#education in homeopathy
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drsauravarora · 10 months ago
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Dose Quantification in Homeopathy
Calling all Homeopaths! Help understanding the clinical of dose quantification! **This Survey is available in different languages** ENGLISH – Link https://bit.ly/dosesurvey हिंदी – https://bit.ly/dosesurveyhin FRENCH – https://bit.ly/dosesurveyfr GERMAN – https://bit.ly/dosesurveyger Dose Quantification in Homeopathy – A Descriptive, Opinion based Survey by IPRH Six years ago, a survey was…
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numberwonclasses · 11 days ago
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mdshahriarkabir-bhms-mph · 15 days ago
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welcomecure1221 · 3 months ago
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The Leap to Similimum: Achieving Precision in Homeopathic Prescriptions
The method of Leap to Similimum is a vital skill for homeopathic practitioners aiming to achieve precise and effective prescriptions. Enlightenment Education courses on this method guide you through the process of identifying the most similar remedy for your patients, ensuring the best possible outcomes. By mastering the art of Similimum, you'll be able to address even the most complex cases with confidence. Our expert instructors provide practical insights and case studies, making this advanced technique accessible to practitioners at all levels. Join us at Enlightenment Education and take your practice to the next level with the Leap to Similimum.
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loubella77 · 5 months ago
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Lizard plant tincture day
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homeopathyclinicbrisbane · 11 months ago
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careermantradotorg · 2 years ago
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The Admission Committee for Professional Undergraduate Medical Education courses will start the special round admission process for Ayurveda (BAMS) and Homeopathy (BHMS) programmes. The offline admission process will be conducted from 8th February to 10th February 2023.
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thosearentcrimes · 9 months ago
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Me for the past week: Damn I really need to focus on writing this paper about revolutionary self-perception in 1789-1794 France. No distractions, just relevant stuff, deadline's coming up.
Instead:
Maria Edgeworth's 1817 novel Harrington contains a vivid evocation of the Gordon Riots, with two unsympathetic characters taken for Papists and finding refuge in the home of the rich Spanish Jew, the father of the young Jewish woman at the centre of the love story.
huh never heard of her I wonder what was up with her
She held critical views on estate management, politics and education, and corresponded with some of the leading literary and economic writers, including Sir Walter Scott and David Ricardo.
that David Ricardo? from economics?
After Honora died in 1780 Maria's father married Honora's sister Elizabeth (then socially disapproved and legally forbidden from 1833 until the Deceased Wife's Sister's Marriage Act 1907)
wait what
The Deceased Wife's Sister's Marriage Act 1907 (7 Edw. 7. c. 47) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, allowing a man to marry his dead wife's sister, which had previously been forbidden.
ok yeah that's pretty much what it says on the tin
The 1907 Act did exactly what it said and no more. It was amended by the Deceased Brother's Widow's Marriage Act 1921 to allow a widow to marry her deceased husband's brother.[36][37] This was a response to First World War deaths to encourage remarriages, reducing war widows' pensions and increasing the birth rate.[37]
the war really did do a lot for gender equality didn't it
anyway what was up with Maria Edgeworth, let's catch up with her
When passing through the village, one of the party wrote, "We found neither mud hovels nor naked peasantry, but snug cottages and smiles all about".[10] A counter view was provided by another visitor who stated that the residents of Edgeworthstown treated Edgeworth with contempt, refusing even to feign politeness.[11]
Ireland moment
Following an anti-Semitic remark in The Absentee, Edgeworth received a letter from an American Jewish woman named Rachel Mordecai in 1815 complaining about Edgeworth's depiction of Jews.[45] In response, Harrington (1817) was written as an apology to the Jewish community.
imagine if Graham Linehan had responded this way to criticism of his transphobic IT crowd episode :)
Rachel Mordecai married widower Aaron Marks Lazarus in 1821, and moved to Wilmington, North Carolina, where she lived for the rest of her life. The Lazaruses had four children together, three daughters and a son, M. E. Lazarus, in a household that also included Mr. Lazarus's seven children from his first marriage.
oh the lady had a son who she named after the author she liked who turned out to be willing to not be anti-semitic, that's nice
Marx Edgeworth Lazarus (February 6, 1822 – 1896) was an American individualist anarchist, Fourierist, and free-thinker.
