poker news
blondepedia
card room
tournament schedule
uk results
galleries
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
July 18, 2025, 04:50:03 PM
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Search:
Advanced search
Order through Amazon and help blonde Poker
2262307
Posts in
66604
Topics by
16990
Members
Latest Member:
Enut
blonde poker forum
Community Forums
The Lounge
GG news of the World
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
« previous
next »
Pages:
1
...
12
13
14
15
[
16
]
17
Author
Topic: GG news of the World (Read 31806 times)
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #225 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:40:15 PM »
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 02:26:45 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:17:24 PM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 01:46:51 PM
Quote from: neeko on July 29, 2011, 12:51:45 PM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:47:14 AM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 11:46:25 AM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:37:37 AM
And this time they added 2 caveats... Do you think it's because they are big fans of RB and NotW?
I think it's because Brooks and the NotW are as reliable as a Fiat with over 100,000 miles on the clock.
So that's why the BBC added things in defence of them?
The BBC is so fond of being perfectly balanced they could have a discussion on if the world is round and get a bloke from the flat earth society on to argue the opposite and give him equal time.
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 01:04:00 PM
Think that's a pretty poor example, surely the purpose of a debate is to give both sides equal time?
There are also entire websites devoted to how "unbalanced" the BBC is...
No, some sides don't deserve to be given equal time in a debate. If one side presents evidence and valuable input and the other just says "no, don't believe that" with no evidence, etc., then they don't have anything to add.
(NSFW)
(one minute in
)
I agree with him, it is a bit harsh. So overall, I disagree with his Philosophy of Science, it's kind of bad and history has proven it bad. There have been many trials that suggest homeopathy is a load of crap, there have been many trials, by the *very* best scientists that have suggested it works. O'Brian et al's problem seems to be that we cannot see the normal mechanism at play (ie molecular action) therefore it must be wrong. There have been lots of examples in the history of science (including the last 100 years) where if we had rejected something with common sense and *in principle* instead of concentrating on the empirical evidence, we would have been wrong. E.g. quantum mechanics.
I'm calling FOUL here as well, I've yet to see a proper Homoeopathy study where they have passed a peer review on their methods - so I sincerely doubt the *very* (especially when the studies AVOID trying the placebo to check for placebo effect when proper studies do include it).
Very good, the central issue was the placebo effect.
However O'Brien's complaint that 'IT'S JUST WATER' puts him in the same camp as those who rejected the findings on the 'a priori' principle that if you can't demonstrate the same broad mechanism as common medicines (molecular action) it must be crap. To reject based on such a principle is really bad empirical science. If such an approach was valid, quantum mechanics could have been rejected right at the start. eg *Nothing travels faster than the speed of light* *Nothing comes from nothing* *If you know where everthing is and what forces are involved, you can say where everything will be in the next stage*. All common sense assumptions, just like 'molecules are the vehicle of chemical action', all widely held, all wrong.
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #226 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM »
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #227 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:50:19 PM »
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
I've met him, he's a clever man, good degree in mathematics, he knows what he's talking about, just happens to be funny enough to be a comic.
I take issue with your 'homeophathy is a massive load of bollocks' assertion, my friend had arthritis for many many years and took special treated water for just a year and now she is playing volleyball every week. What are you calling this, a fluke? Millions of people take homeopathic medicine, what are you saying, they are all NUTS?
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #228 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:52:15 PM »
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:50:19 PM
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
I've met him, he's a clever man, good degree in mathematics, he knows what he's talking about, just happens to be funny enough to be a comic.
I take issue with your 'homeophathy is a massive load of bollocks' assertion,
my friend had arthritis for many many years and took special treated water for just a year and now she is playing volleyball every week. What are you calling this, a fluke? Millions of people take homeopathic medicine, what are you saying, they are all NUTS?
Yes. "Took specially treated water", indeed. Billions of people "believe" in God, I'll call them all nuts as well until someone can show me that they are not talking complete and utter nonsense.
But thanks for starting the homeopathy thing, I'm sure Kin will be along soon
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #229 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:53:56 PM »
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:52:15 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:50:19 PM
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
I've met him, he's a clever man, good degree in mathematics, he knows what he's talking about, just happens to be funny enough to be a comic.
