Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Musing with Perplexity: AI-LLMs, Naturopathy's Vitalism, and Middle School Age Science

here, fleshing out a point I made in the recent ct.gov submission:

001. Perplexity was tasked:

001.a. "If a middle-school aged science student were doing research on naturopathy's vitalism in relation to science with an A.I.-L.L.M., provide what general determination would result in terms of the scientific support for that."

001.b. the answer, in part:

"a middle-school science student using an AI large language model (LLM) to research vitalism in naturopathy would find that vitalism is a foundational idea in naturopathic practice, emphasizing a 'vital force' or innate self-healing property in living organisms. However, scientific consensus holds that vitalism is regarded as a metaphysical or philosophical perspective, rather than a scientifically supported principle. Vitalism in naturopathy. Naturopathy places vitalism at its core, teaching that health arises from a self-organizing, intelligent life force within the body that maintains and restores health. This belief is central to naturopathic theory and therapy, shaping the 'healing power of nature' principle in the field. Scientific Evaluation. Modern science considers vitalism a metaphysical idea, not a testable or evidence-supported hypothesis. Contemporary biology and medicine explain life and healing entirely using physical and chemical processes, leaving no need for a distinct 'vital force'. Critical reviews state that vitalism is 'unfalsifiable' and does not produce scientific predictions or evidence, placing it outside mainstream scientific acceptance [...vitalism] has no scientific support and is not recognized as a valid explanation by current scientific standards."

so, vitalism is central to naturopathy and it is, in scientific terms, irrelevant. Note: it is not merely a belief, it bases actions which happen in-this-here-world while the premise is, being metaphysical, out-of-this-world.  Therein, naturopathy isn't physicianship, essentially, it is metaphysicianship!  That is classically termed sectarian medicine.

002. then Perplexity was tasked:

002.a. "Would educational standards be violated if middle school aged students were taught in a science class that a vital force is an objective fact that survives scientific scrutiny and that engaging in medical practice based on that premise was a sound position?"

002.b. the answer, in part:

"in a typical U.S. public-school context that follows modern science standards, teaching middle school students that a 'vital force' is an objective, scientifically validated fact and a sound basis for medical practice would conflict with how science standards define acceptable scientific knowledge and practice. It would generally be classified as teaching a pseudoscientific claim as if it were established science, which professional science-education organizations explicitly discourage in science classes [...] national science-teaching bodies also state that science classes should focus on scientific methods and explanations 'to the exclusion of nonscientific or pseudoscientific methods,explanations, and generalizations.' Middle-school curricula often explicitly distinguish science from pseudoscience and emphasize that claims must be grounded in evidence rather than authority or belief [...] if vitalism were discussed at all in a standards-aligned middle school curriculum, it would generally be as a historical concept that was once proposed and later rejected or abandoned as evidence accumulated, or, as an example used to help students understand how science distinguishes testable hypotheses from metaphysical or pseudoscientific claims [...] because vitalism in this strong sense is not supported by contemporary empirical evidence and is typically classified as pseudoscientific or purely metaphysical, presenting it to middle school students in a science class as 'an objective fact' that 'survives scientific scrutiny,' and a sound scientific basis for practicing medicine would misrepresent the consensus status of the idea within biology and medicine. Professional science-education organizations emphasize that teaching nonscientific or pseudoscientific ideas as if they were established science undermines the goals of science education and conflicts with the nature-of-science components of standards." 

hear, hear.  And just as a reminder, it is naturopathy at its North American institutional trunk that states 'that a vital force is an objective, scientifically validated fact and a sound basis for medical practice'.

Monday, November 3, 2025

Science-Failing, CSF-Failing, and Historical-Rejection Tables for My "CGA PHC Testimony #2 - 2025-12-22"

here, a compression of said testimony/petition into tables highlighting science-failing and CSF-failing aspects of naturopathy, and the time span of such failings, plus/yet the ct.gov false claim of it all being science:

001. via Perplexity, the entire "CGA PHC Testimony #2 - 2025-12-22" was evaluated through the task:

"For the attached document on naturopathy, create a scoring rubric table which complies to the following: column 1 title - "parameter" with boxes below being each aspect/parameter measured/judged within the document; column 2 title - "scientific integrity" which will be measured on a scale of 0 to 10 with 10 being the highest in terms of modern scientific preponderance. For each scientific integrity box, provide a specific reason in terms of either science-ejection or science-inclusion." [I may have overridden the rubric aspect of the task with the subsequent directions!]

