Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily... Hugo _________ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd./evt=44106/*http://uk.docs./mail/winter07.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Why would you have any trouble with a " machine " if it works? Personally i have not seen one that i would conceder reliable although i have not tested all of them. The only thing that matters is clinical outcome all else is masturbation. - Hugo Ramiro Chinese Medicine Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:46 AM Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily... Hugo ________ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd./evt=44106/*http://uk.docs./mail/winter07.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Hi Alon. To answer your question: " if it works, then...? " I could use the Chinese Martial Arts situation. If you want to be a good fighter, all you have to do is use steroids, bulk up like a monster and scream and rage during a match. You'll win most if not all of your matches. Should only take 9-12 months of training and an angry psychology to achieve that. If you want to fight the above fighter with Tai Chi, good luck unless you've had 10 to 30 years of intensive, complete training, and even then, best to not get into the fight and simply evade a situation that is so magnificently stupid. The situation with machines is similar. A machine (say, a gun) works very well, cuts down people effortlessly and takes a week or less to learn to use lethally. It can even be better than Mr. Roid from our first paragraph. Unfortunately, anything's _apparent_ effectiveness has little to do with final outcomes. Mr. Roid gets a damaged liver and injured spirit, and the Tai Chi trainee gets a foot in the door to enlightenment. Yet one is obviously (?) the better fighter. Certainly we can say that one is far more likely to achieve peace within themselves - which is, according to many sources, the mark of a true (yes I'll use that word) " warrior " . Rawr. Final outcomes have _a_lot_ to do with how we define the meanings of our lives. Interestingly, western medicine is engaged in this dialogue more and more these days - what is the difference between curing and healing? As we all might know, it is possible to heal, and yet not achieve an apparent or total cure. And many people get cured and demonstrate little or no apparent healing. How we define these situations can teach us a lot about the role of machines, and even the role of " effectiveness " . In the end, if I feel an effective machine will, in the long run, weaken 's expression through cultured, refined, developed people (i.e. promote cure, but inhibit healing), then I will tend to be very cautious with the way that that machine is used. Again, it has little to do with the machine, and mainly to do with that aspect of human psychology that chooses the lazy, dis-couraged way out. And I'd like to finish by saying that were I pushed to take an easy way out, I am afraid that I might. Hugo Effectiveness can be defined in many ways, three of which are short-, intermediary-, and final-outcomes. Industry as a whole has a great short-outcome: we make a lot of things, more people have more things like tools, the economy gets a boost, the world becomes more connected and so on. The final-outcome is not so well dispositioned. I believe we are all aware of the tremendous damage to our ecosystem (not that the earth won't survive it, but rather that OUR ecosystem won't (OUR including US, of course), a topic that we need not trawl, and I believe we are also very aware these days that industry by iotself is entirely neutral, and that it provides the means for Alon Marcus <alonmarcus Chinese Medicine Thursday, 31 May, 2007 2:37:29 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Why would you have any trouble with a " machine " if it works? Personally i have not seen one that i would conceder reliable although i have not tested all of them. The only thing that matters is clinical outcome all else is masturbation. www.integrativeheal thmedicine. com - Hugo Ramiro Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:46 AM Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily. .. Hugo ____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd. / evt=44106/ *http://uk. docs.. com/mail/ winter07. html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Hugo I am in a different place, my only alliance is to the patient, i do not care about culture or any other aspect of CM unless it improves the clinical result. Clinical result include safety as far as i am concern, something we mostly only have dogmatic information on. I do not think you can compare harming ones body with steroids to using a " machine, " if it truly works which i have lots of doubts about. Again while i have to use CM historical evidence at this point i by no means think these are completely trustful. There are much we know now that was not known in the past Alon Hugo Ramiro <subincor wrote: Hi Alon. To answer your question: " if it works, then...? " I could use the Chinese Martial Arts situation. If you want to be a good fighter, all you have to do is