I take issue with your 'homeophathy is a massive load of bollocks' assertion,
my friend had arthritis for many many years and took special treated water for just a year and now she is playing volleyball every week. What are you calling this, a fluke? Millions of people take homeopathic medicine, what are you saying, they are all NUTS?
Yes. "Took specially treated water", indeed. Billions of people "believe" in God, I'll call them all nuts as well until someone can show me that they are not talking complete and utter nonsense.
Science cannot know everything, human reason is by its nature very limited.
Here is Dara getting it very wrong about the evolution of the eye.
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
neeko
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 1759
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #230 on:
July 29, 2011, 02:55:25 PM »
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:50:19 PM
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
I've met him, he's a clever man, good degree in mathematics, he knows what he's talking about, just happens to be funny enough to be a comic.
I take issue with your 'homeophathy is a massive load of bollocks' assertion, my friend had arthritis for many many years and took special treated water for just a year and now she is playing volleyball every week. What are you calling this, a fluke? Millions of people take homeopathic medicine,
what are you saying, they are all NUTS?
no dont reply dont get involved it is not worth it
damm
Yes - they are nuts
Logged
There is no problem so bad that a politician cant make it worse.
http://www.dec.org.uk
Rod Paradise
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 7647
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #231 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:00:01 PM »
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:40:15 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 02:26:45 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:17:24 PM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 01:46:51 PM
Quote from: neeko on July 29, 2011, 12:51:45 PM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:47:14 AM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 11:46:25 AM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:37:37 AM
And this time they added 2 caveats... Do you think it's because they are big fans of RB and NotW?
I think it's because Brooks and the NotW are as reliable as a Fiat with over 100,000 miles on the clock.
So that's why the BBC added things in defence of them?
The BBC is so fond of being perfectly balanced they could have a discussion on if the world is round and get a bloke from the flat earth society on to argue the opposite and give him equal time.
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 01:04:00 PM
Think that's a pretty poor example, surely the purpose of a debate is to give both sides equal time?
There are also entire websites devoted to how "unbalanced" the BBC is...
No, some sides don't deserve to be given equal time in a debate. If one side presents evidence and valuable input and the other just says "no, don't believe that" with no evidence, etc., then they don't have anything to add.
(NSFW)
(one minute in
)
I agree with him, it is a bit harsh. So overall, I disagree with his Philosophy of Science, it's kind of bad and history has proven it bad. There have been many trials that suggest homeopathy is a load of crap, there have been many trials, by the *very* best scientists that have suggested it works. O'Brian et al's problem seems to be that we cannot see the normal mechanism at play (ie molecular action) therefore it must be wrong. There have been lots of examples in the history of science (including the last 100 years) where if we had rejected something with common sense and *in principle* instead of concentrating on the empirical evidence, we would have been wrong. E.g. quantum mechanics.
I'm calling FOUL here as well, I've yet to see a proper Homoeopathy study where they have passed a peer review on their methods - so I sincerely doubt the *very* (especially when the studies AVOID trying the placebo to check for placebo effect when proper studies do include it).
Very good, the central issue was the placebo effect.
However O'Brien's complaint that 'IT'S JUST WATER' puts him in the same camp as those who rejected the findings on the 'a priori' principle that if you can't demonstrate the same broad mechanism as common medicines (molecular action) it must be crap. To reject based on such a principle is really bad empirical science. If such an approach was valid, quantum mechanics could have been rejected right at the start. eg *Nothing travels faster than the speed of light* *Nothing comes from nothing* *If you know where everthing is and what forces are involved, you can say where everything will be in the next stage*. All common sense assumptions, just like 'molecules are the vehicle of chemical action', all widely held, all wrong.
LOL - But surely to state that *very* best scientist studies have suggested it worked, given that you know the flaws in those very studies, puts you further past the 'trusted opinion on science' pale than Mr O'Brien's bit of deserved (in my view) comic criticism of those charlatans who claim that it works?
And let's face it IT IS JUST FECKING WATER.
Logged
May the bird of paradise fly up your nose, with a badger on its back.
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #232 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:00:43 PM »
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:53:56 PM
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:52:15 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:50:19 PM
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 02:46:45 PM
lol Manuel, you do realise that Dara is not a lecturer, right? He's a comedian, he exaggerates for comedic effect.