002. results [the scores are lower than I anticipated!]:

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

CGA PHC Testimony #2 - 2025-12-22 - A Cover Letter, Episode 016, a Q&A Perplexity 'Discussion' - As Archived

here, my last submission of the year to the CGA PHC dated 2025-12-22:

001. the 64-page PDF, the meat of the testimony, consisting of the script and annotations for Episode 016 [blog posts a and b] and some additional Perplexity Q&A [003. below]:

is at Archive.org here in entirety;

002. below is the 12-page cover letter from the submission/upload/testimony, which leads off the document at the above link [aka, 'dear foxes, concerning your over-watch of the hen-house...']. The item is post-dated 2025-12-22 as that was my overall deadline for completion.  All was uploaded to ct.gov on 2025-10-29.

[added note, 2025-11-05: Perplexity informs me that, by way of what is publicly available through bio.s, "3 out of 34 committee members have confirmed public health or healthcare credentials as of the 2025 legislative session." Oh my.]:

"December 22, 2025

Honorable Saud Anwar, Co-Chair

Honorable Cristin McCarthy, Co-Chair

Honorable Committee Members

Public Health Committee

Legislative Office Building, Room 3000

Hartford, CT 06106

Dear Co-Chairs and Members of the Public Health Committee,

This is my second and final submission to the PHC portal as testimony for the year 2025 regarding naturopathy in Connecticut.

This submission, as one PDF, includes: a cover letter, the scripts/transcriptions for two mp3s [available here and here in audio format], and an additional Q and A set.

I appreciate the forum in its limited form [literally], and I’m more than happy to engage by other means in the future.

With this PDF submission, I seek to unify and summarize my research and evaluation of Connecticut and naturopathy as it presently stands.

I must emphasize that my focus in this matter is, for starters, factuality as a constituent aspect of positive freedom as opposed to a certain kind of predetermined and oblivious authoritarianism.

Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Legislating Naturopathy 101 - Florida Naturopathic Bill 2025 "HB 223: Naturopathic Medicine"

here, excerpts from the proposed Florida naturopathy licensing law for AANMC-AANP-CAND type NDs.  Same old false labels and opacity shenanigans!

001. at Florida's legislative site flsenate.gov, regarding "HB 223: Naturopathic Medicine" [full text PDF here; archived here] we're provided in:

001.a. science claim:

"has obtained a passing score on Part I - Biomedical Science Examination and Part II - Core Clinical Science Examination of the competency-based national Naturopathic Physician Licensing Examination administered by the North American Board of Naturopathic Examiners [...]";

beware!  It is, of course, NABNE's NPLEX that falsely labels homeopathy, on that Part II, science. 

001.b. coded vitalism:

"'principles of naturopathic medicine' means the foundations of naturopathic medical education and practice as set forth by the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians or the board and embodied in the education offered by naturopathic doctoral degree programs accredited by, or having candidacy status with, the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education or another accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department of Education or the board, and including all of the following principles: (a) The healing power of nature [HPN]. (b) Identify and treat the causes. (c) First do no harm. (d) Doctor as teacher. (e) Treat the whole person. (f) Prevention [...] 'naturopathic therapeutic order' [TO] means a principle defined by the American Association of Naturopathic Physicians to guide naturopathic doctors in resolving a patient's symptoms and addressing the root cause of a patient's disease while using the least therapeutic force necessary";

of course, HPN is naturopathy's vitalism, coded, and build into their TO.  And so now we're into the blanket label of science upon what isn't.

001.c. definition of naturopathy:

"'naturopathic medicine' and 'practice of naturopathic medicine' mean the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment by a naturopathic doctor of any deformity, disease, injury, pain, or other physical or mental condition using botanical or fungal extracts, clinical nutrition, counseling techniques, dietary supplements, environmental medicine, homeopathic remedies, imaging studies, laboratory testing, lifestyle medicine, natural substances, physical exam, or physical medicine in a manner consistent with the education offered by naturopathic doctoral degree programs accredited by, or having candidacy status with, the Council on Naturopathic Medical Education or another accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department of Education or the board, and applied in a manner consistent with the principles of naturopathic medicine and the naturopathic therapeutic order defined herein";

informed consent be damned! This is not a definition, it is a veneer.  Institutionalizing by licensing...falsehood marches on... 

002. thanks to "David Smith Renews Effort to Fully Legalize Naturopathy in Florida" wherein we're told:

"Rep. David Smith has refiled a bill that aims to repeal Florida’s long-standing restrictions on naturopathy. Smith, a Winter Springs Republican, filed a measure (HB 223) that seeks to establish regulatory frameworks to ensure naturopathic doctors [...] Smith filed an identical measure (HB 533) in the House during the 2025 Legislative Session. Doral Republican Sen. Ana Maria Rodriguez filed a similar measure (SB 470) in the Senate, which was cosponsored by St. Petersburg Democratic Sen. Darryl Rouson. Both measures stalled in committee";