4.1 Article

CONSENSUS IN PLACEBO STUDIES lessons from the philosophy of science

Journal

PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 61, Issue 3, Pages 412-429

Publisher

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1353/pbm.2018.0053

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Irish Research Council-Marie Sklodowska-Curie Award [CLNE/2017/226]
  2. Irish Research Council-Fulbright Scholar Award
  3. Irish Research Council (IRC) [CLNE/2017/226] Funding Source: Irish Research Council (IRC)

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In the relatively nascent field of placebo studies, empirical studies have burgeoned. Yet debate about how to define the terms placebo and placebo effect has not abated. A number of prominent scholars (drawn from medical practice, as well as philosophy, psychology, and anthropology) continue to propose and defend different conceptual models for these terms, and the perception that conceptual debate persists is often given as one justification for new definitions. Paradoxically in spite of this lively debate this article finds considerable underlying agreement about definitional matters within placebo studies. Drawing on key insights from philosophy of science, and by exploring the nature of scientific consensus and normal scientific research, this paper argues that well-developed placebo concepts form the basis for a placebo paradigm and that conceptual disagreement is overstated.

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