Controversies
Some scientists hold that since researchers have been unable to demonstrate the existence of Reiki energy with any certainty, it shouldn't be described as an effective or worthwhile medical practice. Proponents of Reiki claim that they can detect and manipulate this energy, but some scientists claim that if a physical or medical phenomenon has any reliable real-world effects, it should be measurable and observable in rigorously structured studies. Since few scientists feel that Reiki's effects have been demonstrated to any significant degree, most argue that the sensations practitioners of Reiki claim to feel are psychologically subjective or the results of practitioners deceiving themselves with magical thinking.
Many practitioners of traditional Chinese medicine are also skeptical of the claims of Reiki practitioners.
There are others who actively criticize Reiki. For example, many mainstream doctors, academics, and consumer advocates find it disturbing and potentially dangerous that patients with serious diseases like cancer are choosing Reiki over trained doctors. While it is understandable for patients to seek non-mainstream remedies when conventional options seem ineffective or untrustworthy, many doctors say that Reiki, like many other forms of alternative medicine, is simply exploiting the fear and hope of people with serious illnesses while offering no demonstrable help. Reiki practitioners argue that Reiki is a reliable and effective treatment which is being unfairly dismissed by conservative Western scientific researchers, presenting a few cases of actual disease remission as evidence.
There are various religious groups opposing Reiki. Fundamentalists condemn Reiki as promoting pagan practices. Once such group is the Unification Church, which cautions its adherents to avoid Reiki on the grounds that Reiki involves channeling the energy of evil spirits. Some individuals and groups (like Dominicans from the Roman Catholic Church) actively advise believers against it. Some even go as far as to call Reiki a cult, which is seen as an unfair characterization by Reiki adherents as they say that there is no real structure, guru or chain of command in the Reiki community. Critics point to the often substantial fees charged by Reiki practitioners for their teachings as an indication of at least one type of structure.
Some Christian practitioners of Reiki contend that the source of power that is chanelled through them is divine, possibly from the Holy Spirit.
See also: Alternative medicine, Alternative healing, Placebo effect.
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