Integrative Energy Healing Program at Langara College

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Uploaded by on Jun 19, 2009

Learn more about the Integrative Energy Healing Program brought to you by Holistic Health Studies through Langara College's Continuing Studies.

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Education

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  • This program is so much more than people think. It's the only scienced based program of it's kind.

  • This is truly awful stuff. Langara should be ashamed. Energy Healing is about as scientifically reputable as Voodoo, or a lucky rabbit's foot. It has been thoroughly debunked.

    I blogged about this program a couple of years ago, on my business ethics blog (if you go to the blog and search on "Langara", you'll find my blog entry.)

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  • @EchelonTransmission That's very unlikely. Business Ethics is my area of expertise, and so I make a practice of commenting publicly when I see unethical business practices. I write a blog about business ethics (The Business Ethics Blog.)

  • @ethicsblogger keep your opinions to yourself

  • @EchelonTransmission It's just an opinion that fraud is unethical? Or it's just an opinion that people are being deceived? If the latter, it's a very-well founded opinion. You're talking about something that is physically impossible, and utterly unproven. It's snake oil. It's like selling lucky rabbit's feet to people at a race-track.

  • @ethicsblogger Thats an opinion

  • @EchelonTransmission People make a living all kinds of ways. Selling something that doesn't work is not a good one. People are being deceived, and others are profiting from it.

  • @ethicsblogger People are currently making a living with their degree from this course, they are feeding there families and living a good life. You are being a little nosy to be saying that there money was not well spent. Remember, ethics buddy.

  • @EchelonTransmission That's not true. Taking people's money in exchange for NOT helping them is a bad thing.

  • @ethicsblogger Why are you so concerned about other peoples lives, they arnt harming anyone or anything.

  • @EchelonTransmission Provide evidence, and I'll believe you. Until then, any supposed changes in people's lives are more plausibly interpreted as placebo effect or faulty memory.

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