FatPhil
Senior Member.
I can't say I'd heard of her before today, I grew out of Freakonomics when I was about a third of the way through their first book, and I think they're the ones who have given her much of her publicity. However, the last few nights have been mostly sleepless and I've been doing a lot of reading - much of it on Andrew Gelman's blog ( https://statmodeling.stat.columbia.edu/ - but don't follow that link, he cross-links everything, so once you're in, it's like the La Brea tar pits). Several hundred dendritic clicks into this extravaganza, I finally reached this externally-linked article:
Most of what he described was just common-or-garden psych woo, stuff that can be easily face-palmed into non-existence, but when I reached the paragraphs where it sounded like actual harm could occur, I thought it was worth popping the link here; she's clearly a serial pseudo-academic bunk-source, and clearly she's potentially harmful. For context, perceptions of time seem to be her thang - if the clock on the wall is set to advance quickly, your bruise will heal quicker (sorry, that's paraphrase, I'm trying to be brief and cut to the chase, the harmless dumb ones are not the important ones), and much more:
Technically, there could be a "Freakonomics" /People Debunked/ thread! (maybe there is, I've not checked!)
https://www.skeptic.org.uk/2024/06/...oubt-ellen-langers-mind-over-matter-miracles/External Quote:Hotels and houseplants: why we should doubt Ellen Langer's mind-over-matter miracles
By Mike Hall 26th June 2024
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Most of what he described was just common-or-garden psych woo, stuff that can be easily face-palmed into non-existence, but when I reached the paragraphs where it sounded like actual harm could occur, I thought it was worth popping the link here; she's clearly a serial pseudo-academic bunk-source, and clearly she's potentially harmful. For context, perceptions of time seem to be her thang - if the clock on the wall is set to advance quickly, your bruise will heal quicker (sorry, that's paraphrase, I'm trying to be brief and cut to the chase, the harmless dumb ones are not the important ones), and much more:
I was lead to that article from the "this recent post" link in Gelman's blog here:External Quote:Perhaps of even greater concern is the work Langer has not published. In an interview for the New York Times in 2014, Langer spoke about applying her 'Counterclockwise' method to cancer patients. Her proposed study would have twenty-four women with Stage 4 breast cancer taken to a private resort in Mexico, outfitted to resemble 2003. The women would be encouraged to behave as if it were 2003, as if they did not have cancer, with the environment around them designed to reinforce that. After a week, measurements would be taken to see if their tumours had shrunk, and to check for other biological markers of cancer.
I don't know if this study ever went ahead. According to the New York Times, the study was set to commence in spring of 2015 – but at the time of writing no results have been published.
Other unpublished studies include one in which Langer claims to have found that breast cancer survivors who describe themselves as 'in remission' showed poorer health than those who described themselves as 'cured'. Another study, described as being 'in progress' in the New York Times interview, asks if mindfulness can stem the progression of prostate cancer.
https://statmodeling.stat.columbia....-in-a-good-way-jeez-these-guys-are-credulous/External Quote:Freakonomics does it again (not in a good way). Jeez, these guys are credulous:
Posted on October 28, 2024 9:43 AM by Andrew
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LEVITT: I've read the work of many scholars and I can honestly say that you win the prize for the body of research that most consistently finds results that are completely the opposite of what I would have predicted. You and I have completely different models of how the world works. And the data keep supporting your model. . . .
That's not true! The data don't keep supporting Langer's model. Just for starters, see the two links given above, or this discussion by linguist Mark Liberman from 2009). Or my recent paper with Nick Brown. Or this recent post at The Skeptic.
Technically, there could be a "Freakonomics" /People Debunked/ thread! (maybe there is, I've not checked!)
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