Yeah, the cited pages don't seem to have any scholarly references, and one of them notes that "the authenticity of the story has been questioned", so I rather doubt it.
Sweden has been good at keeping public records of trials since far earlier than this experiment, so if it happened there are surely written records about it in an archive somewhere. Someone just needs to spend countless hours digging through archives…
If they committed crimes together, not hard. If things like political crimes can be punished by death, even easier. If the king says “get me a pair of identical twins condemned to death” very easy. Go into a poor neighborhood, find a pair of twins and drag them in on an unsolved murder.
As with all drugs, it's not understood the paradoxical drug effects. Stimulants can make people sleepy, and the most potent of benzodiazepamines can make one more agressive. The endocrine system (also the immune system) is so complex and so full of variables and network effects that I think that science has a long way ahead for a precise scientific understanding of all the positive and negative effects of these drug categories.
I've also experienced this both with mate and with coffee. The kind of sleep I have then is a sort of buzz sleep. Not necessarily full of dreams but similar to alcohol induced sleep. It's almost like sleep and activity are different things.
It would surprise me if someone was able to sleep while influenced by stimulants. However, being on stimulants is very exhaustive for your body, and it temporarily stops the racing thoughts many people struggle with, even some time after taking it.
I was having quite severe insomnia when I was younger and it all cleared around the time I was diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed stimulants. My insomnia doesn't seem to return when I'm on holidays or during weekends, periods which I usually don't take any medication.
I asked my doctor about it, and he said it could be related, but it could also just be that I grew out of it, or any number of other reasons. He did say that some doctors was been experimenting with very low doses before going to bed with various degree of success. But it was a high risk that these people was suffer from some kind of undiagnosed variant of ADHD or another where insomnia typically is a comorbid disorder, like bipolar disorder.
> However, being on stimulants is very exhaustive for your body, and it temporarily stops the racing thoughts many people struggle with, even some time after taking it.
Exhaustion is not the mechanism by which stimulants calm people with ADHD, as far as we understand it. Very approximately their internal world is less stimulating than that find restful so they’re constantly looking for more stimulation to reach a pleasant level. The stimulants let them reach that level without more environmental stimulation. One of my friends doesn’t drink anything with caffeine in it because it puts him to sleep.
I am pretty sure I have undiagnosed ADHD(its pointless getting a diagnose in my country as an adult).
My resting heart rate is pretty high, but if I do any intelectual work wahtsoever my heart rate is around 95bpm.
RItalin analogues(in therapeutic doses) bring my heart rate to 60bpm when doing intelectual work while sitting on a desk -- during my deepest sleep my heart rate is 67bpm.
My own bro-science explanation is that I compensate my ADHD with anxiety -- when I'm anxious, I can focus just fine; some stimulants allow me to focus without the anxiety and that's why I feel deep calm and reduced heart rate while using them.
I feel your bro science makes a lot of sense. I'm someone who's been identified as being bipolar and put on Lithium, which I quickly dropped (because it made me feel suicidal) and I instead turn to illegally acquired cannabis, which helps me to not feel the anxiety of not yet having solved a problem, something that these days freak the living shit out of me, if I'm not doped up.
Lithium should almost certainly NOT make one suicidal when dosed correctly for Bipolar. You might wish to explore the uses of a micronutritional form of lithium, namely, lithium orotate, which gets metabolized in a very different (and safer) way than pharmacological lithium.
Thanks for posting, this brings back happy childhood memories :
When I was a kid I used to follow my dad around the farm while he was milking the cows and doing farm work.
He told a lot of stories like this (including the details about the doctors and the king dying first). Other times he told me about scientific studies he had read about etc. I can clearly remember him talking about omega3 in the mid 90ies, way before it became popular around here at least, because I remember asking a particular teacher about it.
(He is now a teacher and enjoys it. I bet his students do too :-)
Edit: I sent the link and he just replied. He read it in a book but sadly that book had less details, not more.
A simple application of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. After the third pot, you're so focused on your velocity that your location can no longer be determined to be in either the land of the living or the land of the dead.
You know, arguably (and I'm sure historians will differ on this!), but arguably, this is sort of like the Swedish version of Prohibition (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_in_the_United_Stat...) -- except with Coffee, and except occuring in 1794, some 126 years or so before Prohibition...