oh well that sounds nice enough
Lazarus was a practicing doctor of homeopathy
ehhhh
Through his adult life, Lazarus tried to cope with apparent mental and physical disturbances, in particular what seemed to be chronic nocturnal emissions, a condition that at the time was labeled "seminal incontinence" or "spermatorrhea," believed to be detrimental and even fatal to the mind and body. Lazarus sought treatments through homeopathy, hydropathy, and electromagnetic treatments that seemed to bring some temporary relief. He also discussed the condition in his 1852 book Involuntary Seminal Losses: Their Causes, Effects, and Cure," where he suggested that the total sexual abstinence that he had tried to practice might be one of those causes. In 1855, Lazarus shocked some of his fellow Fourierists and free love advocates by marrying a 19 year old woman from Indiana, Mary Laurie (or "Lawrie).[1]
oh... a libertarian...
By the mid-1850s, social movements like Fourierism were in decline, and Lazarus's later life seems to have had less focus. When the Civil War broke out, most members of Lazarus's extended family lived in Southern states and generally supported the Confederate cause. In 1861, Lazarus, was staying with relatives in Columbus, Georgia and joined the local City Light Guard when war broke out, later serving as company physician for the Wilmington, NC Artillery.
on the one hand, obviously very bad to enlist in the Confederate army right, but on the other hand a semen retentionist doing homeopathy to them can't really be classified as "aiding" them can it
After the war, Lazarus continued to practice his areas of medicine and contributed articles and comments to various publications.[5] By his last years, though, he had become a disenchanted recluse known as the "Sand Mountain Hermit" of Jackson County, Alabama.
most normal libertarian
I wonder what those articles and comments are, and what kind of website they're hosted on. Oh.
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homunculus-argument · 2 years ago
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Being from Finland, the concept that almost completely unregulated homeschooling is legal in some places is wild to me. There are people on instagram whose entire education consists of being taught to read by their mom and then told that the Bible is the only book they need, and now these mfs are having their own kids and planning to homeschool them too, with absolute confidence that whatever they know and can teach is just as good if not better than a public school, despite of having literally never stepped foot inside of one.
I'm kind of morbidly fascinated by how many generations this could go down. Whole fucking families born and raised learning less and less but staying just as confident that they are well-educated and well-informed people. Academic homeopathy.
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demi-shoggoth · 1 year ago
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2023 Reading Log, pt 13
I've been putting off writing this one for a while, because all of these books are... fine? I didn't feel very strongly about them any way, either positively or negatively. Plus, I've been strongly burnt out on writing in general, and it's been hard for me to push myself to even write little 100 word blurbs about books.
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61. Strange Japanese Yokai by Kenji Murakami, translated by Zack Davisson. It’s rare that I get the opportunity to read a yokai book originally written in Japanese, seeing as I don’t speak the language, so I jumped on the chance to get a copy of this when I found out it existed. It’s cute, with cartoony artwork and little data file sidebars that remind me of a Scholastic book… except the content is far weirder than what American kids books contain. The theme of the yokai stories here is that a lot of yokai… kind of suck. The stories told about the big hitters, like oni, kappa, kitsune and tanuki, are about them being foolish or having easily exploited weaknesses, and a lot of the other stories are about gross or pathetic yokai more than scary or impressive ones. The book is overall charming, but a very quick read. More of a supplement to other yokai books than a one-stop shop.
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62. Mythical Creatures of Maine by Christopher Packard. This is a bit of an odd duck, seeing as it combines multiple monster traditions (fearsome critters, cryptids and Native American lore) under the same set of covers. It’s a pretty typical A-Z monster book, with some good information about obscure fearsome critters and Wabanaki monsters. There are, however, two things about the book I actively dislike, that keep me from strongly recommending it. The art is terrible. The illustrations by Dan Kirchoff are done in a style I can only describe as “fake woodcuts with flat colors” and are ugly (and in some cases, difficult to decipher). The other is that most, but not all of the monsters, get little microfiction epigrams in the character of Burton Marlborough Packard, the author’s great-great grandfather who worked in the Maine lumberwoods. It’s a weird touch, especially since the epigrams are only a sentence or two, and are typically pretty pointless.
