Bring in a bunch of atheists and give them a placebo painkiller that they know is a placebo. Then put their hands in ice water and record the pain response. Send the control group home, but ask the experimental group to believe as hard as they can in the Flying Spaghetti Monster for the next week. A week later, give everyone another placebo painkiller and another pain test. Hypothesis: intentional religiosity increases the strength of the placebo effect.
Faith might be like a muscle. And it might be possible to deliberately cultivate faith for beneficial purposes.
Here’s an idea science has yet to explore:
Bring in a bunch of atheists and give them a placebo painkiller that they know is a placebo. Then put their hands in ice water and record the pain response. Send the control group home, but ask the experimental group to believe as hard as they can in the Flying Spaghetti Monster for the next week. A week later, give everyone another placebo painkiller and another pain test. Hypothesis: intentional religiosity increases the strength of the placebo effect.
Faith might be like a muscle. And it might be possible to deliberately cultivate faith for beneficial purposes.
As an agnostic spiritual (non religious/non atheist) this would highly peak my interest.
Seem like it wouldn’t even be all that expensive.
The only hard part is getting the atheists to actually believe in the FSM. You might have to ask them to keep a prayer journal.
Pique or peak? https://www.vocabulary.com/articles/pardon-the-expression/pique-my-interest-vs-peak-my-interest/
Mix of both really but that is a cool guide.