I don’t believe in chiropractic either, but I go occasionally when I have pains that conventional treatments don’t help. It has probably been 20 years since my last visit, but I’d guess there have been 5-10 occasions when I went for 1 or a few sessions. Sometimes things got better faster than I expected, other times it took as long as I expected doing nothing would.
*The placebo effect is an effect.* There’s no reason to refuse to take advantage of it when other things don’t seem to be working. The big benefit of the placebo effect is that it has few deleterious side effects, so it doesn’t hurt to make use of it, while some drugs aren’t nearly as safe.
I don’t believe in chiropractic either, but I go occasionally when I have pains that conventional treatments don’t help. It has probably been 20 years since my last visit, but I’d guess there have been 5-10 occasions when I went for 1 or a few sessions. Sometimes things got better faster than I expected, other times it took as long as I expected doing nothing would.
*The placebo effect is an effect.* There’s no reason to refuse to take advantage of it when other things don’t seem to be working. The big benefit of the placebo effect is that it has few deleterious side effects, so it doesn’t hurt to make use of it, while some drugs aren’t nearly as safe.
Yes, I guess I’m just wrestling with how it pings both instrumental and epistemic rationality.