I may have taken you too literally, but that's how it goes. Proponents of "alternative" "medicine" are making definitive claims about unverified medical and quasi-medical procedures. Therefore it is up to them to prove them; it is not up to me (or the AMA or the FDA) to debunk them.
Let's use an example to better understand what I was getting at:
Please "thoroughly debunk" the claim "Milk is healthy for you." or, If you prefer, the exact opposite "Milk is unhealthy for you." without using any scientific testing as evidence.That claim is not relevant to my argument. I took your post to mean that every asserted claim must be tested scientifically before it can be considered to be debunked. I countered that some claims are false or meaningless from the moment that they are made.
But if we must cling to your example, then I propose this: perform a study of some large number of individuals of similar baseline health, diet, genetic type, and economic standing. From one third of these (determined randomly) withhold milk, substituting it with an indistinguishable placebo. Provide milk to another third as part of their routine diet, and let the other third consume milk in whatever quantity they desire. After some extended period (a year, five years, ten years, whatever) evaluate the relative health of each sample group and compare the results. If a discernable pattern is visible, and if the consumption of milk is the only variable at play, you'll have some good data in support of (or maybe contradicting) your hypothesis.
I should, at this point, underscore the problem of non-specific claims, which are so deliberately vague as to be scientifically worthless. "Acupuncture has benefits" is a good example of such a worthlessly vague statement.
and I offered this government website http://nccam.nih.gov as support.I'm not going to read the whole website, nor should I be required to do so. Since you are apparently familiar with the site's contents, why don't you give me a specific, quoted excerpt wherein the NIH speficially endorses unverified and unverifiable "medical" practices. Absent this, please provide the quoted excerpt that inclines you to conclude that the NIH supports "alternative" "medicine."
With regard to your definition of "phenomena too subtle to be detected", please scientifically explain placebo effect, nocebo effect and spontaneous disease remission.I don't understand the question. Are you asserting that some outside force is at work in these cases? Or are you asking me to define the precise mechanism of each? Sorry, but that's not a reasonable request to make. I could as readily ask you for an equation that specifically defines the functioning of chi or some other hokum.
If you're asking how I think they work in general, I would offer that the first two take advantage of perception, rather than affecting the underlying condition that they're intended to treat or induce. Any effect upon the underlying condition is secondary to the alteration of patient perception, and the effects are usually pain- or comfort-related in any case. For example, no one has ever taken a sugar pill and enjoyed instantaneous healing of a fractured leg.
Spontaneous disease remission is likewise well-documented but poorly understood. Therefore science makes no specific claims about it, other than to declare that it appears to occur. Alternative practitioners leap on this as "proof" that their particular brand of snakeoil is therefore proven to be effective, but that's clearly baloney. It harkens back to the pseudoscientific adage:
if you can't specifically disprove the phenomenon in which I believe, then you have proven it. Garbage, but it is the foundation of "alternative" "medicine."
It is foolish to support any belief that a lack of scientific understanding is the same as an endorsement of a pseudoscientific claim. That's simply a reformulation of the centuries-old (and debunked centuries ago) God-of-the-Gaps argument for the existence of God. Sorry, but it's nonsense.