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(2012) Ritual and the moral life, Dordrecht, Springer.

Why the West spurns medical rituals

Griffin Trotter

pp. 75-86

This essay investigates the use of ritual in medicine and argues that the healing power of rituals has been under-appreciated and under-utilized in Western biomedicine, despite its own inventory of medical rituals, because of its commitments to biomedical materialism. The argument hinges on an analysis of the confused Western effort to employ only therapies that heal through "specific" physiologic pathways (rather than through the "non-specific" placebo effect). Non-Western medical traditions that embrace healing rituals would be impoverished were they to uncritically adopt biomedical materialism, with its disdain for "non-specific" pathways (such as rituals) to healing.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-2756-4_5

Full citation:

Trotter, G. (2012)., Why the West spurns medical rituals, in D. Solomon, R. Fan & P. Lo (eds.), Ritual and the moral life, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 75-86.

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