Ya know what I want to see?
Somewhere, somewhere in obscure Swedish history, there has to be a version of the U.S.'s Boston Tea Party (1773) -- except occuring with, and solely on behalf of, you guessed it: Coffee...
<g>
(Oh yeah, and to any detractors out there in the HN Community without a sense of humor, feel free to downvote! I have enough HN Karma, I can take it! Hey, I thought it was funny! <g>)
Hmm... Maybe there should be a political party, U.S. and/or Swedish... "The Coffee Party"... (ok, that was overstepping my bounds, yes, that would deserve a downvote! <g>)
31 comments
[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 78.2 ms ] threadFor being condemned criminals it sounds like they were well cared for.
Also what are the odds of finding condemned twins?
(Of course, I was also jetlagged, so I'm not sure whether it was actually an effect of the mate.)
But, according to a psychiatric doctor I spoke to, some people take it to help them fall asleep.
I was having quite severe insomnia when I was younger and it all cleared around the time I was diagnosed with ADHD and prescribed stimulants. My insomnia doesn't seem to return when I'm on holidays or during weekends, periods which I usually don't take any medication.
I asked my doctor about it, and he said it could be related, but it could also just be that I grew out of it, or any number of other reasons. He did say that some doctors was been experimenting with very low doses before going to bed with various degree of success. But it was a high risk that these people was suffer from some kind of undiagnosed variant of ADHD or another where insomnia typically is a comorbid disorder, like bipolar disorder.
Exhaustion is not the mechanism by which stimulants calm people with ADHD, as far as we understand it. Very approximately their internal world is less stimulating than that find restful so they’re constantly looking for more stimulation to reach a pleasant level. The stimulants let them reach that level without more environmental stimulation. One of my friends doesn’t drink anything with caffeine in it because it puts him to sleep.
My resting heart rate is pretty high, but if I do any intelectual work wahtsoever my heart rate is around 95bpm.
RItalin analogues(in therapeutic doses) bring my heart rate to 60bpm when doing intelectual work while sitting on a desk -- during my deepest sleep my heart rate is 67bpm.
My own bro-science explanation is that I compensate my ADHD with anxiety -- when I'm anxious, I can focus just fine; some stimulants allow me to focus without the anxiety and that's why I feel deep calm and reduced heart rate while using them.
Secondly you could say that everyone else was the control group as this king taxed tea and coffe and later outlawed at least coffee entirely.
Edit: according to some sources it was his dad who first introduced steep taxes on tea and coffee.
When I was a kid I used to follow my dad around the farm while he was milking the cows and doing farm work.
He told a lot of stories like this (including the details about the doctors and the king dying first). Other times he told me about scientific studies he had read about etc. I can clearly remember him talking about omega3 in the mid 90ies, way before it became popular around here at least, because I remember asking a particular teacher about it.
(He is now a teacher and enjoys it. I bet his students do too :-)
Edit: I sent the link and he just replied. He read it in a book but sadly that book had less details, not more.
Edit 2: FWIW here is a a page from nih.gov: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5355814/
It to still light on the details though, and I don't have time to check all the references now.
Apparently 3 pots of coffee a day makes you immortal.
Then I thought, "What? Two experiments, but no control group? How disappointing!" :)
That's almost Fry-Futurama level of consumption. Couple more pots and that test subject would have superpowers.
You know, arguably (and I'm sure historians will differ on this!), but arguably, this is sort of like the Swedish version of Prohibition (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prohibition_in_the_United_Stat...) -- except with Coffee, and except occuring in 1794, some 126 years or so before Prohibition...
Ya know what I want to see?
Somewhere, somewhere in obscure Swedish history, there has to be a version of the U.S.'s Boston Tea Party (1773) -- except occuring with, and solely on behalf of, you guessed it: Coffee...
<g>
(Oh yeah, and to any detractors out there in the HN Community without a sense of humor, feel free to downvote! I have enough HN Karma, I can take it! Hey, I thought it was funny! <g>)
Hmm... Maybe there should be a political party, U.S. and/or Swedish... "The Coffee Party"... (ok, that was overstepping my bounds, yes, that would deserve a downvote! <g>)
[1] https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000c4x1