seems so popular with holistic practitioners that I took a course in
it from Bradley Nelson, D.C. who is lauded as an expert. During the
course I witnessed muscle testing being used by proxy to assess the
health of people miles away. A woman with unexplained pains was
diagnosed with nephroptosis and the chiropractor manipulated her
kidneys (or so it was claimed) back to their correct perches.
I inescapably concluded that muscle testing is a shared fantasy of
the practitioner and the client. It might be a useful tool for
plumbing the depths of some hidden parts of one's mind for those who
find this interesting, but it makes no sense to use it to prescribe
medical treatments.
When a practitioner who practices applied kinesiology comes to our
seminars I offer to set up a double blinded test of their skills. I
have had only one acceptance. We set it up, muscle tested the items
repeatedly, and then unblinded the tests. The results were
completely stochastic.
Precious few people are curious about flaws in their own thinking.
Perhaps they fear that their whole world will unravel.
Vincent
At 07:45 AM 8/16/2008, you wrote:
>My ND's rationale for taking this stuff at this dose: "It muscle tests
>well". Period. Nothing else.
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