golfbluecustard
Head Pro
Question is in the title - have nearly purchased both - am i missing anything?
"Are these complete a waste of time and money?"
Short answer - Yes!
Lets make sure we know what we are talking about. When we say 'it works', in science or medicine, we really mean that the outcome is mechanistically linked to the intervention by a plausible, if not necessarily fully understand, mechanism. So if I give you a drug that increases strength, and you hit the ball further, that could be said to be a valid effect, and the drug 'works'.
The so-called science underlying these bracelets is complete and utter nonsense, and if you believe in it, you may as well believe in homoeopathy, horoscopes, that the earth moves around the sun and that spacemen built the pyramids too, because they are just as plausible.
People who believe that Trions etc. might work will, by definition, tend to be (apologies to those affected) the more gullible in the first place, otherwise they wouldn't buy them. More gullible people are also more susceptible to the placebo effect, where they perform a selective recall bias to remember the things they think were favourably affected by the voodoo, and forget the stuff that wasn't helped. They are also more likely to favourably respond to stunts like the Power Balance tests which are actually a good example of the effect of practice rather than the band.
Lets make sure we know what we are talking about. When we say 'it works', in science or medicine, we really mean that the outcome is mechanistically linked to the intervention by a plausible, if not necessarily fully understand, mechanism. So if I give you a drug that increases strength, and you hit the ball further, that could be said to be a valid effect, and the drug 'works'.
The so-called science underlying these bracelets is complete and utter nonsense, and if you believe in it, you may as well believe in homoeopathy, horoscopes, that the earth moves around the sun and that spacemen built the pyramids too, because they are just as plausible.
People who believe that Trions etc. might work will, by definition, tend to be (apologies to those affected) the more gullible in the first place, otherwise they wouldn't buy them. More gullible people are also more susceptible to the placebo effect, where they perform a selective recall bias to remember the things they think were favourably affected by the voodoo, and forget the stuff that wasn't helped. They are also more likely to favourably respond to stunts like the Power Balance tests which are actually a good example of the effect of practice rather than the band.
The earth does move around the sun.. thats fact not theory
Lets make sure we know what we are talking about. When we say 'it works', in science or medicine, we really mean that the outcome is mechanistically linked to the intervention by a plausible, if not necessarily fully understand, mechanism. So if I give you a drug that increases strength, and you hit the ball further, that could be said to be a valid effect, and the drug 'works'.
The so-called science underlying these bracelets is complete and utter nonsense, and if you believe in it, you may as well believe in homoeopathy, horoscopes, that the earth moves around the sun and that spacemen built the pyramids too, because they are just as plausible.
People who believe that Trions etc. might work will, by definition, tend to be (apologies to those affected) the more gullible in the first place, otherwise they wouldn't buy them. More gullible people are also more susceptible to the placebo effect, where they perform a selective recall bias to remember the things they think were favourably affected by the voodoo, and forget the stuff that wasn't helped. They are also more likely to favourably respond to stunts like the Power Balance tests which are actually a good example of the effect of practice rather than the band.
The earth does move around the sun.. thats fact not theory