Your premise is not flawed, but as it turns out our bodies are already very well adapted at getting rid of 'toxins'. Not just the obvious organs like liver and kidneys, but the lungs, gut, and even the skin and hair. Studies suggest that the function of theses systems is already optimal and can not be improved by any of the proposed detox treatments. The only time it needs help is if you are seriously ill and not functioning normally in which case we treat the specific problem. It's a classic example of someone selling a non-solution to a non-problem. You've probably heard all this before but I hate to pass up a chance to preach.Hey, Heis! Haven't seen you around for a minute. The diagram is cool. I still have a lingering tendency to believe in the detox thing from my Trudeau days. Something about the concept sits well with me: we ingest substances, and eat food, containing impurities/toxins so we should logically want to rid them from our bodies (assuming they are harmful), and there should be ways of doing this. I do need to do more research to discover why this isn't logical...
I guess I missed you at the pulpit. I hadn't heard that our bodies' detox systems are already optimal, makes more sense now Thanks...Your premise is not flawed, but as it turns out our bodies are already very well adapted at getting rid of 'toxins'. Not just the obvious organs like liver and kidneys, but the lungs, gut, and even the skin and hair. Studies suggest that the function of theses systems is already optimal and can not be improved by any of the proposed detox treatments. The only time it needs help is if you are seriously ill and not functioning normally in which case we treat the specific problem. It's a classic example of someone selling a non-solution to a non-problem. You've probably heard all this before but I hate to pass up a chance to preach.
I am surprised to see a god of the gaps statement coming from you. What do you suppose a chart listing things dualism has sorted out would look like? Wouldn't need as many pixels I'm guessing.Heis, much of what is in the diagram pertains to consciousness. We need another diagram for the stuff science has actually sorted out
what did you think pissing and shitting and sweating was for?I guess I missed you at the pulpit. I hadn't heard that our bodies' detox systems are already optimal, makes more sense now Thanks...
lmao! Scientology! Encompassed by all of them.
...lol, no, I wouldn't think so. More or less black and whiteI am surprised to see a god of the gaps statement coming from you. What do you suppose a chart listing things dualism has sorted out would look like? Wouldn't need as many pixels I'm guessing.
Links?????Lol Heis...Thank goodness we can finally put this nonsense to rest!
There are quite a few documented cases of successful government-funded remote viewing studies out there, though.
Of course the participants go around reporting they were successful. Reporting misses as hits is not a new tactic for pretend psychics. Lets not forget the researchers in project alpha thought they had something for a while too.The AIR report concluded that no usable intelligence data was produced in the program. David Goslin, of the American Institute for Research said, "There's no documented evidence it had any value to the intelligence community."
The information from the Stargate Project remote viewing sessions was vague and included a lot of irrelevant and erroneous data, it was never useful in any intelligence operation, and project managers changed the reports so they would fit background cues.[SUP]
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According to James Randi, controlled tests by several other researchers, eliminating several sources of cuing and extraneous evidence present in the original tests, produced negative results. Students were also able to solve Puthoff and Targ's locations from the clues that had inadvertently been included in the transcripts.