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63. Mushrooms: A Natural and Cultural History by Nicholas P. Money. There have been a number of books about fungi for the educated lay audience that have been published in the last couple of years. This one doesn’t really stand out from the crowd. The photography is nice, and there’s some coverage of the history of mycology and some of the prominent people in the field. But the book isn’t very well organized, bouncing from one topic to another within the same paragraph, and there are a number of passages that feel more like rants (the chapter on culinary uses for mushrooms, for example).
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64. The Lives of Beetles by Arthur V. Evans. This book serves as an introduction to entomology in general, and beetles in particular. It covers core topics like insect body plans, introduces cladistics and covers the evolution, ecology, behavior and conservation of beetles in broad strokes. These strokes feel particularly broad because there are a lot of beetles; much of the book covers groups on the levels of family, which makes it feel a little bit shallow. These are alternated with descriptions of individual species, and this is where the book shines, as it gives good information about both well known species and some pretty obscure ones. The real value of the book, to someone who has been around the entomological block as I have, is in its production values—this book is quite simply gorgeous, and there are lots of nice photos of many different species.
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65. Hoax: A History of Deception by Ian Tattersall and Peter Névraumont. This book has an identity crisis. You would think, with a title like that, that the main topic would be about hoaxes and cons. Some of it is. Some of it is about people who believed what they were pushing, even if it wasn’t true (apocalypse prophecies, homeopathy). Some of it is about misconceptions in archaeology, even if nobody was intentionally lying (the Piltdown Man is an actual hoax. Mary Leakey misidentifying rocks as human artifacts isn’t). And the organization is frankly baffling—it’s arranged in chronological order for some part of a topic, regardless of how much of the chapter is actually about when it’s set. For example, a chapter on fixed games is set at 260 BCE, but spends more of its length talking about modern pro wrestling than gladiator matches. The book is a somewhat bizarre reading experience.
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drsauravarora · 3 months ago
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Excerpts and Therapeutics tips: Clinical Updates in Medical Cardiology with Homeopathy Panel Discussion
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nightguide · 1 month ago
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MEET YOUR COURSE LEADERS/LECTURERS OF THE ORIGINAL CAST OF GLEE
those i don't mention are karmic members of McKinley high (the reason the show ended with a claustrophobic mother of all plot holes that ended humanity with a Gomez leading the UN)
even Angelina Jolie went into hiding cuz of her (fear of nazar, ya Allah)
SANTANA LOPEZ: Ocular sciences (english literature (Master of Research (MRes)
RACHEL BERRY (OBERLIN): student
FINN HUDSON: student
KURT HUMMEL: War design (beauty guru's specialising in dermatology: actually a fashion apprenticeship with heartbreak (Master of Arts (MA)
NOAH 'PUCK' PUCKERMAN: Theosophy (Doctorate)
WILL SCHUESTER: student (choir leader spare time)
SUE SYLVESTER: Gym physics (19)
BLAINE ANDERSON: PSCHE (globalisation foundation degree)
JESSE ST. JAMES: Remedial biology (wood work doctorate)
SEBASTIAN SMYTHE: Cancer therapy (Higher National Certificate)
QUINN FABRAY: Arts and drama sociology (degree theory and masters in homeopathy doctorate)
BRITTANY PIERCE: White collar in past-life therapy (podiatry in biology: superhuman abilities to counter alternate realities Higher National Certificate)
SAM EVANS: Lt. sky high (Epistemology = childcare + bereavement Bachelor of Education (BEd)
ARTIE ABRAMS: Webb Degree associates archivists of the Starless Sea (personality pseudo-webinars in Intranet explorer) X-FILES
MARLEY ROSE: super girl (The Mediator enterprises in Shintoism to Ethical Investing Foundation degree)
TINA COHEN-CHANG: The Aquarian Conspiracy (Homo-Deus Apprenticeship)
LAUREN ZISES: Transactional analysis (Wall-Street immunology in bromatology Master's degree)
BECKY JACKSON: Database systems (in Jehovah's Witness Prognosticum Theologicum post-modernism to Unbroken art movement graduate degree)
MERCEDES JONES: The corpus hermeticum (dance therapy doctorate)
EMMA PILLSBURY: Architecture (Bachelor of Science (BSc)
SHELBY CORCORAN: Artificial sign language for remedial energy (Edgar Allen Poe society for wayward losers Doctorate)
