Justlooking
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Day one of nightly application of Tricomin. So far, no noticeable results :lol:
(Aqua)Sodium Methyl Cocoyl Taurat, Sodium
Lauromaphoacetate,cocomidopropyl betaine, acrylates
copolymer,treonine,phosphrous, azelaic acid, niacin, n-carboxyethyl
butyrlc acid, orinthine decarboxylase, calphostin c, Serenoa serrulata
fruit extract, paullinia cupana seed extract, swertia japonica
extract, ginko biloba, camelia sinensis leaf extract, royal jelly,
chinchona succirubra bark extract, coptis japonica extract, gastrodia
elata extract, nasturtium officinale extract, robinnia pseudacacia
flower extract, cymbopogon schoenanthus extract, polygonum multiflorum
root extract, foeniculum vulgare (funnel)fruit extract, retinyl
palmitate, tocopheryl acetate, scorbic acid, magnisium asorbyl
phosphate, calcium pantothenate, magnesium salicylate, zinc gluconate,
rice amino acids, hydrolyzed wheat protein, pantheynl Ethyl Ether,
panthenyl hydroxypropyl, steardimonium chloride, biotin,
polyquaternium-28, hydroxypropyl guar hydroxypropltrimium chloride,
hydrolyzed mucopolysacchrides, saccharomyces(lysate, copper, zinc)
Ferment, superoxide dismutase, lactoferrin, retinyl palmitate
polypeptide phosolipids, corn oligosaccharides, copper oxidase, acetyl
methionine, acetyl serine, amino acyl transferase,
cinnamidopropyltrimonium chloride, peg-150, distearatem, propylene
glycol, peg 45-m, aminomethyl propanol, titanium dioxide, mica,
silicia, disodium EDTA, citric acid, diazolidinyl urea, methylparaben,
propylparaben, fragrance.
Um, I provided references to a number of studies. Those studies represent evidence, my friend. You are free to assess the quality of the evidence that those studies present however you wish, but so far you have not provided a single reason to show that the studies are in any way suspect.Dave001 said:I disagree, and your claim of sufficient evidence is greatly weakened by your failure to provide any.
Take a logic class. Of course a claim by an informed expert is evidence. I mean, you believe that the earth is roughly 93 million miles from the sun, right? Do you think that your belief is a reasonable one? Have you ever measured that distance yourself? Do you know exactly how it is calculated? Have you read and digested the process by which those measurements have been made? Do you understand completely the theories behind those measurements? If not, then you are basing that belief on a claim someone made at some point. And that's perfectly reasonable. In fact, that's how get most of our information.Dave001 said:mvpsoft said:Moreover, at least one minoxidil expert (I suppose) has claimed that minoxidil and CUs work synergistically. I don't know of any studies to support that claim, and I didn't say there were any. I simply stated something to the effect that there is some evidence for that. Informed claims made by experts count as evidence.
(above emphasis mine)
WHAT????? Good Lord! A claim is NEVER evidence of any sort, no matter who makes it.
Dave001 said:mvpsoft said:I really don't see why it is important that you get inside my head. I simply made a claim, you objected, I gave the evidence to support the claim. My psychological or epistemic profile should not be particularly relevant, or even interesting.
[...]
I have no idea what that is in reference to.
My point in asking for citations to copper peptide studies was to find out whether the opinions being expressed concerning their effectiveness were informed opinions, or blind faith.
mvpsoft said:Um, I provided references to a number of studies. Those studies represent evidence, my friend.Dave001 said:I disagree, and your claim of sufficient evidence is greatly weakened by your failure to provide any.
mvpsoft said:Take a logic class. Of course a claim by an informed expert is evidence. I mean, you believe that the earth is roughly 93 million miles from the sun, right? Do you think that your belief is a reasonable one? Have you ever measured that distance yourself? Do you know exactly how it is calculated? Have you read and digested the process by which those measurements have been made? Do you understand completely the theories behind those measurements? If not, then you are basing that belief on a claim someone made at some point. And that's perfectly reasonable. In fact, that's how get most of our information.Dave001 said:mvpsoft said:Moreover, at least one minoxidil expert (I suppose) has claimed that minoxidil and CUs work synergistically. I don't know of any studies to support that claim, and I didn't say there were any. I simply stated something to the effect that there is some evidence for that. Informed claims made by experts count as evidence.
(above emphasis mine)
WHAT????? Good Lord! A claim is NEVER evidence of any sort, no matter who makes it.