None of these are realistic "examples"; only his website, newsletters and several books (some of which
are listed here).
I saw his website. I don’t really value volume of work if it’s just shouting into the void. The more I look into Ray Peat the more he looks like a quack or a kook.
Sure being rejected by experts may be a sign of a conspiracy by elites who only see things one way, but it also may be a sign that this person’s ideas are deeply flawed.
The only websites I can find really touting Raymond Peat are weird alternative medicine sites and redpill sites, where there is quite a volume of other sites calling his ideas quackery, such as his idea of getting the majority of a days calories from sugars.
There's a few significant figures beyond the peer-reviewed ecosystem which - as excellent as it is - has it's limitations imo. Ray would be one, Katharina Dalton another.
Katharina Dalton seems cool, but I would not describe her as beyond the peer reviewed ecosystem at all. She has published more than 40 peer reviewed articles, with some of them being cited hundreds of times.
She practiced medicine and published peer reviewed articles. Beyond that her work actually has been adopted by the medical establishment (she coined the term premenstrual syndrome, and did pioneering work on postpartum depression).
She makes a good contrast to Ray Peat, because her work was published, she made advances in patient care, and her ideas have propagated through the medical system.
I'd go so far as to say that if their work was applied to drug addiction & recovery there would be substantial progress. From everything I'm seeing on bluelight, theirs is a key element that is missing from the discussion. I've no doubt that private rehabilitation centers have incorporated Rays ideas (which are quite simple & reasonable).
The problem that I have with Ray’s ideas is that you kind of have to take him by his word. What separates him from anybody else shilling nonsense from a self-published book?
I think unfortunately we will have to agree to disagree on Ray’s ideas being a key idea missing on bluelight.
That initial quote that promoted this discussion where Peat criticizes the existence of genes causing disease and compares it to Nazi germany, in context is so ludicrously, sand in the head stupid. I don’t think we are going to agree at all if you think that statement is at all reasonable, and after reading up more on this guy, I don’t think his stuff holds water.
Alternative medicine lacks a feedback system to improve based on its own failings, and lacks any validation system. If there is any merit to it, it tends to be incorporated into mainstream medicine (because doctors and scientists actually do want to treat patients)
Applied to medicine as a whole, Rays work would highlight many dogmas. This would affect the pharmaceutical industry, particularly the "corporate healthcare industry". Many of it's schemes would collapse. By schemes I mean the proliferation of various conditions and treatments. Ray writes:
Yeah and so would Andrew Wakefield’s work on vaccines causing autism [which was proven fraud and caused him to lose his medical license]. Kind of weird how there is overlap between the communities that like Raymond Peat’s teachings and Wakefield’s.
Frankly, I also don’t understand how alternative medicine people always talk about “the corporate healthcare industry” when they are doing the same for-profit things they are decrying, just at a small scale and without regulation.