use steroids, bulk up like a monster and scream and rage during a match. You'll win most if not all of your matches. Should only take 9-12 months of training and an angry psychology to achieve that. If you want to fight the above fighter with Tai Chi, good luck unless you've had 10 to 30 years of intensive, complete training, and even then, best to not get into the fight and simply evade a situation that is so magnificently stupid. The situation with machines is similar. A machine (say, a gun) works very well, cuts down people effortlessly and takes a week or less to learn to use lethally. It can even be better than Mr. Roid from our first paragraph. Unfortunately, anything's _apparent_ effectiveness has little to do with final outcomes. Mr. Roid gets a damaged liver and injured spirit, and the Tai Chi trainee gets a foot in the door to enlightenment. Yet one is obviously (?) the better fighter. Certainly we can say that one is far more likely to achieve peace within themselves - which is, according to many sources, the mark of a true (yes I'll use that word) " warrior " . Rawr. Final outcomes have _a_lot_ to do with how we define the meanings of our lives. Interestingly, western medicine is engaged in this dialogue more and more these days - what is the difference between curing and healing? As we all might know, it is possible to heal, and yet not achieve an apparent or total cure. And many people get cured and demonstrate little or no apparent healing. How we define these situations can teach us a lot about the role of machines, and even the role of " effectiveness " . In the end, if I feel an effective machine will, in the long run, weaken Chinese Medicine's expression through cultured, refined, developed people (i.e. promote cure, but inhibit healing), then I will tend to be very cautious with the way that that machine is used. Again, it has little to do with the machine, and mainly to do with that aspect of human psychology that chooses the lazy, dis-couraged way out. And I'd like to finish by saying that were I pushed to take an easy way out, I am afraid that I might. Hugo Effectiveness can be defined in many ways, three of which are short-, intermediary-, and final-outcomes. Industry as a whole has a great short-outcome: we make a lot of things, more people have more things like tools, the economy gets a boost, the world becomes more connected and so on. The final-outcome is not so well dispositioned. I believe we are all aware of the tremendous damage to our ecosystem (not that the earth won't survive it, but rather that OUR ecosystem won't (OUR including US, of course), a topic that we need not trawl, and I believe we are also very aware these days that industry by iotself is entirely neutral, and that it provides the means for Alon Marcus <alonmarcus Chinese Medicine Thursday, 31 May, 2007 2:37:29 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Why would you have any trouble with a " machine " if it works? Personally i have not seen one that i would conceder reliable although i have not tested all of them. The only thing that matters is clinical outcome all else is masturbation. www.integrativeheal thmedicine. com - Hugo Ramiro Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:46 AM Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily. .. Hugo ____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd. / evt=44106/ *http://uk. docs.. com/mail/ winter07. html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Woops, missed that last bit: ....provides the means for either raising or lowering ourselves. For me, the questions are how and why we make the choices to raise or lower ourselves. Effectiveness can be defined in many ways, three of which are short-, intermediary- , and final-outcomes. Industry as a whole has a great short-outcome: we make a lot of things, more people have more things like tools, the economy gets a boost, the world becomes more connected and so on. The final-outcome is not so well dispositioned. I believe we are all aware of the tremendous damage to our ecosystem (not that the earth won't survive it, but rather that OUR ecosystem won't (OUR including US, of course), a topic that we need not trawl, and I believe we are also very aware these days that industry by iotself is entirely neutral, and that it provides the means for _________ _ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd. / evt=44106/ *http://uk. docs.. com/mail/ winter07. html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Hey Alon, yes I have gotten this impression from you in the past (that we are in different places). However, we are both in the same boat, and both of us actually perform useful, different functions on the spectrum of medicine. Question is, are we going to be able to communicate for the benefit of people? Thanks for your note, Hugo Alon Marcus <alonmarcus Chinese Medicine Thursday, 31 May, 2007 5:11:47 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hugo I am in a different place, my only alliance is to the patient, i do not care about culture or any other aspect of CM unless it improves the clinical result. Clinical result include safety as far as i am