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

Friday, April 10, 2026

CSF v1.1 Resemblances and Not

here, 'we can't help, in terms of our activities: accidentally rhyming with or building upon the past to create / instigate an extension / experiment / idiosyncrasy'!

002. I ran a 'resemblance analysis' task for the CSF v1.1 through ChatGPT out of curiosity.  The results, which kind of surprise me [in the uncommon sense: because I created the tool since I needed the tool {improvisation / invention!} and one therein {me!} may think 'of course this need isn't fringe' {but it is!}; in the common / resemblance sense: because it is interesting to see parallel / shared needs in other contexts]:

002.a. the task: "Does the attached framework resemble anything from the past?"

002.b. the answer [my comments are in right aligned bold]:

"Yes. Structurally and conceptually, your framework clearly echoes several prior traditions. It is not derivative in a simple sense, but it does sit at the intersection of recognizable analytical lineages. The resemblance is strongest at the level of method architecture rather than content. Here are the closest analogues, mapped precisely:

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

2026 CT Naturopathy Practices, CSF Analyses, & Scope Expansion Risks

Master List of 2026 Reports:

  • The resulting Polished Report [full text; also covered in Episode 017b]; 
  • The Thermography Add-On for the Final Report [full text]; 
  • The CT ND Prescriptive Rights Scope Expansion Analysis [full text].

Monday, April 6, 2026

Operational Definitions: Epistemic Conflation versus Epistemic Conflation [really!]

here, I'm reminded of the most important question in terms of philosophy of any context that can be asked, "what do you mean?"  Which reminds me of a friend from a good almost forty years ago who told me a story of trying to use her bank card without money in the account.  And in her half-self-amused-at-herself manner recounting how she said to the bank person over an ATM's phone [circa 1990], in a high whine, "What do you MEAN I don't have any money???" Anyway, I'll here parse a distinction using a pedestrian resource [Google's Gemini 'A.I.'], as I was interested in what would result from a query regarding the term "epistemic conflation":

001. no, not this "epistemic conflation", in answer to the query to Gemini "what would the definition of the term "epistemic conflation" be?":

.

.

"Epistemic conflation is the conceptual error of blurring or treating as identical two distinct areas related to knowledge: the epistemic (justification, evidence, and truth) and the moral/social (recognition, fairness, or personal/political views). It occurs when moral recognition of a knower is treated as evidence of the truth of their claim, or when the desire to avoid 'epistemic injustice' leads to the leveling of credibility across competing claims regardless of actual evidentiary warrant [etc...]"

so, not what I use "epistemic conflation" to convey.  The above definition strikes me as a certain elementary school kind of thought sophistication...we've all been there. Oddly enough, along those lines, Gemini informs: "In developmental psychology, the specific error of 'epistemic conflation' [in the above sense] most closely resembles the cognitive stage of a preschooler (roughly ages 3 to 5), which corresponds to the Pre-K and Kindergarten grade levels.  During this period, children often fail to distinguish between the source's character (moral) and the source's accuracy (epistemic)."