Difference between revisions of "Atheists and health care"
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[[File:Gua Sha Massage Aftermath.jpg|thumbnail|center|200px|In the [[Traditional Chinese medicine]] practice of gua sha, the skin is abraded until red spots then bruising cover the area to which it is performed.]] | [[File:Gua Sha Massage Aftermath.jpg|thumbnail|center|200px|In the [[Traditional Chinese medicine]] practice of gua sha, the skin is abraded until red spots then bruising cover the area to which it is performed.]] | ||
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Revision as of 11:58, September 27, 2019
Below are resources related to atheists and healthcare:
Contents
Atheist hospitals
The psychiatric hospital Serbsky State Scientific Center for Social and Forensic Psychiatry, formerly called the Serbsky Institute, was used during the Soviet Union era to engage in “psychiatric terror” against political dissidents.[1] See: Atheist hospitals
Atheist doctors
CBS News reported: "According to a mail-in survey of nearly 4,000 British doctors, those who were atheist or agnostic were almost twice as willing to take actions designed to hasten the end of life."[2] See: Atheist doctors
Atheism and unscientific health practices
Razib Khanm wrote at Discover Magazine:
| “ | ...the most secular nations in the world are those of East Asia, in particular what are often termed “Confucian societies.” It is likely therefore that the majority of the world’s atheists are actually East Asian...
This is not to say that East Asia is necessarily a haven for a critical rationalist perspective, what with the prominence of Chinese medicine, geomancy, Korean shamanism...[3] |
” |
See also: Asian atheism and Atheist population
The atheist, communist dictator Mao Zedong revived and heavily promoted Traditional Chinese medicine in China. He didn't believe in it himself, but pushed it as a cheap alternative to real medicine.[4] See: Atheism and unscientific medical practices
In the Traditional Chinese medicine practice of gua sha, the skin is abraded until red spots then bruising cover the area to which it is performed.
Atheism and infantcide
- ↑ Korotenko, Ada; Alikina, Natalia [Ада Коротенко, Наталия Аликина] (2002). Советская психиатрия: Заблуждения и умысел [Soviet psychiatry: fallacies and wilfulness] (in Russian). Kiev: Издательство «Сфера» [Publishing house "Sphere"]. ISBN 978-966-7841-36-2.
- ↑ https://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504763_162-20014770-10391704.html
- ↑ Most atheists are not white & other non-fairy tales By Razib Khanm, Discover Magazine
- ↑ WHO Endorses Traditional Chinese Medicine. Expect Deaths To Rise by Steven Salzberg, Forbes magazine