TERRI SCHUESTER (MALONE): immunology in stage presence (Foundation degree)
HARPER OBERLIN: Social arts in Dubai and Brazilian architecture (hons in Universal Credits (UC) for post-graduates jobseekers allowance (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery (MB ChB)
PUSHING DAISIES (RETURNING CAST OF HONOURARY BACHELORS DEGREE):
NED WILSON: THERAPY FOR WAYWARD DIMENSIONAL PLUTONIAN WARGODS (warhammer)
EMERSON COD: X-MEN LEADING CAREERS ADVISOR
CHARLOTTE 'CHUCK' CHARLES: PALMISTRY PHYSIOLOGY IN SOCIAL CARE (diploma of higher education)
OLIVE SNOOK: BROADWAY ELYSIUM (actors hell)
NIGHTINGALES DIALOGUE OF GAIMANS HELL: SINGER SONGWRITERS GUILD
TAYLOR SWIFT: Acupuncture/Shiatsu in Latin: morals (Master's Degree in Law (LLM)
DEMI LOVATO: Alexander Technique in Hebrew: eyes body function (Foundation degree)
SELENA GOMEZ: Aromatherapy in Arabic: algorithm (Diploma of Higher Education)
MATT SMITH: Buddhism in Aramaic: kindness (Doctorate)
HOST CAREERS SERVICE IN TOON-FICTION:
FINN THE UNBROKEN (adventure time): Jake the Dog
more yet to come
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drbased · 11 months ago
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It drives me mad how a typical argument is 'you should be more open minded!' in response to not believing in things like alternative healing, UFOs, etc. I've fortunately not experienced this one IRL but it's a common argument I've seen elsewhere.
First of all, I don't think that being 'open-minded' to, say, homeopathy or dowsing or ghost experiences or fucking sightings of bigfoot is really all the virtue that you're claiming it is. It has very limited real-world application and little to do with my life. So, say I'm open to the possibility that someone really did see an alien: what do I learn from this, and what wisdom do I gain from this? I used to be 'open-minded' to things like that and, if anything, in hindsight it felt like a distraction from developing real, actionable wisdom - and also it meant that I was putting money into the pockets of a people who turned out to be kinda exploitative (I don't think those things are unrelated, by the by).
Second of all, I don't think any of you really know what you mean when you say 'open-minded' - I am open-minded. I watched a very long video on UFOs today and found it fascinating and intriguing. But more importantly, I recognise that a number of things that used to be considered alternative health quackery have since become acknowledged by medical professionals - meditation, the importance of gut health, etc. I do not believe that science is necessarily 'dogmatic', and it is important to be skeptical of how studies are carried out, who is funding them, and how the media interprets them. This isn't a case of either being close-minded and pro-science, or open-minded and pro-whatever-else. But you aren't actually asking us to be 'open-minded' - you're specifically arguing that we should believe what you believe: that's the *opposite* of being open-minded. I'm the real open-minded one, here: I stay skeptical of all things and but also stay open to things that are not proven, including those that are incapable of being proven. Outside of that, I'm not really invested in these things in my day-to-day life. If bigfoot turns out to exist, then I'd be like, hey that's cool - in exact the same way as if scientists bring a predicted element into existence.
But that's kinda the problem: the 'believers' of these things have created an arbitrary split between 'science' and 'not science' when there isn't one, and then decided that we're the ones who believe in science and are close-minded to other ideas. But, in reality, we're merely approaching 'science' and 'not-science' with the exact same principle. Sure, some people are probably too willing to give too much credit to anything accepted by 'science', but that is exactly why I advocate for education in scientific literacy. For a start, 'science' isn't real! 'Science' is a catch-all term for the scientific method, the people doing the method, the results produced, the institutions that champion and collect research, the organisations funding the study, the news article sharing the study's results, etc. etc. There is no uniform body that comprises the totality of 'science' - it's a functionally meaningless term.
I apply 'science' to UFOs as much as I do antibiotics. But to the believers, 'open-minded' means willing to make exceptions so that their personal beliefs are validated. It's insecure, entitled and vain: you're assuming something about me based on criteria you made up specifically to make you seem like the intellectually superior party. You're boring, and people like you are a dime-a-dozen. The human ability to believe in random shit is exactly why we have to have the scientific method in the first place.