On top of which he's obviously right and homeopathy is a massive load of bollocks.
I've met him, he's a clever man, good degree in mathematics, he knows what he's talking about, just happens to be funny enough to be a comic.
I take issue with your 'homeophathy is a massive load of bollocks' assertion,
my friend had arthritis for many many years and took special treated water for just a year and now she is playing volleyball every week. What are you calling this, a fluke? Millions of people take homeopathic medicine, what are you saying, they are all NUTS?
Yes. "Took specially treated water", indeed. Billions of people "believe" in God, I'll call them all nuts as well until someone can show me that they are not talking complete and utter nonsense.
Science cannot know everything, human reason is by its nature very limited.
Here is Dara getting it very wrong about the evolution of the eye.
Damn, and here I was thinking that a one eyed monkey really did hump everything in sight.
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #233 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:09:55 PM »
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 03:00:01 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:40:15 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 02:26:45 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:17:24 PM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 01:46:51 PM
Quote from: neeko on July 29, 2011, 12:51:45 PM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:47:14 AM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 11:46:25 AM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:37:37 AM
And this time they added 2 caveats... Do you think it's because they are big fans of RB and NotW?
I think it's because Brooks and the NotW are as reliable as a Fiat with over 100,000 miles on the clock.
So that's why the BBC added things in defence of them?
The BBC is so fond of being perfectly balanced they could have a discussion on if the world is round and get a bloke from the flat earth society on to argue the opposite and give him equal time.
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 01:04:00 PM
Think that's a pretty poor example, surely the purpose of a debate is to give both sides equal time?
There are also entire websites devoted to how "unbalanced" the BBC is...
No, some sides don't deserve to be given equal time in a debate. If one side presents evidence and valuable input and the other just says "no, don't believe that" with no evidence, etc., then they don't have anything to add.
(NSFW)
(one minute in
)
I agree with him, it is a bit harsh. So overall, I disagree with his Philosophy of Science, it's kind of bad and history has proven it bad. There have been many trials that suggest homeopathy is a load of crap, there have been many trials, by the *very* best scientists that have suggested it works. O'Brian et al's problem seems to be that we cannot see the normal mechanism at play (ie molecular action) therefore it must be wrong. There have been lots of examples in the history of science (including the last 100 years) where if we had rejected something with common sense and *in principle* instead of concentrating on the empirical evidence, we would have been wrong. E.g. quantum mechanics.
I'm calling FOUL here as well, I've yet to see a proper Homoeopathy study where they have passed a peer review on their methods - so I sincerely doubt the *very* (especially when the studies AVOID trying the placebo to check for placebo effect when proper studies do include it).
Very good, the central issue was the placebo effect.
However O'Brien's complaint that 'IT'S JUST WATER' puts him in the same camp as those who rejected the findings on the 'a priori' principle that if you can't demonstrate the same broad mechanism as common medicines (molecular action) it must be crap. To reject based on such a principle is really bad empirical science. If such an approach was valid, quantum mechanics could have been rejected right at the start. eg *Nothing travels faster than the speed of light* *Nothing comes from nothing* *If you know where everthing is and what forces are involved, you can say where everything will be in the next stage*. All common sense assumptions, just like 'molecules are the vehicle of chemical action', all widely held, all wrong.
LOL - But surely to state that *very* best scientist studies have suggested it worked, given that you know the flaws in those very studies, puts you further past the 'trusted opinion on science' pale than Mr O'Brien's bit of deserved (in my view) comic criticism of those charlatans who claim that it works?
And let's face it IT IS JUST FECKING WATER.
If a bunch of bog standard scientists had come up with experimental results that seemed to fly in the face of common sense, reason, and other empirical data, the first things you would suggest would be that their methodology, measurement or results were wrong. Less likely to find these in a near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist with many successful drugs to his name. So instead of attacking his methods, some attacked the very notion that he could be right, since it just appeared to be water. And water has no memory.
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #234 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:15:54 PM »
Quote
If a bunch of bog standard scientists had come up with experimental results that seemed to fly in the face of common sense, reason, and other empirical data, the first things you would suggest would be that their methodology, measurement or results were wrong.
