I never said anything about proving or disproving. People are welcome to believe anything they'd like to on whatever basis they choose to... if you like Chinese medicine, go for it. Think drinking that awful cough medicine will make you feel better? Fine... Want to see a naturopath or chiropractor to perform vertebral subluxation to cure your back pain? Have at it... All of these practices sound very convincing, intuitive, and are almost common sense to billions of people, and I'm glad that professional doctors and scientists reject them regardless of how appealing they sound because none of them can be experimentally verified.
The fact that they are rejected does not mean that they don't work or have been proven to be ineffective, it means that they are not established scientific facts and as such it's absolutely dangerous to have physicians or other scientists promoting ideas as scientific fact or using said ideas as the basis for their professional practice.
The fact that they are rejected does not mean that they don't work or have been proven to be ineffective, it means that they are not established scientific facts and as such it's absolutely dangerous to have physicians or other scientists promoting ideas as scientific fact or using said ideas as the basis for their professional practice.