Stacie5959 wrote:the point I was trying to make is that the lack of peer review and reproduction of an experiment is not proof that an experiment can't be reproduced
this is a fallacy
so anything you say after then means nothing
just sayin'
You are the one operating from a fallacious viewpoint. If one person conducts an experiment in a controversial field, like hypnosis, and publishes his findings but then no one chooses to attempt and reproduce his experiment, this does not disprove the original person's findings, nor does it prove that his experiment is not reproducible, it merely proves that no one else has chosen to perform an experiment in the original person's chosen field of investigation. The human body, much less the mind, is an extremely complex thing and does not always behave as expected. That's why biochemistry and pharmacology are such difficult fields to master and why there are so many active lawsuits against pharmaceutical companies. A chemical compound that behaves in a predictable way in laboratory settings does not always continue to behave that way when introduced into the human body. That same chemical compound will also behave in different, sometimes radically so, ways in different humans, that's why a prescription drug that is perfectly harmless for most people, can be extremely lethal for others. Now that's with the human body, which as a general rule does still adhere to the predictable behaviors of organic chemistry, the mind however is far more complex and much less predictable as even when one uses the same subject one may receive differing results depending upon a number of uncontrollable variables within the human condition. Now back to the physical, in the book I referenced to support my statement, which you deem fallacious, Dr. Becker documents a case of a child who lost the tip of one of his fingers in an accident, and as the result of a minor error in the emergency room instead of suturing the end of the remaining portion of the finger closed, as is standard procedure, the finger was merely cleaned and bandaged. When the child was checked to see the condition of his wound at a later date the error was discovered, as was the fact that the child's finger was regrowing the missing piece. The end result was that the child now has a whole finger with almost no scarring, and Dr. Becker and others who wish to research the possibility of instigating the regenerative abilities of the body have more data to work with. But you in your statement, would insist that since no one is willing to take a small child and chop off a finger tip and then wait to see what happens, the previous documented case of it happening is false and does not happen. So, I state again, just because no one has chosen to reproduce another person's work, is not proof that that work can not be reproduced, nor is it proof that the work is not scientific or that it is in anyway invalid, it simply means that no one has chosen to reproduce the work. In order to disprove something, you must attempt to reproduce it and publish the documentation on your results, you can not simply state that it is false without first attempting to reproduce the results.