Less likely to find these in a near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist with many successful drugs to his name.
So instead of attacking his methods, some attacked the very notion that he could be right, since it just appeared to be water. And water has no memory.
Name and links to his studies please.
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Rod Paradise
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 7647
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #235 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:21:51 PM »
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 03:09:55 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 03:00:01 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:40:15 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 02:26:45 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:17:24 PM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 01:46:51 PM
Quote from: neeko on July 29, 2011, 12:51:45 PM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:47:14 AM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 11:46:25 AM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:37:37 AM
And this time they added 2 caveats... Do you think it's because they are big fans of RB and NotW?
I think it's because Brooks and the NotW are as reliable as a Fiat with over 100,000 miles on the clock.
So that's why the BBC added things in defence of them?
The BBC is so fond of being perfectly balanced they could have a discussion on if the world is round and get a bloke from the flat earth society on to argue the opposite and give him equal time.
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 01:04:00 PM
Think that's a pretty poor example, surely the purpose of a debate is to give both sides equal time?
There are also entire websites devoted to how "unbalanced" the BBC is...
No, some sides don't deserve to be given equal time in a debate. If one side presents evidence and valuable input and the other just says "no, don't believe that" with no evidence, etc., then they don't have anything to add.
(NSFW)
(one minute in
)
I agree with him, it is a bit harsh. So overall, I disagree with his Philosophy of Science, it's kind of bad and history has proven it bad. There have been many trials that suggest homeopathy is a load of crap, there have been many trials, by the *very* best scientists that have suggested it works. O'Brian et al's problem seems to be that we cannot see the normal mechanism at play (ie molecular action) therefore it must be wrong. There have been lots of examples in the history of science (including the last 100 years) where if we had rejected something with common sense and *in principle* instead of concentrating on the empirical evidence, we would have been wrong. E.g. quantum mechanics.
I'm calling FOUL here as well, I've yet to see a proper Homoeopathy study where they have passed a peer review on their methods - so I sincerely doubt the *very* (especially when the studies AVOID trying the placebo to check for placebo effect when proper studies do include it).
Very good, the central issue was the placebo effect.
However O'Brien's complaint that 'IT'S JUST WATER' puts him in the same camp as those who rejected the findings on the 'a priori' principle that if you can't demonstrate the same broad mechanism as common medicines (molecular action) it must be crap. To reject based on such a principle is really bad empirical science. If such an approach was valid, quantum mechanics could have been rejected right at the start. eg *Nothing travels faster than the speed of light* *Nothing comes from nothing* *If you know where everthing is and what forces are involved, you can say where everything will be in the next stage*. All common sense assumptions, just like 'molecules are the vehicle of chemical action', all widely held, all wrong.
LOL - But surely to state that *very* best scientist studies have suggested it worked, given that you know the flaws in those very studies, puts you further past the 'trusted opinion on science' pale than Mr O'Brien's bit of deserved (in my view) comic criticism of those charlatans who claim that it works?
And let's face it IT IS JUST FECKING WATER.
If a bunch of bog standard scientists had come up with experimental results that seemed to fly in the face of common sense, reason, and other empirical data, the first things you would suggest would be that their methodology, measurement or results were wrong. Less likely to find these in a near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist with many successful drugs to his name. So instead of attacking his methods, some attacked the very notion that he could be right, since it just appeared to be water. And water has no memory.
Sorry - but we're on story time here.
You seem to expect us to believe your story just as you expect us to believe 'near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist' when you have showed your method to be flawed and instead are relying on anecdotal evidence & then crying 'foul they want reality'.
IF your genius chemist used placebos as a control and followed normal scientific controls which are there for a reason then why wouldn't his study be accepted? Did he?
I'd also have trouble trusting a chemist making medical claims, since medicine is not (or should not be) a study of chemistry & biology but should take into account psychology as well. Hence the requirement to test for placebos.
So far Manuel:
Logged
May the bird of paradise fly up your nose, with a badger on its back.
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #236 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:36:04 PM »
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 03:15:54 PM
Quote
If a bunch of bog standard scientists had come up with experimental results that seemed to fly in the face of common sense, reason, and other empirical data, the first things you would suggest would be that their methodology, measurement or results were wrong.
