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- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!bnr.co.uk!bnrgate!corpgate!news.utdallas.edu!aicklen
- From: aicklen@utdallas.edu (Greg Aicklen)
- Subject: Re: Chi Kung?
- Message-ID: <BxFMDK.94C@utdallas.edu>
- Sender: usenet@utdallas.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: newcastle.utdallas.edu
- Organization: Univ. of Texas at Dallas
- References: <1992Oct28.221529.5394@walter.bellcore.com>
- Date: Mon, 9 Nov 1992 04:41:44 GMT
- Lines: 50
-
- In article <1992Oct28.221529.5394@walter.bellcore.com> kenl@origami.cc.bellcore.com (Ken Lehner) writes:
- >A Chinese-born friend of mine was talking about a remedy his grandmother
- >uses to relieve various ailments (including a broken arm); she is in the
-
- ...
-
- >My friend is an extremely intelligent
- >computer science/EE type, and believes in it. I'm not as smart, and
- >I am skeptical. (He says that, as a child in China, he witnessed an
- >exhibition of this art, in which the master could not be physically touched
- >by those (his students?) around him.
-
- ...
-
- While there have been many studies of home and folk remedies by the medical
- community, there has yet to be and probably never will be exhaustive testing.
- BUT, the general consensus seems to be that most home/folk/paranormal remedies
- operate on the principle that the majority of illnesses heal themselves ...
- treatment often is irrelevant. But that's not why I respond (after all, this
- is certainly not my area)!
-
- I just wanted to pass on the observation that, in the last five years or so
- while I have been in graduate school, I have noticed that the VAST MAJORITY
- of students from China, Taiwan, and India seem to believe (no questions asked)
- in old remedies and mystical ways. I can't count the number of times that
- Ph.D. students (and several professors) with origins in the far east have
- offered me odd remedies for coughs, sore muscles, headaches, etc.
-
- This isn't just a silly bigot's point of view. My two best buddies are far
- easterners and I have been studying the culture and language of China for
- several years, under the supervision of natives. I have had extensive contact
- with the Chinese and Indian community.
-
- Of course, coming from the deep south (Baton Rouge, LA) I have my share of
- relatives that believe in swinging dead cats around in the dark and ... well,
- not that bad, but the remedies that I survived in growing up were pretty
- awesome. Still, the majority of folk from "down home" use asprin and other
- over the counter remedies and see a physician when the going gets tough.
-
- So I am AMAZED at the stories, testimonials, etc. that I hear from my eastern
- pals. Let me make my point clear: skepticism and challenge of authority in
- the area of folk remedies and superstitions (luck, FengShui, etc.) are almost
- non-existant in many of the well educated easterners that I have met in the
- last five years. These guys don't even THINK about asking questions, it's
- just the way things work.
-
- The interesting thing is, they should all fit in well here in the States!
-
- Greg (don't take me TOO seriouly) Aicklen
- aicklen@utdallas.edu
-