Gabriel Cousens is a health writer who describes himself in
the following manner:
“Dr. Sir Gabriel Cousens, M.D., M.D.(H), D.D. (Doctor of
Divinity), Diplomate of American Board of Integrative Holistic Medicine,
Diplomate Ayurveda, a physician of the soul, teaches and lives the sevenfold
peace. To the process of awakening and healing, Gabriel Cousens, M.D., M.D.(H),
weaves a background as a holistic physician,
medical researcher, world-recognized live-food nutritionist, psychiatrist,
family therapist, homeopath,
Rabbi, acupuncturist,
Ayurvedic practitioner,
expert on green juice spiritual fasting and detoxification fasting, ecological leader, Reiki master, internationally celebrated spiritual teacher, author, lecturer,
culture-bridger, world peaceworker, to give a unique holistic approach to
nurturing the hungry soul.”
That ought to tell you quite a bit about what kind of cretin
we are dealing with here. Cousens’s work, in all its glory, centers around New
Age woo and bullshittery (a mixture, it seems, of sycophancy and criticism of
those whose unsupported claims differ from his own – e.g. Johnny Lovewisdom (criticism) and Adi Da (endorsement)). A mainstay of his particular kind of woo is Raw foodism,
and he employs a wide arsenal of crackpottery (particularly the Gerson protocol)
and New Age religious fluffery to prop up his advice, as well as primitive medieval vitalism:
the uncooked baby carrot is “alive”, while the cooked carrot is “dead”; Hence,
cooking and pasteurization “kill” food, and raw food is “living”. Why it would
be an advantage that the carrot is alive is not entirely obvious, but Cousens
does at least have pictures of the auras of energy surrounding the food to
prove it. His rainbow diet is aptly featured here.
Apparently Cousens is the founder of the Tree of Life
Rejuvenation Center, “the world's leading spiritual, vegan raw and live food
retreat center,” and the author of Simply
Raw: Reversing Diabetes in 30 Days, in which he claims that enzymes are
food-qi and that treating diabetes is easy. It is discussed here.
He’s got … anecdotes to
back it all up, endorsements by one Joel Fuhrman – who appears not to know the
first thing about reality – and plenty of thoroughly false and rather
random-sounding assertions. In the accompanying video he does tone down the woo
a little to make it more mainstream (without making it anywhere near
reality-based), but both the video and the “Raw for Life” Encyclopedia on his
website feature “expert” commentaries from Morgan Spurlock, Mike Adams and Gary Null,
which shouldn’t exactly confer much authority to his claims.
Cousens has been involved in a lot of nasty bullshit over
the years, including raising some controversy over his fantastically crankycellular therapy,
and he has been responsible for at least one death,
though according to Arizona’s board of homeopathic medicine (yes they have one)
Cousens wasn’t guilty of malpractice by their standards – “standards of homeopathy” aren’t much to write home about, though.
With one David Wagner Cousens has also written Tachyon Energy: A New Paradigm in Holistic Healing.
No, it is not evidence-based; and yes, it is quantum woo taken just a few steps further.
Diagnosis: A staunch enemy of humanity, Cousens is a monstrous
supercrank who unabatedly continues his campaign to fool people into ruining
their own lines. Repugnant.
Cousens recently made an appearance here.
ReplyDeleteO autor deste artigo ofende quem é diabético e se curou pela terapia pioneira de SIR Gabriel K. Cousens.
ReplyDeleteSo, there are actually no facts in this 'profile' which debate Cousens' ideas on the merits. It begins with a premise that not only are his ideas wrong, his interest in them is not legitimate, and it never goes anywhere else. That is contrary to science and argumentation. Whether you agree or not - something which may be moot until you've done his diet - he does explain his terms at length. He is an actual MD, from a prestigious school, with 5 decades of clinical practice. And he does get amazing results,especially with diabetics. I have critiques, but they are grounded in actual heurism and experiments, not armchair contempt, and not ad hominem laziness.
ReplyDelete