Less likely to find these in a near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist with many successful drugs to his name.
So instead of attacking his methods, some attacked the very notion that he could be right, since it just appeared to be water. And water has no memory.
Name and links to his studies please.
A brit defending the french from attacking germans, who would have thunk it
The Life And Work Of Jacques Benveniste
Was Written Not Only In Water
(1935 – 2004)
Jacques Benveniste is a charismatic man who has a considerable history as a medical research scientist. Born in Paris in 1935, Jacques studied medicine and rose quickly to become a head of clinic at the medical faculty. After training as a doctor and working with cancer patients, he dedicated himself to research. He is committed to one of the most exciting areas of biological research : the communication between cells, especially the cells which make up the human immune system. He has devoted his life to try to discover the pathways between a select group of cells which are activated when foreign substances enter the human body. Throughout his long career, working both in France and the U.S., Jacques Benveniste published more than 300 scientific articles and with the “Platelet Activating Factor” (paf-acether) discovery in 1972, gained an international reputation as a specialist on the mechanisms of allergies and inflammation. From 1973, he was the head of several INSERM (French National Institute of Health and Medical Research) departments and in 1984 was appointed Research Director.
He was responsible for the development of new ways of approaching inflammation including the patenting of an innovative allergy test. Over the last 20 years, the literature has grown exponentially, and Jacques contributed to this significantly. It is difficult to read anything on the subject without finding a reference to his work.
Benveniste's research into allergy has taken him deep into the mechanisms which create such
responses. Understanding that the smallest amount of a substance affects the organism -"A
person can enter a room two days after a cat has left it and still suffer an allergic response"-
led Benveniste in the mid-eighties, to research how very high dilutions appear to have a real and
material effect upon immune system cells called basophils.
He tackling problems that mattered to him, rather than those that were simply fashionable. Of equal importance, Jacques had an amazing intuition and an ear for apparently bizarre phenomena on the margins of medical science, coupled with the ability to bring them to center stage. It was in the mid-eighties, in his Inserm laboratory, that he became interested in hormesis and in the mysteries of high dilutions. This was the beginning of the “water memory’’ saga.
Jacques Benveniste finished his race on October 3rd, 2004 and with him went a good chunk of
scientific creativity.
2
Scientific biography of Benveniste
ACADEMIC CURRICULUM :
- 1951 : Baccalauréat
- 1953–1960 : Medical study at Faculté de Médecine de Paris
Hospital titles:
- 1956 : Externe des Hôpitaux de Paris
- 1959 : Interne des Hôpitaux de la Région de Paris
- 1961 : Interne des Hôpitaux de Paris
- 1967 : Assistant des Hôpitaux de Paris
University degrees :- 1967 : Medical doctor, Faculté de Médecine de Paris, Thesis silver
medal
- 1967-1969 : Chef de Clinique, Faculté de Médecine de Paris
RESEARCH POSITIONS :
1965-1969 : Part-time researcher at Institut de Recherche sur le Cancer, CNRS,
Villejuif (Dr. J.C. Salomon and Prof. W. Bernhardt)
1969-1972 : Research Associate, Department of Experimental Pathology, Scripps Clinic
and Research Foundation, La Jolla, California (Drs C.G. Cochrane and F.J. Dixon)
1973 : Chargé de Recherches, INSERM Unit 25, Hôpital Necker, Paris
1977 : Head of the Research Laboratory on Immediate Hypersensitivity and
Immunopathology, INSERM Unit 25
1978 : Directeur de Recherche 2ème Classe INSERM, INSERM Unit 131, Clamart
1980 : Head of INSERM Unit 200 : Immunology of Allergy and Inflammation, Clamart
1981-1983 : Close consultant to J-P Chevènement, French Minister for Research.
1984 : Directeur de Recherche 1ère Classe INSERM
1995 : Head of Digital Biology Laboratory, Clamart
2004 : Head of NeutrAct Laboratory, Paris
3
Jacques BENVENISTE - Selected publications* :
BENVENISTE J, HENSON PM, COCHRANE CG : Leukocyte-dependent histamine release from rabbit platelets : the role of IgE, basophils and a platelet-activating factor. J EXP MED, 1972, 13:1356-1377.**
BENVENISTE J : Platelet-activating factor, a new mediator of anaphylaxis and immune
complex deposition from rabbit and human basophils. NATURE, 1974, 249:581-582.