concern, something we mostly only have dogmatic information on. I do not think you can compare harming ones body with steroids to using a " machine, " if it truly works which i have lots of doubts about. Again while i have to use CM historical evidence at this point i by no means think these are completely trustful. There are much we know now that was not known in the past Alon Hugo Ramiro <subincor > wrote: Hi Alon. To answer your question: " if it works, then...? " I could use the Chinese Martial Arts situation. If you want to be a good fighter, all you have to do is use steroids, bulk up like a monster and scream and rage during a match. You'll win most if not all of your matches. Should only take 9-12 months of training and an angry psychology to achieve that. If you want to fight the above fighter with Tai Chi, good luck unless you've had 10 to 30 years of intensive, complete training, and even then, best to not get into the fight and simply evade a situation that is so magnificently stupid. The situation with machines is similar. A machine (say, a gun) works very well, cuts down people effortlessly and takes a week or less to learn to use lethally. It can even be better than Mr. Roid from our first paragraph. Unfortunately, anything's _apparent_ effectiveness has little to do with final outcomes. Mr. Roid gets a damaged liver and injured spirit, and the Tai Chi trainee gets a foot in the door to enlightenment. Yet one is obviously (?) the better fighter. Certainly we can say that one is far more likely to achieve peace within themselves - which is, according to many sources, the mark of a true (yes I'll use that word) " warrior " . Rawr. Final outcomes have _a_lot_ to do with how we define the meanings of our lives. Interestingly, western medicine is engaged in this dialogue more and more these days - what is the difference between curing and healing? As we all might know, it is possible to heal, and yet not achieve an apparent or total cure. And many people get cured and demonstrate little or no apparent healing. How we define these situations can teach us a lot about the role of machines, and even the role of " effectiveness " . In the end, if I feel an effective machine will, in the long run, weaken Chinese Medicine's expression through cultured, refined, developed people (i.e. promote cure, but inhibit healing), then I will tend to be very cautious with the way that that machine is used. Again, it has little to do with the machine, and mainly to do with that aspect of human psychology that chooses the lazy, dis-couraged way out. And I'd like to finish by saying that were I pushed to take an easy way out, I am afraid that I might. Hugo Effectiveness can be defined in many ways, three of which are short-, intermediary- , and final-outcomes. Industry as a whole has a great short-outcome: we make a lot of things, more people have more things like tools, the economy gets a boost, the world becomes more connected and so on. The final-outcome is not so well dispositioned. I believe we are all aware of the tremendous damage to our ecosystem (not that the earth won't survive it, but rather that OUR ecosystem won't (OUR including US, of course), a topic that we need not trawl, and I believe we are also very aware these days that industry by iotself is entirely neutral, and that it provides the means for Alon Marcus <alonmarcus (AT) wans (DOT) net> Thursday, 31 May, 2007 2:37:29 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Why would you have any trouble with a " machine " if it works? Personally i have not seen one that i would conceder reliable although i have not tested all of them. The only thing that matters is clinical outcome all else is masturbation. www.integrativeheal thmedicine. com - Hugo Ramiro Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:46 AM Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily. .. Hugo ____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd. / evt=44106/ *http://uk. docs.. com/mail/ winter07. html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 31, 2007 Report Share Posted May 31, 2007 Hugo, we are communicating right now Alon Hugo Ramiro <subincor wrote: Hey Alon, yes I have gotten this impression from you in the past (that we are in different places). However, we are both in the same boat, and both of us actually perform useful, different functions on the spectrum of medicine. Question is, are we going to be able to communicate for the benefit of people? Thanks for your note, Hugo Alon Marcus <alonmarcus Chinese Medicine Thursday, 31 May, 2007 5:11:47 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hugo I am in a different place, my only alliance is to the patient, i do not care about culture or any other aspect of CM unless it improves the clinical result. Clinical result include safety as far as i am concern, something we mostly only have dogmatic information on. I do not think you can compare harming ones body with steroids to using a " machine, " if it truly works which i have lots of doubts about. Again while i have to use CM historical evidence at this point i by no means think these are completely trustful. There are much we know now that was