You read the topic title so... your thoughts please...
Personally, I'm unsure. Some of the time, I find myself agreeing with Richard Dawkins and his rather... acerbic comments about it. However, having grown up around a couple of people (read: my parents) who know a lot about Chinese herbology, I can vouch for 'TCM' (traditional Chinese medicine) which I/they have tested... primarily on myself/themselves/my sisters... (half-kidding)
You find me recovering from a cold (I actually recovered a few days ago after a couple straight days of having herbal teas and manuka and just debased myself on a truckload of junk food) with a slight niggling cough and I've spent the last half hour alternately sipping and sniffing a hot concoction of nin jiom (I haven't the faintest idea either how it is anglicised from Cantonese or what it is in English).
Quackery? Or legitimate?
EDIT - I know 'common cold' is probably not the best thing to judge its merits by so... *meh* Still, considering the availability of medicine, Chinese physicians in certain parts did admirably with what they could get their hands on.
Medicine has the trouble that human body is a difficult thing to cater to. Most modern drug designs need the rule of five to function otherwise they become too lipophilic (or plain up large) to be able to reach their targets. Herbal medicines (the main... and probably only, area of alt-med that I advocate) primarily are water based, but they suffer from a lack of efficacy. Where they are easily absorbed by tissues, they are easily dispelled for the same reasons. Thus there is a slight impasse... it's why it's rather difficult to overdose on ascorbic acid...
It's why you find that Chinese medicine commonly combines traditional treatments to complement or accelerate that which has been started by "modern medicinal methods".
Personally, I'm unsure. Some of the time, I find myself agreeing with Richard Dawkins and his rather... acerbic comments about it. However, having grown up around a couple of people (read: my parents) who know a lot about Chinese herbology, I can vouch for 'TCM' (traditional Chinese medicine) which I/they have tested... primarily on myself/themselves/my sisters... (half-kidding)
You find me recovering from a cold (I actually recovered a few days ago after a couple straight days of having herbal teas and manuka and just debased myself on a truckload of junk food) with a slight niggling cough and I've spent the last half hour alternately sipping and sniffing a hot concoction of nin jiom (I haven't the faintest idea either how it is anglicised from Cantonese or what it is in English).
Quackery? Or legitimate?
EDIT - I know 'common cold' is probably not the best thing to judge its merits by so... *meh* Still, considering the availability of medicine, Chinese physicians in certain parts did admirably with what they could get their hands on.
Medicine has the trouble that human body is a difficult thing to cater to. Most modern drug designs need the rule of five to function otherwise they become too lipophilic (or plain up large) to be able to reach their targets. Herbal medicines (the main... and probably only, area of alt-med that I advocate) primarily are water based, but they suffer from a lack of efficacy. Where they are easily absorbed by tissues, they are easily dispelled for the same reasons. Thus there is a slight impasse... it's why it's rather difficult to overdose on ascorbic acid...
It's why you find that Chinese medicine commonly combines traditional treatments to complement or accelerate that which has been started by "modern medicinal methods".
Currently, as far as BBDs are concerned (blockbuster drugs), the known ones from herbal sources are either for low level conditions (mild infections etc.) or are preventative (since western medicine is a little too obsessed with curing, as opposed to avoiding) that they don't perceive much of a market for them beyond fad status. The only one that comes to mind is a Japanese developed anti-cancer drug... can't remember what it is, though it's been in development since the nineties... :/Catchy Slogan said:This can pretty much sum up my thoughts about homeopathy and alternate medicines.
Alternative medicine always seems a little... fake to me.
If they did have such an effect, and worked so well, then the cynical part of me would have a hard time believing that all the big pharmaceutical companies wouldn't be jumping at the chance to patent that crap and sell it for profit.