--- In [email protected], turquoiseb <no_reply@...> wrote: > > I, for one, would like to thank Michael David Blitz (whoever > he is) for so effectively demonstrating the truth of my > theory that "the ME is only placebo effect" as expressed in: > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/message/325166 > > Well, *isn't* he essentially dispensing a placebo? If any > actual "study" really was done to "prove" that buttbouncing > in the dome during this coming week had any effect, anyone > who had read this "challenge" would be by definition > disqualified from being able to accurately assess any > changes as reflected in the media. They've been given > an expectation of what to look for, and so naturally that > is what they'll find.
I hope that when I mention "placebo effect" people understand that this is not a negative term, or a negative phenomenon. It's established fact that for some people, the suggestion that they will bet better as the result of something prescribed for them or given to them by someone in a white coat -- even if that something is an inert sugar pill or a tech- nique that does nothing at all -- is *enough*. They WILL get better. That's amazing. What is less understood is how this works, and what makes it work more for some people than for others. Thus I pass along this article, a pointer to what I think is some fascinating research. Some people are more open to the placebo effect than others, and that depends on whether they carry a certain variant of the COMT gene. If they carry the high- dopamine-generating variant of this gene, they are six times more likely to respond to a placebo than people who carry the low-dopamine-generating COMT gene. http://www.livescience.com/24222-placebo-effect-genes.html Go figure. What this makes me wonder about is the larger subject of spiritual experience *itself* as largely the result of the placebo effect. What if the thing that put all of us on a "spiritual path" in the first place was nothing more than toting around a variant gene?
