Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by Retric 4003 days ago
That or Placebo. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Placebo

IMO, if doing a 'pointless' ritual reduces someones dependance on pain medication then it's useful.

2 comments

All anyone should care about is results. If a ritual somehow reduces pain then it can hardly be called "pointless."

The problem is when there are no results. From homeopathic "medicine" that's nothing but water to chiropractors claiming that they can treat allergies, there's a ton of alternative medicine that's just completely baseless.

Pain is an area where weird things can help, because it's ultimately a matter of perception. But that doesn't in any way legitimize the sorts of folks who say they can treat cancer by manipulating your spine.

I'm happy to heap scorn on homeopathy too, but, as you say initially, if results are what we're after, than placebo effect is potentially just as good as allopathic medicine. But yes, it would be asking a lot of placebo effect to cure cancer...
Exactly. You should really stop and do a re-think if you ever find yourself saying, "no, that didn't relieve your pain, it just produced a state observationally indistinguishable from lacking pain!"

Kinda like the people who say "shaving hair doesn't make it come back darker. That's a misconception. It just looks like it does ... when what you care about is looks."