Liff wrote:Gyrfalcon wrote:While most of what you said is true, it's not comparable to the issue I brought up.
It seems like the point that you brought up was,
Gyrfalcon wrote:I wonder if this is just the result of an author who is extremely skilled in the medical field and simply has little understanding of firearms classifications or ballistics, or if the book is also peppered with medical falsehoods.
It seems like I directly answered the point you brought up.
I don't think you're picking up what I'm laying down. Dig it:
1. There are obvious falsehoods in the medical textbook's discussion of firearms.
2. We know, in this day and age, without any reference to the past, that these statements made about firearms are inaccurate.
3. I was asking if anyone knew, in this day and age, if there are obvious glaring falsehoods in this modern medical textbook about
current medical care protocols. NOT compared to the past, but compared to practices or information in
this particular book that are, today, in this era, obviously contrary to the practices accepted by today's modern medicine.
Gyrfalcon wrote:It's called a "hysterectomy," and it's because "hystera" is Greek for "womb." Add the suffix "ektomia," and it's the cutting out of the womb. So what's the problem with the term "hysterectomy?"
="Liff"]Maybe it is that men physically can not become hysterical? Or what the treatments for hysterical episodes used to be? (Look it up.) Ignorance and sexism at work in the educated medical community that at one point in time, you could reference. You not understanding that point is probably not the fault of sexism.
You indicated that "hysterectomy" was an archaic and sexist term. If it is simply Greek for "cutting out the womb," why is it sexist? "
hystera," meaning simply "womb," predated the term "hysterical," which was coined by a PhD, in much more modern times. Now, if you want to say that "hysterical" is sexist, or that some hysterectomies were performed because of sexist ideas and bad science, I will agree with you. But how can you
possibly claim that "hysterectomy" is itself a sexist term?
You brought up the validity of our resources, specifically that manual. All manuals are flawed, use the best you can find, double check those references with other references and your experience. Be open to changing your mind and admitting "truths" you held are not set in stone.
I do not deny this, and I never asserted it. See above.
Why do I feel like I am playing chess with a pigeon?
Probably because you didn't understand what I was actually asking. And when I asked you a question, you didn't respond to it, but instead responded to some other question that I never asked, which made you even more confused.