TheOtherDave comments on Study shows placebos can work even if you know it's a placebo - Less Wrong

8 Post author: ata 24 December 2010 04:09AM

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Comment author: TheOtherDave 24 December 2010 03:56:57PM 4 points [-]

An acquaintance regularly treats headaches by putting two aspirins in his shirt pocket.

He is as bemused by this as anyone, but figures as long as the headache goes away, why should he actually consume the aspirin?

I can't fault his reasoning, though I'll admit to finding it disturbing.

Comment author: jimmy 24 December 2010 07:54:43PM 1 point [-]

I wonder how far he can take it.

If he can't find aspirin, can he write "aspirin" on a piece of paper and put that in his pocket? Can he just imagine doing it? Or can he do absolutely nothing and have it still go away?

Comment author: ata 24 December 2010 08:22:01PM *  4 points [-]

Regarding writing it on a piece of paper: apparently some homeopaths actually do that. (And this is regarded by mainstream homeopaths as superstitious pseudoscience.)

Comment author: DanArmak 24 December 2010 10:00:12PM 11 points [-]

Well it's obviously not homeopathy, since you can clearly distinguish between a piece of paper saying "homeopathic remedy" and a piece of paper saying "ordinary water".

What they need to do is write "homeopathic remedy" on some paper, pulp it with clean paper in a 1/1,000,000 proportion, make recycled paper out of it, and give the patient some of that recycled paper. Without writing anything on it.

Comment author: TheOtherDave 24 December 2010 08:52:08PM 1 point [-]

I've wondered that myself, though I've never asked. I expect he could train himself to eliminate the headaches without the ritual, were he inclined to do so.