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helputrust · 1 year ago
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27.11.2023, लखनऊ | माननीय प्रधानमंत्री श्री नरेंद्र मोदी जी की प्रेरणा से  हेल्प यू एजुकेशनल एंड चैरिटेबल ट्रस्ट द्वारा बाल दिवस 2023 के उपलक्ष्य में, पीपलेश्वर महादेव मंदिर, दीनदयाल पुरम, मायावती कॉलोनी, तकरोही, इन्दिरा नगर लखनऊ में दिनांक 26.11.2023 को आयोजित “नि:शुल्क होम्योपैथिक परामर्श, निदान एवं दवा वितरण शिविर” आयोजन की, दिनांक 27.11.2023 के समाचार पत्र मे प्रकाशित खबर |
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By: Jewish Institute for Liberal Values
Published: Jun 10, 2024
We need to talk about American universities🧵
This is Johannah King-Slutzky, the Columbia grad student who demanded "humanitarian aid" for students protesting Israel on campus.
Have you wondered how a supposedly educated person could make such an absurd and tone-deaf request?
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While many people go to college and receive a rigorous education, it entirely depends on the field of study.
This is Johannah’s focus in school:
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This kind of academic jargon may sound impressive to a layperson, but it is actually intellectually bankrupt.
Jargon is often a hallmark of pseudoscience.
Charlatans frequently use jargon to deceive people into buying their snake oil - a term used to describe a scam.
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Johannah’s academic focus belongs to a family of identity and culture-focused studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences. We call it activist scholarship.
It is a form of snake oil.
Influenced by Marxist Critical Theory and postmodern thought, activist scholarship focuses on power dynamics, and seeks to drive social change. 
Other fields of study advance knowledge objectively, but activist scholarship uses knowledge selectively to advance specific social and political goals.
This approach is unscientific because it starts with a conclusion and looks for evidence to support it, leading to flawed research in areas like race, gender, sexuality, society, and culture. 
It’s commonly assumed that college campuses are bastions of practical, fact-based learning, but it depends entirely on the discipline. Some courses are more focused on promoting specific ideologies than imparting knowledge about the world.
Few understand just how intellectually bankrupt and steeped in pseudoscience that many fields in the Humanities are. 
Some disciplines are designed specifically to breed leftist activists, which are not concerned in objective truth, but in their truth, and how it can be applied to better the lives of the identity groups they deem to be “marginalized.”
This sounds like a noble goal, but it often flies in the face of Enlightenment principles, science, reason, and the pursuit of objective truth.
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==
When I've been saying for years that these "disciplines" are fake, I worry you might think this to be hyperbole or exaggeration. It's not.
However fake you think they are, they're more fake than that. They're as fake as "Jesus' Carpentry Studies," "Homeopathy Studies" or "Realigning Chakras in Pigeons Studies."
They are fully, completely, fake. Fraudulent. Bogus. And these "students" want society to fund it by reimbursing their college fees.
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I'm currently getting treatment for an ingrown toenail. The woman who's treating me is from Ukraine and she told me she used to be a doctor there. She can't work as a doctor in Germany because her graduation isn't recognised here and apparently we don't offer classes she could attend to catch up. So she's getting training as a podiatrist now. While yes, we need those, too, she's terribly overqualified for the job and now has to deal with stubborn patients like me who refuse to wear shoes that don't ruin her toes.
However I strongly question how different the education of Ukraine really is from Germany. If anyone could enlighten me that would be much appreciated. Until then I'll believe the only thing doctors outside of Germany don't learn about is homeopathy and we all know that's just a placebo.
It reminds me of the two young men from Syria that were studying some engineering before they came to Germany. Here they only found work as cleaners at a public pool.
It's so frustrating and embarrassing. Our federal government welcomes them and our state governments throw their hands in the air because they're overwhelmed. I believe they are, but they've also had like 8 years to find better ways. Maybe they don't need the 10th grade report card and curriculum in German of every single immigrant and refugee. Our offices should fucking communicate with each other, upload curriculums of universities, so that every state so they only have to be requested and translated once and if we're going to deport someone maybe we shouldn't wait for 4 years. That makes deportation even crueller.
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