Affiliation:
1. University of Agder Kristiansand Norway
Abstract
Abstract
This special issue explores belief and healing in Late Antiquity, through insight and terminology developed in modern placebo research. My introduction outlines the history of placebo research and its use in historical studies of medicine and healing. It has helped historians pose new questions to their sources and discuss them in light of modern medical research. Most studies analyse various descriptions or records of symptoms or diagnoses, but some researchers also extend their work to include social or anthropological studies of healing. Summarizing insights from such efforts in medical research and the history of medicine, I propose a selection of questions and perspectives from research on the placebo effect to aid and guide the subsequent articles in their examination of their respective sets of sources, as well as facilitate discussion and comparison across our different materials, and often also differing disciplines.
Reference73 articles.
1. Ader, Robert (1997), “The Role of Conditioning in Pharmacotherapy”, in: Anne Harrington (ed.), The Placebo Effect: An Interdisciplinary Exploration, Cambridge, MA, 138–165.
2. Aslaksen, Per M./Bystad, Martin/Vambheim, Sara M./Flaten, Magne A. (2011), “Gender Differences in Placebo Analgesia: Event-Related Potentials and Emotional Modulation”, in: Psychosomatic Medicine 73, 193–199. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e3182080d73
3. Austin, John L. (1971), How to Do Things with Words: The William James Lectures Delivered at Harvard University in 1955, ed. James O. Urmson, Oxford.
4. Benedetti, Fabrizio (2014), “Placebo Effects: From the Neurological Paradigm to Translational Implications”, in: Neuron 84, 623–637. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2014.10.023
5. Benedetti, Fabrizio (2013), “Responding to nocebos through observation: Social contagion of negative emotions”, in: PAIN 154, 1165. doi: 10.1016/j.pain.2013.05.012