Here's a hint. In prescientific systems of medicine based on religion and mysticism, like TCM, the chaff to wheat ratio is astronomical. https://twitter.com/joandark11/status/1056304907664257025 …
a) You guys need to try to get it through your thick skulls that I am making no such claim. It's Mr Gorski that is making the claim. Please do try to understand. b) I rarely make any claims in any case. c) I do not agree that they always bear the burden of proof.
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If I believed an oracle reading the entrails of a sacrificed goat predicted 9/11 and said prove me wrong, the burden of proof would be on me. If a claim requires magical forces to be plausible like chi, homeopathy, or rhino horn use, then the burden of proof is on the claimant
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Again, listing particular instances where one requires a burden of proof, does not establish the universal claim that one *always* requires the burden of proof. For one thing, it could only pertain to phenomena that could be empirically investigated.
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BTW, that's DOCTOR Gorski: He earned his M.D. at the University of Michigan, AND a PhD. in cellular physiology at Case Western Reserve University, AND completed a surgical oncology research fellowship at The University of Chicago.
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