Wednesday, May 6, 2026

2026 Naturopathic Medicine Week via SUHS and the CSF

here, through the lens of the 2026 CT Final Report, an interrogation via ChatGPT regarding SUHS's NMW post at Instagram:

001. at Instagram, Sonoran University of Health Sciences posted 2026-05-05:

"It’s Naturopathic Medicine Week. At Sonoran University, we’re proud to help shape the future of healthcare through naturopathic medicine. Naturopathic physicians treat the whole person, not just symptoms. Rooted in vis medicatrix naturae, their care blends modern medical science with natural, evidence informed therapies. Through clinical nutrition, botanical medicine, acupuncture, hydrotherapy, and lifestyle focused care, treatment is tailored to the individual. Our students learn this through hands on, patient centered training that prepares them to collaborate across healthcare and support a wide range of conditions. This week, we celebrate a model of care that puts patients first and the next generation of physicians leading the way. [Picture: someone shown doing acupuncture to a person laying supine]."

 SUHS has conveniently edited homeopathy and explicit vitalism out of their portfolio in this language.

002. at SUHS, two pages come to mind:

002.a. their naturopathy principles page with their broad science claim;

002.b. their therapeutic order page entailing their vitalism that is cooked into their therapeutic model; 

003. a ChatGPT interrogation:

003.a. the question or task upon those three SUHS items saved as a single DOCX:

"Through the lens of the findings of the attached PDF Final Report, analyze and evaluate the attached DOCX."

003.b. the answer [in full!]:

"Cullen-Snyder Framework Analysis of the Sonoran University of Health Sciences (SUHS) Materials Scope and Purpose

This analysis evaluates the statements and representations contained in the uploaded SUHS DOCX through the analytical lens established in the attached “Connecticut Naturopathic Licensure Analysis” Final Report. The assessment therefore applies the Cullen-Snyder Framework (CSF) categories of:

  • Epistemic integrity
  • Science camouflage
  • Institutional legitimacy inflation
  • Factuality
  • Sovereignty
  • Unpredictability
  • Mobility
  • Solidarity

The analysis also examines how the SUHS materials reflect, reproduce, reinforce, or operationalize the institutional and epistemic concerns identified in the Final Report.

Friday, May 1, 2026

The Cullen-Snyder Framework (v.1.1) Application #008: NDNR 2026 Vitalism by ND Camp, Science, Ethics, the Fanciful, and Logical Fallacies

here, a little AI-LLM musing upon a recent NDNR article by ND Camp regarding naturopathy's essential vitalism in light of the CSF:

001. so, the 2026-04 ND Camp article:

is here, titled "Why Naturopathic Doctors Recommend Different Treatments: Understanding Individualized Care in Naturopathic Medicine";

002. some Perplexity tasking:

002.a1. first, this task was applied to the short article:

"For the attached PDF by ND Camp, can you generate a report regarding how the contents, claims, and assurances compare with what is known in terms of modern medical science and ethics?  Detail in a table the misuse of scientific language, any fanciful therapeutic and diagnostic ideas shared, and any logical fallacies."

002.a2. the answer:

"This article by Dr. Eli Camp presents naturopathic vitalism as a legitimate medical framework, but it fundamentally conflicts with modern medical science and contains numerous problematic claims, logical fallacies, and misuses of scientific terminology.

Core Scientific and Ethical Issues

The document's central premise—that a non-material "vital force" (vis medicatrix naturae) governs healing—has been rejected by biology since the mid-19th century [the freakin' 1800's!!!]. Vitalism is metaphysical rather than scientific, offering tautological explanations (the body heals because it has healing capacity) that cannot be tested or falsified. Modern medicine understands healing through biochemistry, immunology, and physiology—material processes with demonstrable mechanisms.

The article promotes homeopathy as a valid treatment modality despite systematic reviews showing it performs no better than placebo. Homeopathic remedies are diluted beyond Avogadro's number, meaning they contain no active molecules, violating fundamental principles of chemistry and pharmacology.

Misuse of Scientific Language

The document exploits scientific-sounding terminology while embedding vitalist metaphysics:

Monday, April 27, 2026

2026 Logo Renders Through the ChatGPT 2.0 Imager

here, messing around with logo versions through ChatGPT and my musings:

001. from this 'original' c2025:

002. to these this 2026-04:

002.a. Viking b&w:

 002.b. Viking color:

Friday, April 24, 2026

Reflecting Upon Connecticut Naturopathy: The 2015 Podcast Episode v. the 2026 Report

here, with aid from AI-LLM -land [Perplexity], a compare and contrast / relational analysis between the Episode 009 script from 2015 and the 2026 Final Report:

001. sources:

episode script (Part 1, Part 2a, Part 2b);

2026 Final Report.

002. tasking:

002.a. the interrogative and specifications where:

"How does the podcast episode script PDF that's attached from 2015 covering Connecticut naturopathy relate to the attached Final Report PDF on Connecticut naturopathy from 2026? Include reflection on the naturopathy law that was passed in Connecticut in 2016."

002.b. answer:

"1. Overview: What Each Document Is Doing

  • The 2015 podcast script (Episode 009) is a long-form, first-person critical investigation of Connecticut naturopathy and the 2015 CNPA “modernization” push for prescriptive authority, grounded in the author’s experiences as a former ND student and resident of Connecticut. 
  • The 2026 Final Report is a structured policy analysis of Connecticut’s naturopathic licensure law (Chapter 373) as modernized by Public Act 14‑231 (2014–2016 implementation) using the Cullen‑Snyder Framework, with explicit legislative and regulatory recommendations.

They are separated by a decade, but they are about the same underlying problem: Connecticut’s legal and institutional enabling of pseudoscientific naturopathic practice under a “physician / science” veneer. The 2015 script is the qualitative, narrative, ground-level critique; the 2026 report is the formalized, framework-driven synthesis that treats those same issues as systematic, state‑created harms.
 
2. Core Critiques Shared by Both Documents