BENVENISTE J, LE COUEDIC JP, POLONSKY J, TENCE M : Structural analysis of
purified platelet-activating factor by lipases. NATURE, 1977, 269:170-171.
CHIGNARD M, LE COUEDIC JP, TENCE M, VARGAFTIG BB, BENVENISTE J : The role
of platelet-activating factor in platelet aggregation. NATURE ,1979, 279:799-800.
BENVENISTE J, TENCE M, VARENNE P, BIDAULT J, BOULLET C, POLONSKY J : Semi-synthèse et structure proposée du facteur activant les plaquettes (PAF) : PAF- acéther, un alkyl éther analogue de la lysophosphatidylcholine. C R ACAD SCI PARIS, 1979, 289, série D:1037-1040.**
CHAP H, MAUCO G, SIMON MF, BENVENISTE J, DOUSTE-BLAZY L : Biosynthetic labelling of platelet-activating factor (paf-acether) from radioactive acetate by stimulated platelets. NATURE, 1981, 289:312-314.
DAVENAS E, BEAUVAIS F, AMARA J, OBERBAUM M, ROBINZON B, MIADONNA A, TEDESCHI A, POMERANZ B., FORTNER P, BELON P, SAINTE-LAUDY J, POITEVIN B, BENVENISTE J : Human basophil degranulation triggered by very dilute antiserum against IgE. NATURE, 1988, 333-816-818.
BENVENISTE J, DAVENAS E, DUCOT B., CORNILLET B., POITEVIN B, SPIRA A : L’agitation de solutions hautement diluées n’induit pas d’activité biologique spécifique. C R ACAD SCI PARIS,1991,312,série II:461-466.
BEAUVAIS F, SHIMAHARA T, INOUE I, BENVENISTE J : Anti-IgE induces the opening of non selective cation channels on human basophils. FUNDAM CLIN PHARMACOL, 1994, 8:246-250.
NGUER CM, PELLEGRINI O, GALANAUD P, BENVENISTE J, THOMAS Y, RICHARD Y : Regulation of paf-acether receptor expression in human B cells. J IMMUNOL, 1992, 149:2742-2748.
CALABRESSE C, NGUER CM, PELLEGRINI O, BENVENISTE J, RICHARD Y, THOMAS Y : Induction of high-affinity paf-acether receptor expression during T cell activation. EUR J IMMUNOL, 1992, 22:1349-1355.
4
BEAUVAIS F, HIEBLOT C, BURTIN C, BENVENISTE J : Regulation of human basophil activation. III. Impairment of the inhibitory effect of Na+ on IgE-mediated histamine release in patients with allergic rhinitis. J ALLERGY CLIN IMMUNOL, 1992, 90:52-58.
BEAUVAIS F, HIEBLOT C, BURTIN C, BENVENISTE J : Regulation of human basophil activation. IV. Dissociation between cationic dye binding and histamine release : role of Ca2+ ions. FUNDAM CLIN PHARMACOL, 1992, 6:153-158.
EL AZZOUZI B, JURGENS P, BENVENISTE J, THOMAS Y : Immunoregulatory functions of paf-acether. IX. Modulation of apoptosis in an immature human T cell line. BIOCHEM BIOPH RES COMMUN, 1993, 190:320-324.
BIDET B, LEBOYER M, DESCOURS B, BOUVARD MP, BENVENISTE J : Allergic
sensitization in infantile autism. J AUTISM DEVELOP DISORD, 1993, 23:419-420.
PELLEGRINI O, DAVENAS E, MORIN L, BENVENISTE J, MANUEL Y, THOMAS Y : Stress proteins in human lymphocytes. II. Modulation of stress proteins in a human T cell line. EUR J PHARMAC, 1994, 270:221-228.
EL AZZOUZI B, TSANGARIS G, PELLEGRINI O, BENVENISTE J, MANUEL Y, THOMAS Y : Cadmium induces apoptosis in a human T cell line. TOXICOLOGY, 1994, 88:127-139.
