It's not about whether the concepts are hard to understand, it's about having specific pieces of knowledge and fitting them together in a specific way.
The question isn't whether or not it's reasonable to expect Biostem to
understand this once it is presented to him. The question is whether it's
appropriate, as opposed to being churlish and pointlessly obnoxious, to condemn him for not having already known it before you said anything.
It is reasonable to expect Biostem to understand the statement "the nerves that govern chronic pain are not nerves that can be safely or easily affected by electrical stimuli,
unlike the nerves in the jaw or in peripheral body parts like the feet." It is not necessarily reasonable to expect him to
already know that and therefore not even need to ask the question "would electrical stimulation work?"
And you were holding the second expectation, not the former.
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Jub wrote: ↑2017-10-12 06:59amI could be wrong, but I don't have any specific formal knowledge on this subject and I know these things so they're clearly not hard concepts.
As for your google search, I'd start by looking at his starting premise. Googling "Electronic pain management dental" where the second suggest result takes me to google scholar (
https://www.google.ca/search?q=Electron ... e&ie=UTF-8). Then I'd do some reading to get an idea of what this system does.
Okay, so if I type in a plausible combination of other words that should produce comparable links... let's say...
dentist electrical pain
...I get a couple of relevant hits. I can refine my search terms or I can just go with those.
https://www.webmd.com/oral-health/contr ... ental-pain
https://www.elsevier.com/about/press-re ... nt-instead
The WebMD article clearly describes the process and gives an accurate description any scientifically literate person can understand... but it says nothing about central versus peripheral nerves.
The Elsevier article is less informative. We can keep looking, and find...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4312687/
...which might be very informative but is written in medical jargon and is
NOT accessible to the average scientifically literate reader in a reasonable amount of time.
It actually links directly to another article on the subject at hand...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11687055
...and then I'd spend a few minutes reading THAT, and so on. It adds up.
So at this point, if you attacked me for asking "gee, what about using electrical stimuli to control chronic pain," you'd be attacking me for not spending fifteen or twenty minutes researching before posting a one-paragraph question on a casual fucking discussion thread, because
CLEARLY I should spend fifteen or twenty minutes researching everything before writing anything. Moreover you'd be attacking me for asking a question that
even the medical community thinks it's worth seriously considering and writing scientific papers on, namely "can electrical stimulation of nerves be used to treat chronic pain?"
So honestly, this standard of "how much research should Biostem have to do before having a right to ask a question somewhere you can see it" sounds less like a fair-minded way to treat other people...
And more like an excuse to say nasty things about other people and assume that just because
YOUR string of Google searches bore fruit rapidly and easily and told you things you may well have already known anyway, another related and comparable string of searches would have done the same so quickly and efficiently that only laziness can POSSIBLY explain why the other person didn't just make those searches.
...
The blunt reality is, Google searches and other tools of auto-didactism are hit-or-miss when it comes to getting accurate, specific information on a subject one has limited understanding of
in a timely manner. The argument that other people should have to put in considerable time wandering the Internet in hopes of maybe getting their answer without "bothering" you by
posting their question on a board you had no obligation to answer or engage with seems absurd.
Every single search result here comes from top of mind phrasing and basic search engine knowledge. I used stiff formal terms knowing that would be more likely to get me scholarly works. This is common sense stuff and I pity the US education system if your average high school graduate couldn't do this if prompted.
I now demand evidence that the average Canadian high school graduate can deduce that electrical stimulation is a poor tool for treating chronic pain
faster than he can write a one-paragraph question inquiring as to whether electrical stimulation is a good or bad tool for treating chronic pain.
Since you seem to think Americans are dumb for not doing that, despite the fact that there exist scholarly journal articles investigating that very question, which suggests it isn't even
slightly obvious.
Who knows? Maybe
you are the one oversimplifying how pain management works, and being arrogant and obnoxious and trying to throw your weight around by calling people 'stupid' for thinking questions are worth asking, when you
incorrectly believe you know the answer.