A: Touché. (I knew there's examples, MMS being one, I was just curious what, if any, you could name)/
B: Still not any amount of evidence that prayer solves any issues.
As in the article above, testimony from patients that a drug “worked for them” is enough for doctors to note its efficacy - even when they lack scientific proof of how it works or what it does.
Corruption in pharmaceuticals (accepting a paycheck for fraudulent results) is nothing new. Nor is the fraud that is religion.
[–] 26453670? 0 points 2 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago
There’s lots of fraud in religion. Some from ignorance, some from malice. You don’t rely on MSM to deliver truth, why would you accept religion as a conveyor of Truth?
You could certainly call the personal testimony from a praying person a placebo effect. And you would be scientifically accurate.
[–] 26453711? ago
/tips hat to reasonable response.