BrianW
BC
Why would a placebo work? And what does it mean — BrianW
SophistiCat
Tzeentch
What is it specifically about the placebo effect that philosophy of mind ought to address? — SophistiCat
SophistiCat
The fact that the brain has such a large influence on the body lends credibility to the claim that the brain is master over the body. — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
"The brain is master of the body?" Please... — SophistiCat
SophistiCat
This is scientific fact and as far as I know not up for debate. — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
unenlightened
We don't have to be terribly concerned if 4% or 5% of a large experimental group who received a placebo experienced benefit. It's more a mystery when 10 or 15% of placebo recipients experience benefit. — Bitter Crank
What’s the difference between a homeopath and a surgeon? It’s a question that sounds like a joke, and it won’t have many surgeons laughing. Homeopathy is the scientifically implausible idea that diluted substances can somehow treat disease: it has never been shown to work and any effect is, at very best, a placebo effect. It’s a world away from the glinting scalpels and cut-and-dried logic of surgery. See a problem, cut it out, sew it back up. Right?
Well, it is until you start looking for evidence of effectiveness for some operations, and then you’re left thinking that the line between the two is not as clear as you first thought.
BrianW
SophistiCat
bert1
BTW, I am not a medical man, but does anyone else think that "Everything the body does has it's origin in the brain?" That is news to me. — SophistiCat
SophistiCat
So we know that faith healing works, to an extent, and it is supposed to be the foundation of medicine that it works better than faith. But the supposition is faith, and disentangling that faith from 'real' medical benefits is only possible if you question that faith. — unenlightened
BrianW
Moliere
SophistiCat
Tzeentch
BrianW
And this brings us to the placebo. This is an example of the conscious mind influencing the unconscious part of the brain. The conscious action and thought from mind to brain: "I took a pill that will help me." and the unconscious signal from the brain to the body: "We are being helped so calm down/stop whatever you're doing." The reason the placebo-effect is so interesting is because it shows the mind's ability to influence unconscious processes in the body. — Tzeentch
BC
homeopath
See a problem, cut it out, sew it back up. Right?
BrianW
Relativist
The brain is master of the body. Everything that happens inside the body is caused by signals from the brain, and almost all of this happens subconsciously. — Tzeentch
Tzeentch
praxis
SophistiCat
Through the brain, the mind can influence the body, for the body is controlled by the brain. I thought this was generally accepted, but without a connection to the brain(stem), the human body cannot function. — Tzeentch
The reason the placebo-effect is so interesting is because it shows the mind's ability to influence unconscious processes in the body. — Tzeentch
You seem skeptical, but personally I believe the influence of the mind, with practice, can become very significant. — Tzeentch
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