here, musing with Perplexity on Bastyr U., its promises and peculiarities, truthfulness, and monies [see the three bolded red areas for the gist]:
001. I was inspired to muse by way of Perplexity on 'naturopathy harms' due to:
001.a. this new Bastyr University video [uploaded 2025-09-22 and titled "Welcome to Fall Quarter at Bastyr University!"] wherein ND Pizzorno speaks of naturopathy as "science-based natural medicine":
"[at about 33 seconds in he states] We created Bast University with a very clear vision of science-based natural medicine";
now, as I pointed out in recently submitted material to ct.gov, ND Pizzorno is an NUNM graduate, and NUNM is quite clear about the essential vitalism which is the goal of all naturopathic activity and in fact written in coded fashion into the naturopaths' oath. Similarly to 'science-based subset vitalism / the science-exterior', NUNM to this day states that vitalism as life force survives objective observation and scientific scrutiny. Ah, the apple and the tree it fell from!
001.b. and indeed:
BU still claims "science-based natural medicine" upon such things within naturopathy as supernaturalism, homeopathy, vitalism, [and their homeopathic vitalism!].
actually, when asked to find the five most science-divergent aspects of bastyr.edu as a web site in terms of naturopathy, Perplexity states:
"these five areas—homeopathy, constitutional hydrotherapy/vital force stimulation, detox cleanses, craniosacral/visceral manipulation, and spirituality framed as a formal therapeutic modality—are among the clearest examples where Bastyr’s naturopathic program diverges from a rigorously science‑based, mechanism‑ and evidence‑driven standard while still being presented as part of an ostensibly 'science‑based' curriculum."
001.c. now, in the same month as that recent upload of 001.a.:
BU uploaded an admissions video titled "Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine Virtual Information Session" wherein we're shown in a slide that, according to ND Conner their "dean of naturopathic medicine", the central premise of naturopathy -- the vis medicatrix naturae or healing power of nature -- is "analogous to Paracelsus's concept of the archeus."
