Science, Art, Litt, Science based Art & Science Communication
Yesterday some people asked me whether they can wish dead people 'happy birthdays' and 'happy wedding anniversaries' like others are doing.
There have been numerous studies on prayer. Most of them have a result within the statistical error margin compared to the control group, meaning that any positive or negative effect could well be a random fluke.
Some studies stand out, for instance the Study of the Therapeutic Effects of Intercessory Prayer (STEP) in c...: in this study, patients of cardiac bypass were randomly divided into three groups.
The prayer was standardised like “we pray for the speedy recover without complications of John N” (given name and initial), and distributed among randomly selected congregations. Then the complication rates of the patients were measured in a given time.
There was practically no difference in complication rates among the two first groups – about 50% of patients in both had some form of complication.
The third one was different, though: about 60% of patients in this group had some form of complication.
During research it was found that unless you told people you were praying for them... then outcomes were worse for the prayee!
Aviles et al.[1] examined cardiovascular outcomes related to prayer. In this study, 799 coronary care unit patients at discharge were randomized to intercessory prayer or no prayer conditions. Prayer was conducted by five persons per patient at least once a week for 26 weeks.
Patients were considered to belong to a high-risk group if they were 70 years old or older or if they had any of the following: diabetes mellitus, previous myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular disease or peripheral vascular disease. The primary endpoint of the study was any of the following: death, cardiac arrest, rehospitalization for cardiovascular disease, coronary revascularization or an emergency department visit for cardiovascular disease.
By the end of 26 weeks, a primary endpoint had occurred in 25.6% of patients in the prayer group and in 29.3% of patients in the control group. The difference was not statistically significant. The results remained nonsignificant when data were analyzed separately for high- and low-risk patients. Thus, this study showed that, as delivered in this study, intercessory prayer did not influence the 26-week outcome after discharge from a coronary care unit.
Other recent randomized controlled trials have also reported negative results. For example, Krucoff et al.[2] reported no benefits with off-site prayer in patients (n = 748) undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions and Astin et al.[3] found that neither remote prayer delivered by professional healers nor remote prayer delivered by nurses with no training or experience in distance healing resulted in benefits to patients (n = = 156) with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome-defining opportunistic infections.
Benson et al.[4] described a triple-blind, randomized controlled study that examined whether remote intercessory prayer influenced recovery after coronary artery bypass graft surgery and whether the certainty of being prayed for was associated with better outcomes. The sample comprised 1,802 patients in six hospitals in the USA. These patients were randomized into three groups: 604 were prayed for after being informed that they may or may not be prayed for, 597 were not prayed for after similarly being informed that they may or may not be prayed for and 601 were prayed for after being informed they would definitely be prayed for.
Prayer commenced one day before the surgery and continued for 14 days. Three mainstream religious sites prayed daily for patients assigned to receive prayer. Assessment of outcomes was made by nurses who were blind to the group assignments. The primary outcome was the presence of any complication within 30 days of surgery. Secondary outcomes were any major event, including death. The study sought to examine the efficacy of intercessory prayer and not to test the presence of God. The design was described by Dusek et al.[5]
In the two groups that did not know for certain whether or not they were being prayed for, complications occurred in 52% of patients who received intercessory prayer and in 51% of those who did not. In contrast, complications occurred in a significantly larger proportion of patients (59%) who knew for certain that they were being prayed for. Major events and 30-day mortality rates, however, were similar across the three groups.
This study therefore showed that remote intercessory prayer did not improve outcomes after coronary artery bypass graft surgery. In fact, the knowledge of being prayed for was associated with a slightly but significantly higher rate of postsurgical complications.
In scientific research by invoking prayer, researchers invite troublesome questions about the importance of several theosophical matters (6):
These “pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic” descriptors of prayer are all important issues to judge from the manner in which persons pray, or if persons with strong religious affiliations are to be believed. Therefore, all of the above would need to be considered as independent or confounding variables in any scientific study on the efficacy of intercessory prayer. Curiously, no study has so far addressed these issues. And, for several reasons, such issues are disturbing because they reduce the concept of God to that of a human being with weaknesses and vanities, thereby exposing theological inconsistencies and attacking the very roots of theology and natural justice. Some of the unsettling questions that arise in these contexts are presented below; the questions are unsettling because they invite comparison with human parallels that devalue the concept of God, something that those who pray surely would not have considered. Researchers raised these important questions (6):
These questions are unsettling to those who pray because of their theological implications, but they are also unsettling to scientists because they challenge the design, analysis and interpretation of randomized controlled trials of the efficacy of intercessory prayer. Consider the following:
From a scientific perspective, if prayer is indeed considered to work, thought should also be given to the possibility that it may not require a deity. It may, instead, invoke some hitherto unidentified mental energy that has healing power. If so, might prayer be more effective if those who pray are in closer proximity to those who are being prayed for? Might the direction in which persons face (while praying) matter? Might the assistance of the physical sciences be required to identify the nature of the biological energies at work?
It should be noted that the distant healing, intercessory prayer studies specifically test the intervention of a divine entity. This is because the intercessors are usually blind to the identities of the patients for whom they pray, or (at least) because the intercessors do not have any contact with these patients. Therefore, it is left to a sentient being to miraculously divine the intent of the prayers and apply the intercession to the correct target.
Of note, distant healing, intercessory prayer studies address soft diagnoses with soft outcomes. No study, for example, has examined whether prayer can result in the disappearance of medically proven tumors and metastases, reversal of traumatic paraplegia or revival from a state of brain death. It would seem that the results of such studies could be more convincing than the results of studies on wound healing or successful pregnancy. Could it be that those who pray believe that God has or sets limitations?
Researchers close the critique with two final questions (6):
In this context, we must keep in mind that religion is based on faith and not on proof. This implies that, if God exists, he is indifferent to humanity or has chosen to obscure his presence. Either way, he would be unlikely to cooperate in scientific studies that seek to test his existence.
Where does this leave us? God may indeed exist and prayer may indeed heal like theists think and say that their research has validated this; however, it appears that, for important theological and scientific reasons, randomized controlled studies cannot be applied to the study of the efficacy of prayer in healing. In fact, no form of scientific enquiry presently available can suitably address the subject. Therefore, the continuance of such research may result in the conducted studies finding place among other seemingly impeccable studies with seemingly absurd claims (Renckens et al. 2002; [7]). Whereas some scientists have attempted to be scientifically and politically correct in their critique, other authors, such as Dawkins,[8] have been humorous, no even scathing, in their criticism.
The aim of science is not only to open a door to infinite wisdom but to set a limit to infinite error.
So some say prayers have some effects but that is highly questionable.
Okay, coming to the main question, If you send wishes to a dead person, he cannot have a psychological boost like living persons. But what your wish says is how much you care about the person, how you remembered an important date in that person's life and how you still feel about that person. The dead person's close relatives and friends might feel happy about this. This also shows how much the dead person is still loved, respected or revered. This is an important Hallmark of that person.
So you can wish the dead person to pay your respects and make all his or her loved ones happy.
Those who are living and say these wishes mean a lot to them are denoting that they are unable to overcome their emotional dependence on them and do need them for a psychological boost.
Coming to the emotional boost of wishes or blessings or prayers, those who have risen above the emotional aspects in their lives don't need these external boosters. I certainly don't need them and wrote a poem too on this sometime back (9).
But the irony is people who give spiritual renderings too depend on them for their emotional well being. They say you can learn how to control your emotions by rising above them to the degree of consciousness of your Higher Self (10).
When you identify with an emotion you become that emotion, even if temporarily, and then that emotion is in control as it colours all your thoughts and actions. In contrast, by learning how to control your emotions by rising above them and observing your experiences as if from above, then any associated emotions can be tempered.
This is not the same as not having or suppressing your emotions. Controlling your emotions is about changing the way you handle those experiences that trigger extreme emotional reactions within you. By observing your emotions from a higher vantage point, as if observing yourself having those emotions from a distance, you no longer identify with them.
It's not what happens to you that counts but rather how you perceive that experience, or in other words, the meaning you give to it. Any experience is in itself neutral but your emotions surrounding the experience determine its impact on you, and your emotions are in turn coloured by the core beliefs of your personal belief system.
I am not into spiritual things but when science tells me there is no meaning to wishes, blessings or prayers in reality and that they won't affect the result or outcome in any way - I don't feel anything at all whether people wish me or not! If they find time to wish me, it is okay and I thank them for taking time to do that. If they have more important work to do and are unable to wish for me, I can understand that and still this is also okay with me.
It doesn't make any difference to me, dead or alive, whether people wish me or not! If people call that emotional maturity like my friends and colleagues do, that is what science has brought into my life and I thank SCIENCE for that.
to all those who need an emotional boost :)
Footnotes:
8. Dawkins R. The God Delusion. Great Britain: Bantam Books; 2006. [Google Scholar]
9. https://kkartlab.in/group/theartofwritingpoems/forum/topics/don-t-s...
10. https://www.mind-your-reality.com/how-to-control-your-emotions.html....
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