13 scientific puzzles

Read them here.  My favorite:

Several times a day, for several days, you induce pain in someone [children: do not try this at home]. You control the pain with morphine until the final day of the experiment, when you replace the morphine with saline solution. Guess what? The saline takes the pain away.

This is the placebo effect: somehow, sometimes, a whole lot of nothing can be very powerful. Except it’s not quite nothing. When Fabrizio Benedetti of the University of Turin in Italy carried out the above experiment, he added a final twist by adding naloxone, a drug that blocks the effects of morphine, to the saline. The shocking result? The pain-relieving power of saline solution disappeared.

So what is going on? Doctors have known about the placebo effect for decades, and the naloxone result seems to show that the placebo effect is somehow biochemical. But apart from that, we simply don’t know.

Here is one more puzzle on string theory, courtesy of Craig Newmark.  Or try this one, on what it is like to be watched by a robot.

Comments

Comments for this post are closed