Can the Mind Truly Transform Ice into a Blade?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Llamarama
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Ice Matter Mind
AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around a story about prisoners who, blindfolded and believing they were being cut with a razor, experienced bleeding when ice cubes were rubbed on them, raising questions about the mind's influence on physical sensations. Participants express skepticism about the validity of such claims, emphasizing that while the placebo effect is real, the idea that the mind can physically harm the body lacks scientific support. The conversation touches on related phenomena, such as the placebo effect and anecdotal claims like the "magnetic man," which are often viewed with skepticism. Overall, the consensus leans towards disbelief in the original story, suggesting that while the mind can influence perception, it cannot directly cause physical harm or cuts to the body.
Llamarama
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
A friend of mine told me a while ago about this article he read ~50 years ago about some prisoners being blindfolded, told they were going to be cut with a razor, and having an ice cube rubbed on them. Apparently it felt like a razor and because of "mind over matter" the prisoners actually got cut and started bleeding. I've been trying to figure out if this has any basis in an actual article or if my friend is just remembering something badly. Has anybody else heard of this or know where this legend came from? I'm usually pretty good at finding things on the internet, but none of my searches turn up anything, and it doesn't help that a Google search of 'mind over matter + ice' turns up 10 pages of lyrics for Ice-T's song "Mind Over Matter." Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I too have heard and read such claims. In particular, I have even seen psychologists claim the mind over matter business as the "scientific explanation" for alleged cases of stigmata, which in itself qualifies as crackpottery. If this were true, it would be as amazing as the stigmata claim.

As a sideline to this, we have the placebo effect, which we know to be real.
 
I would believe that they would feel the pain and experience the feeling of being cut. But if the mind can indeed cut the body itself it would have to have a means to. What I'm getting at is that there is no organ or tissue under the skin that could exert a force to cut the skin. Either that or we don't know much about the human body...
 
I highly doubt this... it would be a big thing if it were demonstrable. People would put that on youtube in under 9 nanoseconds.

Screenshot or it didn't happen... lol
 
Yeah as bassplayer said I am sure they could've misinterpreted the signals as the brain deals with that however to the fact of actually causing wounds.. the brain does not have a link to EVERY single cell therefore cannot control all the cells in such a way that could cause it to cut.
 
If I stare at an ice cube long enough, I can make it melt! A clear case of "mind over matter".
 
Interesting question perhaps more so because I can not remember answer that I got, for example, on Discovery channel. I think that people can get a rash from immune system and display some reactions.

Btw, isn't it amazing that Chinese man called "magnetic man" who can attract metals and not by magnetic force? Saw it several times on Discovery. My guess is something like static electricity.

:-)

(love magneto)
 
giann_tee said:
Btw, isn't it amazing that Chinese man called "magnetic man" who can attract metals and not by magnetic force? Saw it several times on Discovery. My guess is something like static electricity.

:-)

(love magneto)

Or, perhaps the effect results from boloney?
 
HallsofIvy said:
If I stare at an ice cube long enough, I can make it melt! A clear case of "mind over matter".

I will make a wild leap of faith that when you do this, the ambient temp is above freezing. :biggrin:
 
  • #10
Ivan Seeking said:
I will make a wild leap of faith that when you do this, the ambient temp is above freezing. :biggrin:

You know in this notification email for new replies it says "There may also be other replies," but it would be humanly impossible to talk about the impossible. I believe in magnetic man.
 
  • #11
giann_tee said:
it would be humanly impossible to talk about the impossible.
How deliciously ironic -- your statement disproves itself!
 
  • #12
giann_tee said:
I believe in magnetic man.

Why; because you saw it on TV?
 
  • #13
giann_tee said:
Interesting question perhaps more so because I can not remember answer that I got, for example, on Discovery channel. I think that people can get a rash from immune system and display some reactions.

Btw, isn't it amazing that Chinese man called "magnetic man" who can attract metals and not by magnetic force? Saw it several times on Discovery. My guess is something like static electricity.

:-)

(love magneto)

the trick is to embed a magnet under the skin.


as for the ice cutting trick... i call b.s. it's about as useful a piece of data as reading anecdotes like this:

There is a story that a group of experimenters etched the sigil of the elemental spirit of wind onto a printed circuit board. The board was subject to a high density fluctuating magnetic field (using various frequencies until an effect was noted). After a few minutes of excitation, the wind outside the building took on tornadic velocities and the building collapsed as the wind entity attempted to interphase with the resonator.

maybe next someone would like to debunk the "experiments" shown every week or so an episode of the "Sci-Fi" channel's "Ghost Hunters"
 
  • #14
Proton Soup said:
the trick is to embed a magnet under the skin.

I seriously doubt it.

maybe next someone would like to debunk the "experiments" shown every week or so an episode of the "Sci-Fi" channel's "Ghost Hunters"

They claim to collect various forms of evidence in the form of audio, video, temperature measurements, etc. The most obvious explanation is that all of the interesting evidence is faked. Of course we don't know that to be true.

Note the distinction here: Magneto man, or whatever his name is, could perform in front a university staff any day he chooses. Since this feat of magic is allegedly reproducible on demand, the fact that we haven't seen a scientific paper published is all but proof that it's a hoax.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top