Optimal thought and optimal fitness through reason, logic, science, passion, and wisdom.
All In Modern Medicine That Is Not Inductive and Integrated Is Wrong
All In Modern Medicine That Is Not Inductive and Integrated Is Wrong

All In Modern Medicine That Is Not Inductive and Integrated Is Wrong

Too much medical research cannot be trusted. As Dr. John Ioannidis says in STEM-Talk podcast #77 (November 20, 2018), too much of “modern medicine“ is not good for human health. (If you don’t like this, you can take it up with John. Or the producers of the podcast.)
 
And too many in modern medicine want to get more and more people wrapped up in and dependent on “medical care.”
 
But, to understand what needs to be done to get things right, he and the interviewers need to study more philosophy, logic, the history of philosophy, and the history of science.
 
We will not address and correct the failures Ioannidis points out until we grasp that science is strictly inductive and integrative. Method matters.
 
Philosophers, scientists, medical researchers, and doctors need to learn what induction really is and need to learn how to integrate knowledge to gain understanding.
 
That is yet to happen. It’s an artifact of our culture and our history.
 
As a start on doing things right, I recommend the chapters on classification, definition, analogy, and induction in The Art of Reasoning by David Kelley.
 
Also recommended (based on the recommendation of some people I trust; I have not read these yet) are Logic: An Introduction by Lionel Ruby and An Introduction to Logic by H.W.B. Joseph.
 
And The Inductive Leap by David Harriman.
 
And biology. Start reading and studying a heck of a lot of biology: zoology, botany, evolution, anthropology, ecology, exercise science. And get out in nature to see it and learn it yourself.
 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *