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Placebro effect

An event in which a bro who has recently undergone emotional turmoil is put at ease by the mere act of being around his brethren, though in actuality they offer no constructive advice or amelioration of his dilemma. It is oftentimes used in complete substitution of problem solving and leads to the inability to handle trying situations.
Bro 1: "Yeah, last night I found out my girlfriend had been cheating on me. I was bummed at first but then all the guys went and got some Buds and watched 300 so it's whatever."
Bro 2: "You know, the placebro effect is only temporarily useful. Real talk, you're going to have sort out your problems at some point".
Placebro effect by ethersworn November 18, 2011
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placebo effect 

This is mind over matter; when somebody believes that something will happen to his health, it does even when it wouldn't have otherwise. This generally happens when doctors tell patients that their health will improve even though there's no logical reason to believe that; the patients' optimism then helps heal them.
The doctor gave Jimmy sugar capsules and told them it would cure his headaches; it did even though the capsules didn't do anything. Classic placebo effect!
placebo effect by iLikeSoup February 17, 2010

Placebo effect of I.T. 

When a computer fault that has been plaguing a user suddenly disappears at the mere presence of someon who works in I.T.
The "system fault" was resolved using the placebo effect of I.T.

placebo effect 

When you are with people who are doing something, even when you arent doing it, you feel the same effect. It works depending on if you mentally believe in it or not.
Since I'm straight edge, when my friends drink, i use the placebo effect and feel the same as they do.

Placebo Effect Bigotry

A form of bigotry where the placebo effect is weaponized to dismiss, ridicule, or delegitimize healing practices, spiritual beliefs, or subjective experiences that fall outside materialist scientific frameworks. The bigot claims that any reported benefit from alternative medicine, prayer, energy work, or ritual is “just placebo,” implying that placebo effects are unreal, worthless, or a sign of self‑deception. This dismisses the real, measurable physiological changes the placebo effect can produce, while ignoring that much of mainstream medicine also relies on placebo components. Placebo effect bigotry is often used to silence discussions of non‑Western or non‑pharmaceutical healing traditions.
Example: “When she said her acupuncture helped her chronic pain, he sneered ‘that’s just placebo.’ Placebo effect bigotry: using the concept to erase her lived experience of relief.”

Placebo Effect Prejudice

A cognitive bias where one automatically assumes that any benefit from non‑standard treatments or spiritual practices is purely placebo, without investigating mechanisms, context, or patient outcomes. This prejudice dismisses whole traditions as “merely psychological” while ignoring that placebo responses are real neurobiological events. It often operates as a reflexive dismissal: “It’s only placebo, so it doesn’t count.” Placebo effect prejudice prevents open inquiry into how meaning, expectation, and ritual can produce genuine healing—and reinforces a hierarchy where only pharmaceutical or surgical interventions are seen as “real.”

Example: “He refused to consider that her meditation practice reduced her blood pressure, saying ‘that’s placebo effect prejudice—you’re dismissing evidence because it doesn’t fit your model of real medicine.’”

Placebo Effect Violence

Physical, emotional, or institutional harm inflicted under the justification that the victim’s beliefs or practices are “only placebo.” This can include denying a patient access to traditional medicine because it’s “not evidence‑based,” forcing people to abandon spiritual rituals that provide genuine comfort, or mocking and humiliating individuals for using alternative therapies—causing psychological distress, social exclusion, or even worsening health outcomes. Placebo effect violence occurs when the dismissal of “mere placebo” is used to strip people of coping mechanisms, identity, and community support.
Example: “The hospital refused to allow her to have a traditional healer visit, claiming it would be ‘just placebo’—placebo effect violence, denying her cultural care under the guise of scientific rigor.”

Placebo Effect Alienation

A form of social and epistemic alienation experienced by individuals whose healing practices, spiritual experiences, or subjective well‑being are constantly dismissed as “only placebo.” They are made to feel that their own bodies and minds cannot be trusted, that their traditions are worthless, and that they are naive or irrational for finding relief outside approved medical frameworks. Placebo effect alienation often leads to self‑doubt, withdrawal from healthcare, and resentment toward scientific institutions. It is particularly acute for indigenous, religious, or holistic communities whose knowledge systems are pathologized.

Example: “Every time she spoke about her ancestral herbal remedies, she was told it was placebo. She stopped sharing—placebo effect alienation, where systematic dismissal makes you feel your own healing is imaginary.”

Critical Theory of Placebo Effect

The application of Critical Theory to the placebo effect itself—examining how the concept is used, what assumptions it carries, and how it functions in medical and scientific discourse. Critical Theory of Placebo Effect asks: Why is "placebo" often used dismissively? What does it mean that healing can occur without specific physiological mechanisms? How does the placebo effect challenge biomedical orthodoxy? Whose interests are served by treating placebo as "not real" rather than as a phenomenon worthy of study? It doesn't deny the reality of placebo but insists that our understanding of it is shaped by power, by assumptions about what counts as "real" medicine, and by the politics of healing.
"They call it 'just placebo' as if that ends the discussion. Critical Theory of Placebo Effect asks: why 'just'? The placebo effect is real, powerful, and poorly understood. Calling it 'just placebo' dismisses the body's capacity to heal, the mind's role in health, and the complexity of therapeutic relationships. Critical theory insists on asking: who benefits from treating placebo as nothing? And what would medicine look like if we took placebo seriously?"