The work of Andrew F. Weil is related to these issues, or so I hear. I have not read his recent books, but I've seen his PBS lecture on diet and exercise a few years ago, (Which unfortunately had little affect on my lifestyle, but at least I know fully well how I'm contributing to my own demise! We picks our choices and takes our chances on this spinning wheel.)
I recommend his, The Natural Mind, to anyone interested in issues surrounding drug use, changes in consciousness, the interaction of the body and mind (what a tired old, inaccurate and limited dichotomy that is) with drugs, and vice versa.
In his newer work he asserts an ability of the mind to heal the body. So when it comes to discussing placebo or "the good boy", effect, and forms of "healing" which do not have empirically provable mechanisms easily accessible to mainstream funded science, let alone unfunded independents like Taishon, I understand his work has things to say about all that.
Also I have seen him being slammed/slimed on the internet for being woo and therefore not reputable.
Without having read his work on self-healing, I can't fully endorse him. Or pan him. But he's one of the more renowned commentators on these matters. He is an allopathic doctor who teaches medicine at a university, as well as lecturing and writing for a popular audience.
If anyone has read his recent work, who also maintains a skeptical rationalist attitude on such matters, I'd be very interested in your thoughts about his ideas. And by skeptical rationalist I include being skeptical of rationalism.
Great posts Conrad and Jeff.



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