Kwayera
Passive-aggressive Mod
Well, ask any expert a question like "explain something really complex, in simple terms" and expect them not to get frustrated.
Riet said:She had cerebral palsy in her knees?
Is it something which is curable in a way other than via divine miracle?Shoubadoo said:Hahahahaha!!, oh my how silly of me. As I wrote it I thought I should change it, but... I didn't.
It's what my friend called it when people asked her about her knees, cause she couldn't be bothered to delve further...and most people also took it as 'cerebral palsy in the knees'! I know it's not correct, I sort of say / write it by habit. I know it's in fact a brain, and not a knee, thing
To be a tad more exact she has a gait abnormality in her knee, being in her sagittal plane.
:]
Haha, nup.Enteebee said:Is it something which is curable in a way other than via divine miracle?
So is it cured or treated? If something treatable appears to be treated... I really don't see what's so special.Haha, nup. It's not curable, only treatable.
I've gotta say, it was pretty freaky seeing her knees hell crippled one moment, and pretty much healed the next.
Typically no. You certainly wouldn't expect a sudden cure if one is available. However, the brain is rediculously complex and there is always the possibility that some function has been 'regained' whilst also being psychologically repressed (say, because one simply assumes that the limb is not functional), thus allowing the function to suddenly be regained. The kind of analagous disorders include pychosomatic blindness or, more generally, Munchausen syndrome. That said, the theory I just outlined, while possible, is fairly far-fetched.Enteebee said:Is it something which is curable in a way other than via divine miracle?
Oh I see now how you meant the question.Enteebee said:So is it cured or treated? If something treatable appears to be treated... I really don't see what's so special.
So do you have any evidence that she:Shoubadoo said:Oh I see now how you meant the question.
It is cured.
It was treatable and treated by medication, before God, as she believes, came along and made it cuurred!
a) It is incurable, so I believe. So the doctors told her. Maybe KFunk good shed some light, he's the one studying medicine. But the doctors did say it was not curable. And by being treatable, her knees were put in knee braces and given plenty of physical and also occupational therapy, but that never cured her to the extent of that one moment of prayer- which healed her knees in an instant. If it was prayer that did this, who knows.Enteebee said:So do you have any evidence that she:
a) Had an INCURABLE disease, i.e. credible medical records
and
b) Credible medical evidence that it has been cured.
If so, you win $100,000, she gets $900,000.
Do you think there would be the evidence i.e. Medical records? If so you truly may be able to win $1,000,000. People say all sorts of shit, so I'm not interested (sorry if that seems rude but it is simply just true...).Shoubadoo said:a) It is incurable, so I believe. So the doctors told her. Maybe KFunk good shed some light, he's the one studying medicine. But the doctors did say it was not curable. And by being treatable, her knees were put in a knee braces and given plenty of physical and also occupational therapy.
b) All I can say is the doctors were amazed when she told them how they were suddenly 'cured'.
Look, I don't know how it happened. Her knees are perfect, her feet almost as, but she said because she was concentrating more on her knees while the preacher prayed, they got the most out of the healing.
I don't know how it worked, if it really is because of a god, or if it's because she believed so much that she willed it to happen? It happend like just like that! It was just crazy, that's all I can say.
Plus, if you're skeptical about that. How would you explain the ear-healing?
It's all very strange.
Still, I think the Christian god is just a bit too fantasy. Perhaps 'god' should just define everyone, and the whole world, in the sense that our creative life-force is 'god', which could justify that she healed herself, and not the Christian God.
Meh, I dunno, the debate over 'god' is never-ending...
I remember seeing this on House MD. Win of an episode.KFunk said:Typically no. You certainly wouldn't expect a sudden cure if one is available. However, the brain is rediculously complex and there is always the possibility that some function has been 'regained' whilst also being psychologically repressed (say, because one simply assumes that the limb is not functional), thus allowing the function to suddenly be regained. The kind of analagous disorders include pychosomatic blindness or, more generally, Munchausen syndrome. That said, the theory I just outlined, while possible, is fairly far-fetched.
No offense taken, I know exactly what you mean.Enteebee said:Do you think there would be the evidence i.e. Medical records? If so you truly may be able to win $1,000,000. People say all sorts of shit, so I'm not interested (sorry if that seems rude but it is simply just true...).
It's really not something I have much knowledge about (so a grain of salt please!). But by extension of what I know about stroke and early childhood brain damage you would expect most lesions to be permanent and relatively incurable. If the damage were very mild then, given the plasticity of the infant brain, a small degree of recovery would be feasible. Then again, most of my reading is more in the cognitive arena and I'm not sure how much of that extends to motor function (on the grounds that motor functions are highly specific - i.e. it's clear what is wrong when they are impaired - whereas the brain can probably mask and compensate for cognitive deficits in more subtle ways).Shoubadoo said:a) It is incurable, so I believe. So the doctors told her. Maybe KFunk good shed some light, he's the one studying medicine. But the doctors did say it was not curable.
I dunno about you guys, but I always do this. I intentionally stare at things and organise them in my head and stuff. Like the tetris effect without tetris,.Kwayera said:The human brain has a powerful ability to see patterns in randomness, even where no patterns exist.
I strongly doubt you'll ever produce real medical evidence of this, nor do I believe what you have seen (cripples being healed) is real either... Have you ever gone over and questioned them critically?Shoubadoo said:No offense taken, I know exactly what you mean.
I was there, I'm not lying. The fact that I'm not a Christian anymore and not trying to shove it down your throats should be proof of that :] (not meant offensively).
But since you're interested in the subject I'll ask her if she has medical evidence and get back to you. I don't know myself, only that the doctors were amazed, so it'd be interesting to find out.
I wasn't there when the woman had her ear healed, but I do believe the person who did it. I've seen other miracles to, they were all at Christian events. Cripples being healed etc. It's all very weird and interesting.
Anywho, I'll get back to you on that one Enteebee
I've heard it hypothesised that this is why we so frequently think we see a person/creature lurking in our peripheral vision when in fact it is just a waving branch or something of that sort.Slidey said:Better to think you see a tiger than to miss a real tiger.