HILLIQUIN P, NATOUR J, AISSA J, GUINOT P, LAOUSSADI S, BENVENISTE J, MENKES
, ARNOUX B : Treatment of carrageenan-induced arthritis by platelet- activating factor (paf) antagonist BN 50730. ANN RHEUM DIS, 1995, 54:140-143.
HILLIQUIN P, HARRAN H, AISSA J, BENVENISTE J, MENKES
: Correlations between paf-acether and tumor necrosis factor in rheumatoid arthritis. SCAND J RHEUM, 1995, 24:169-173.
GUIMBAUD R, IZZO A, MARTINOLLE JP, VIDON N, COUTURIER D, BENVENISTE J, CHAUSSADE S : Intraluminal excretion of paf, lysopaf, and acetylhydrolase in patients with ulcerative colitis. DIGEST DIS SCI, 1995, 40:2635-2640.
KORTH RM, HIRAFUJI M, BENVENISTE J, RUSSO-MARIE F : Human umbilical vein endothelial cells : specific binding of platelet-activating factor and cytosolic calcium flux. BIOCHEM PHARMAC, 1995, 49:1793-1799.
AÏSSA J, HARRAN H, RABEAU M, BOUCHERIE S, BROUILHET H, BENVENISTE J : Tissue levels of histamine, paf-acether and lysopaf-acether in carrageenan-induced granuloma in rats. INT ARCH ALLERGY IMMUNOL, 1996, 110:182-186.
F.Joly, D.Poisson, P.Clauser, J.Akimjak, L. Kahhak, J. Bidault, Y. Thomas, J. Benveniste : Effet du nitrate d'éconazol dans un modèle d'inflammation sous-cutanée chez le rat. La lettre du Pharmacologue, 1995, 9: 125-127.
5
L. Kahhak, A. Roche, C. Dubray, C. Arnoux and J. Benveniste : Decrease of ciliary beat frequency by platelet-activating factor; Protective effect of ketotifen. Inflammation Research, 1996, 45: 234-238.
Y. Thomas, M. Schiff, L. Belkadi, P. Jurgens, L. Kahhak and J. Benveniste : Activation of human neutrophils by electronically transmitted Phorbol-Myristae Acetate. Medical Hypotheses, 2000, 54(1) : 33-39.
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
Manuel
Newbie
Offline
Posts: 40
jammy
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #237 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:40:30 PM »
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 03:21:51 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 03:09:55 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 03:00:01 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:40:15 PM
Quote from: Rod Paradise on July 29, 2011, 02:26:45 PM
Quote from: Manuel on July 29, 2011, 02:17:24 PM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 01:46:51 PM
Quote from: neeko on July 29, 2011, 12:51:45 PM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:47:14 AM
Quote from: kinboshi on July 29, 2011, 11:46:25 AM
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 11:37:37 AM
And this time they added 2 caveats... Do you think it's because they are big fans of RB and NotW?
I think it's because Brooks and the NotW are as reliable as a Fiat with over 100,000 miles on the clock.
So that's why the BBC added things in defence of them?
The BBC is so fond of being perfectly balanced they could have a discussion on if the world is round and get a bloke from the flat earth society on to argue the opposite and give him equal time.
Quote from: Bongo on July 29, 2011, 01:04:00 PM
Think that's a pretty poor example, surely the purpose of a debate is to give both sides equal time?
There are also entire websites devoted to how "unbalanced" the BBC is...
No, some sides don't deserve to be given equal time in a debate. If one side presents evidence and valuable input and the other just says "no, don't believe that" with no evidence, etc., then they don't have anything to add.
(NSFW)
(one minute in
)
I agree with him, it is a bit harsh. So overall, I disagree with his Philosophy of Science, it's kind of bad and history has proven it bad. There have been many trials that suggest homeopathy is a load of crap, there have been many trials, by the *very* best scientists that have suggested it works. O'Brian et al's problem seems to be that we cannot see the normal mechanism at play (ie molecular action) therefore it must be wrong. There have been lots of examples in the history of science (including the last 100 years) where if we had rejected something with common sense and *in principle* instead of concentrating on the empirical evidence, we would have been wrong. E.g. quantum mechanics.