not known in the past Alon Hugo Ramiro <subincor > wrote: Hi Alon. To answer your question: " if it works, then...? " I could use the Chinese Martial Arts situation. If you want to be a good fighter, all you have to do is use steroids, bulk up like a monster and scream and rage during a match. You'll win most if not all of your matches. Should only take 9-12 months of training and an angry psychology to achieve that. If you want to fight the above fighter with Tai Chi, good luck unless you've had 10 to 30 years of intensive, complete training, and even then, best to not get into the fight and simply evade a situation that is so magnificently stupid. The situation with machines is similar. A machine (say, a gun) works very well, cuts down people effortlessly and takes a week or less to learn to use lethally. It can even be better than Mr. Roid from our first paragraph. Unfortunately, anything's _apparent_ effectiveness has little to do with final outcomes. Mr. Roid gets a damaged liver and injured spirit, and the Tai Chi trainee gets a foot in the door to enlightenment. Yet one is obviously (?) the better fighter. Certainly we can say that one is far more likely to achieve peace within themselves - which is, according to many sources, the mark of a true (yes I'll use that word) " warrior " . Rawr. Final outcomes have _a_lot_ to do with how we define the meanings of our lives. Interestingly, western medicine is engaged in this dialogue more and more these days - what is the difference between curing and healing? As we all might know, it is possible to heal, and yet not achieve an apparent or total cure. And many people get cured and demonstrate little or no apparent healing. How we define these situations can teach us a lot about the role of machines, and even the role of " effectiveness " . In the end, if I feel an effective machine will, in the long run, weaken 's expression through cultured, refined, developed people (i.e. promote cure, but inhibit healing), then I will tend to be very cautious with the way that that machine is used. Again, it has little to do with the machine, and mainly to do with that aspect of human psychology that chooses the lazy, dis-couraged way out. And I'd like to finish by saying that were I pushed to take an easy way out, I am afraid that I might. Hugo Effectiveness can be defined in many ways, three of which are short-, intermediary- , and final-outcomes. Industry as a whole has a great short-outcome: we make a lot of things, more people have more things like tools, the economy gets a boost, the world becomes more connected and so on. The final-outcome is not so well dispositioned. I believe we are all aware of the tremendous damage to our ecosystem (not that the earth won't survive it, but rather that OUR ecosystem won't (OUR including US, of course), a topic that we need not trawl, and I believe we are also very aware these days that industry by iotself is entirely neutral, and that it provides the means for Alon Marcus <alonmarcus (AT) wans (DOT) net> Thursday, 31 May, 2007 2:37:29 PM Re: Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Why would you have any trouble with a " machine " if it works? Personally i have not seen one that i would conceder reliable although i have not tested all of them. The only thing that matters is clinical outcome all else is masturbation. www.integrativeheal thmedicine. com - Hugo Ramiro Thursday, May 31, 2007 10:46 AM Robot Empire was--acupuncture meridian computer program Hi Mike and all - rejoining the fray here... Like you said Mike, a lot of people enjoy a particular brand of " science " , one that involves printouts with numbers, graphs + a good layout. Hopefully this email classifies as good science since I typed it on a computer. In fact I demand that perspective. In any case I don't really believe that Dr. Wu's preference should make any of us run to the machine-slaver, I mean, saviour, until we have - as he does - 50 years of traditional pulse taking under our belts. It may be that machines such as this are a good prescription for causing a decline of personally skilled practitioners. But perhaps I worry too much - the chinese martial arts aren't dead so much as flaky since the introduction of firearms to chinese military culture. It does however sadden me to see so many of us enamored to machines and leaving our own personal potential by the wayside. Not that I wouldn't want a robotic master race, necessarily. .. Hugo ____________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _________ _ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd. / evt=44106/ *http://uk. docs.. com/mail/ winter07. html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 1, 2007 Report Share Posted June 1, 2007 --- Alon Marcus <alonmarcus wrote: > Hugo, we are communicating right now > Alon Apparently we're not. I wasn't referring to us. As you say, we are communicating. Hugo _________ Mail is the world's favourite email. Don't settle for less, sign up for your free account today http://uk.rd./evt=44106/*http://uk.docs./mail/winter07.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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