rainy
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
@Andy, @Trish, thank you for the welcomes and your replies!
This is such a shame. I feel like by not explaining what the Lightning Process is they are glossing over the pseudoscientific aspects of it. If they actually published their theories it would be possible to look into them and and prove or disprove them, but istead they jusy mystify everthing.
But that isn’t Phil Parker’s view of ME, as far as I understand it. He writes in his book that ME is a physiologial illness, and that the body is in a state of imbalance, where for instance the immunsesystem and digestive system are affected.
I guess the authors could have intended to use the Lightning Process for a different effect than what Phil Parker designed it for, but then they would also be using it for a different purpose than has been done in Lightning Process all these years ME patients have been doing it, and for a different purpose than someone seeking out LP on their own would be getting from their coach. I find it strange that this is not mentioned in the publishing, but I don't know what's usually expected in a publishing.
I guess I'm mostly wondering: by researching a method by someone as pseudoscientific as Phil Parker, are they accepting and adopting his pseudoscience, or does it not matter to them either way?
Wow! Makes my heart hurt.
I’m trying to look for writings from the BPS side for their theories of ME and their explanations of why GET or LP would be recommended as treatments. Maybe I’m wrong, but I feel like it would be easier to argue against these people if I actually had an idea what their theories are, but it almost seems like there are none?
Of course, not knowing what exactly was done means that any attempt to replicate this study is impossible, as it can't be guaranteed that the same process is used.
This is such a shame. I feel like by not explaining what the Lightning Process is they are glossing over the pseudoscientific aspects of it. If they actually published their theories it would be possible to look into them and and prove or disprove them, but istead they jusy mystify everthing.
I'm not so sure that they are based on different theories. GET and CBT are based on the idea that we have false cognitions about the limitations of our bodies, which seems to be very much the same as the broad concept behind the LP.
But that isn’t Phil Parker’s view of ME, as far as I understand it. He writes in his book that ME is a physiologial illness, and that the body is in a state of imbalance, where for instance the immunsesystem and digestive system are affected.
I guess the authors could have intended to use the Lightning Process for a different effect than what Phil Parker designed it for, but then they would also be using it for a different purpose than has been done in Lightning Process all these years ME patients have been doing it, and for a different purpose than someone seeking out LP on their own would be getting from their coach. I find it strange that this is not mentioned in the publishing, but I don't know what's usually expected in a publishing.
I guess I'm mostly wondering: by researching a method by someone as pseudoscientific as Phil Parker, are they accepting and adopting his pseudoscience, or does it not matter to them either way?
This allowed them to pretend the long term trial showed the treatments worked, when in fact it showed they didn't.
Wow! Makes my heart hurt.
As to what theory of ME/CFS the different practices like LP, CBT and GET are based on, in a way that is irrelevant, since none of the theories have any biological evidence base. They just make up theories to justify their treatments and make them sound scientific.
I’m trying to look for writings from the BPS side for their theories of ME and their explanations of why GET or LP would be recommended as treatments. Maybe I’m wrong, but I feel like it would be easier to argue against these people if I actually had an idea what their theories are, but it almost seems like there are none?