This is related to my other thread ("Placebo effect", http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=63574) but somewhat different.
For this thread, please assume that the placebo effect is real; if you want to question that, do so on the thread above.
Supposing that it is - let's define this as "a positive effect experienced by a patient receiving some therapy, in addition to the therapy's physiologic or pharmacologic effect" (nocebo is a negative effect). This can occur with sugar pills (in which case there is no physiologic/pharmacologic effect, just the placebo effect) and with regular therapy also (in which case you get both).
Let us also define skepticism here as not believing something until it is proven, or a general distrust in argument from authority.
Skeptics, one could reasonably conclude, should be less likely to experience placebo effect in most cases.
Therefore, compared to non-skeptics, skeptics should get less of an effect from ALL treatments they get, because they lack the trust that generates placebo effect.
Thus: nonskepticism may well be a healthier and adaptive trait.
(Er, except for the problem of making sure the skeptics are choosing which therapies are administered, so you're not only choosing sugar pills and witch doctors...)
For this thread, please assume that the placebo effect is real; if you want to question that, do so on the thread above.
Supposing that it is - let's define this as "a positive effect experienced by a patient receiving some therapy, in addition to the therapy's physiologic or pharmacologic effect" (nocebo is a negative effect). This can occur with sugar pills (in which case there is no physiologic/pharmacologic effect, just the placebo effect) and with regular therapy also (in which case you get both).
Let us also define skepticism here as not believing something until it is proven, or a general distrust in argument from authority.
Skeptics, one could reasonably conclude, should be less likely to experience placebo effect in most cases.
Therefore, compared to non-skeptics, skeptics should get less of an effect from ALL treatments they get, because they lack the trust that generates placebo effect.
Thus: nonskepticism may well be a healthier and adaptive trait.
(Er, except for the problem of making sure the skeptics are choosing which therapies are administered, so you're not only choosing sugar pills and witch doctors...)
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