I'm calling FOUL here as well, I've yet to see a proper Homoeopathy study where they have passed a peer review on their methods - so I sincerely doubt the *very* (especially when the studies AVOID trying the placebo to check for placebo effect when proper studies do include it).
Very good, the central issue was the placebo effect.
However O'Brien's complaint that 'IT'S JUST WATER' puts him in the same camp as those who rejected the findings on the 'a priori' principle that if you can't demonstrate the same broad mechanism as common medicines (molecular action) it must be crap. To reject based on such a principle is really bad empirical science. If such an approach was valid, quantum mechanics could have been rejected right at the start. eg *Nothing travels faster than the speed of light* *Nothing comes from nothing* *If you know where everthing is and what forces are involved, you can say where everything will be in the next stage*. All common sense assumptions, just like 'molecules are the vehicle of chemical action', all widely held, all wrong.
LOL - But surely to state that *very* best scientist studies have suggested it worked, given that you know the flaws in those very studies, puts you further past the 'trusted opinion on science' pale than Mr O'Brien's bit of deserved (in my view) comic criticism of those charlatans who claim that it works?
And let's face it IT IS JUST FECKING WATER.
If a bunch of bog standard scientists had come up with experimental results that seemed to fly in the face of common sense, reason, and other empirical data, the first things you would suggest would be that their methodology, measurement or results were wrong. Less likely to find these in a near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist with many successful drugs to his name. So instead of attacking his methods, some attacked the very notion that he could be right, since it just appeared to be water. And water has no memory.
Sorry - but we're on story time here.
You seem to expect us to believe your story just as you expect us to believe 'near Nobel-Laureate genius experimental chemist' when you have showed your method to be flawed and instead are relying on anecdotal evidence & then crying 'foul they want reality'.
IF your genius chemist used placebos as a control and followed normal scientific controls which are there for a reason then why wouldn't his study be accepted? Did he?
I'd also have trouble trusting a chemist making medical claims, since medicine is not (or should not be) a study of chemistry & biology but should take into account psychology as well. Hence the requirement to test for placebos.
So far Manuel:
Excellent post (esp the psychology medicine bit), and nice vid lol. I'm not trying to show he's right as a scientist, I'm trying to show that the reasons to reject him 'a la O' Brien' are wrong. 'The mechanism of medicinal action (and psychological action as well), is *molecular*. We found something that appears to have an effect without a molecular action, therefore reject it. This is the wrong approach. Quantum mechanics is a perfect analogy, it flies in the face of all Classical Physics assumptions, but remains right. You could reject it 'a priori' in just the same way that the 'Memory of Water' is rejected. Shame on you.
Logged
"The problem with Internet quotations is that many of them are not real."
- Abraham Lincoln
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #238 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:49:53 PM »
Oh thanks god, you meant Jaques Benviste's paper. I almost thought you'd found something that wasn't widely proven to be unreliable and, essentially, nonsense
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7505286.stm
sums it up for the not so scientifically minded.
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
boldie
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 22392
Don't make me mad
Re: GG news of the World
«
Reply #239 on:
July 29, 2011, 03:54:36 PM »
Quote from: boldie on July 29, 2011, 03:49:53 PM
Oh thanks god, you meant Jaques Benviste's paper. I almost thought you'd found something that wasn't widely proven to be unreliable and, essentially, nonsense
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7505286.stm
sums it up for the not so scientifically minded.
Oh, BTW..to proof or dis-proof water memory (and let's remember it's up to the scientists to prove it) does not equate to proving (or indeed dis-proving) homeopathy as a whole.
Logged
Give a man a gun and he can rob a bank, give a man a bank and he can rob the world.
Pages:
1
...
12
13
14
15
[
16
]
17
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Poker Forums
-----------------------------
=> The Rail
===> past blonde Bashes
===> Best of blonde
=> Diaries and Blogs
=> Live Tournament Updates
=> Live poker
===> Live Tournament Staking
=> Internet Poker
===> Online Tournament Staking
=> Poker Hand Analysis
===> Learning Centre
-----------------------------
Community Forums
-----------------------------
=> The Lounge
=> Betting Tips and Sport Discussion
Loading...