the article. Similarly, we shouldn't list the few that find acupuncture is harmful, because those are also clearly false negatives. Include the scientific consensus, which is that acupuncture has no substantial effect beyond the placebo effect, and leave it at that. There's no doubt in my mind that there is a scientific consensus that acupuncture is a placebo, and you have even agreed with that stance: "The benefit (if it is real and not an artifact of bias) is small or modest ... nobody who is reality-based disputes that". So why do you argue that there is not a scientific consensus? Why doesn't a phrasing like "the benefits of acupuncture are non-existent or trivial" sum it up adequately?—Kww(talk) 16:18, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
fwiw, Kww, in my view this is messier than most people will actually acknowledge and deal with. One reason I appreciate Middle 8's perspective on Acu is that he actually deals with that. There are a set of difficult, hard facts here that there is no room in the acu article for, due to POV-pushing on both sides, namely:
- acu is indeed based on pre-scientific principles. If anybody claims today that "qi" and "merdians" have any reality, they are doing pseudoscience
- conventional medicine fails to help people sometimes, especially with regard to pain, which we still do not understand very well on basic scientific levels and even today we lack drugs and devices that effectively help some people who are in pain
- clinical studies have shown benefit of acu in some populations of people who are still in pain when doctors have done their best with conventional medicine. the placebo issues don't matter, clinically. the risk is tiny and compared to actually doing nothing extra, some people who are otherwise in pain are helped by this extra procedure. that is what matters.
- the use of acu as a complementary medicine in the situations mentioned above is discussed in medical textbooks (it doesn't get more mainstream than that) and is widely practiced. some of that is driven by market demand but medical centers wouldn't offer it if there wasn't some rationale (the clinical evidence) for it
I believe that Middle 8 gets all that, which is rare around here. A reasonable article about acu would be anchored on those facts and I think if Middle 8 had the article to himself, it would look that way. But you get acu-proponents constantly making insane claims about acu and the quack-fighters pushing back way too hard. The article is a wasteland, and there is no way to make the extremes step away. So I stepped away. That's my view, again, fwiw. (and none of this excuses Middle 8's poor judgement in bringing the AE) Jytdog (talk) 16:36, 11 January 2015 (UTC)
- I agree that the social issue of whether a placebo is worth paying for confounds the issue, but it doesn't confound it much in my eye. If someone with chronic hives is helped by a sugar pill, I'm not about to endorse putting any statements that say that sugar is effective for the treatment of hives into sugar. Similarly, if the placebo effects of acupuncture help someone with chronic nausea, that doesn't make me inclined to put any statements into the article that says it helps with nausea.—Kww(talk) 16:49, 11 January 2015 (UTC)