Doug, 

 

Somebody laid the chemtrails thing on me the other day . an otherwise
perfectly sensible neighbor . and I was left standing in the street with my
jaw hanging open.   What do you say when somebody your sort of like, touches
you on the upper arm, points skyward and says, "Call me nuts, but .."  

 

I guess, "You're nuts!"

 

N

From: Friam [mailto:friam-boun...@redfish.com] On Behalf Of Douglas Roberts
Sent: Thursday, April 04, 2013 12:14 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Fwd: [New post] The Loud and Clear Message that the TED
Controversy is Sending

 

Well shoot, as long as we're talking about irrational belief sets, how about
if we throw chemtrails into the mix. There is a not insignificant segment of
the US population who fervently believe that "they" are poisoning us, on
purpose.  But only on those days that the jets leave con ... er ...
chemtrails.  No proof necessary, just *look* at those chemtrails.

 

--Doug

On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 11:57 AM, Ron Newman <ron.new...@gmail.com> wrote:

But you're missing the point.:  *something* is working for them if they
believe it is, and is not for you or anyone who doesn't believe it is.  The
question is how does it work?  No, that's not good enough, because it too
easily leads back to premature assumptions.  The question is:  how can
placebo be improved.  Not set aside but improved.

 

On Thu, Apr 4, 2013 at 11:47 AM, glen <g...@ropella.name> wrote:

Barry MacKichan wrote at 04/04/2013 10:29 AM:

> I've heard it is very effective, but only for a time until the
> patient discovers it is a placebo. Call it the Lincoln effect ("You
> can fool all of ..").

A friend of mine announced that she's now getting acupuncture for her
chronic back and neck pain.  There's a zealot in our local CfI
(http://www.centerforinquiry.net/) group who continuously and loudly
shouts about acupuncture being as quackish as homeopathy. (Seriously...
is there anything as quackish as homeopathy?) The tiny amount of time
I've spent looking into acupuncture indicates that it's mostly nonsense
with some slight possibility of truth in regard to certain _pressure_
points and nerve clusters.  But nothing that an evidence-based masseuse
couldn't achieve more effectively.

But I kept my mouth shut and let her talk about how well it's worked so
far.  My dad also used acupuncture for a racquetball associated injury.
 He claimed it worked very well... [ahem] ... even better than his
chiropractor.  I didn't want to introduce any doubt that might interfere
with her placebo effect.

Interestingly, I was trying to apply the Golden Rule in a post-hoc
analysis of my lack of action.  Would I want someone to burst my placebo
effect bubble?  If so, when?  Immediately?  Or perhaps after some window
of time as the placebo effect decays and it bumps up against the hard
biophysical/physiological limits?


--
=><= glen e. p. ropella

I can't get no peace until I get into motion



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-- 
Ron Newman, Founder
MyIdeatree.com <http://www.Ideatree.us> 
The World Happiness Meter <http://worldhappinessmeter.com> 


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-- 

Doug Roberts
d...@parrot-farm.net

 <http://parrot-farm.net/Second-Cousins>
http://parrot-farm.net/Second-Cousins


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