The Thinking Practitioner podcast

161: Science, Skepticism, & Keeping Heart (with Paul Ingraham)

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🎙 Science, Skepticism, & Keeping Heart (with Paul Ingraham)

What happens when a former massage therapist turns a skeptical eye on his own profession and starts asking uncomfortable questions about pain science and manual therapy? You get Paul Ingraham of PainScience.com — a writer whose work has challenged, irritated, and influenced practitioners in equal measure.

In this episode, Til Luchau and Whitney Lowe sit down with Paul to explore how clinicians can think clearly in a field crowded with confident claims, competing models, and stories that feel true even when the evidence is thin. The conversation doesn’t shy away from friction. Paul is known for his sharp critiques of manual therapy’s favorite explanations, and many practitioners bristle at his tone. Here, we examine both the substance of his skepticism and the costs that can come with it.

Together, they explore questions many therapists wrestle with, often quietly: How do we tell the difference between what helps clients and the stories we tell ourselves about why it helped? When does confidence in a method turn into intellectual blinders? And how can practitioners stay curious and effective without clinging to explanations that may not hold up?

In this episode, they discuss:

  • Paul’s move from massage therapist to science writer — and the unresolved questions that pushed him there
  • “Modality empires” and why techniques so easily become identities
  • The challenge of separating your identity from your methodology — and why it matters
  • Confirmation bias in clinical practice: how we see what we expect to see and miss contradictory evidence
  • Placebo, context, and why they complicate claims about mechanisms in manual therapy
  • Paul’s critique of “structuralism” — the exclusive focus on alignment, posture, and movement dysfunction
  • How to think about biomechanical explanations without falling into reductionist storytelling
  • Why connecting dots between distant body parts (like foot problems causing back pain) can slip from plausible hypothesis into speculation
  • The role of neurophysiological effects in manual therapy outcomes
  • How to engage with research critically without becoming paralyzed by uncertainty
  • Why practitioners may need intellectual humility more than confidence in untested theories
  • The tension between skepticism as a tool and skepticism as a communication style — and what can get lost when critique outpaces curiosity
  • The future of manual therapy as it integrates pain science and biopsychosocial models — and where Paul remains unconvinced

This conversation won’t give you comfortable answers or a new technique to believe in. Instead, it invites you to sit with uncertainty, examine your assumptions, and reflect on how skepticism can sharpen thinking — and how, at times, it can narrow it. Whether you admire Paul’s work, struggle with it, or find yourself somewhere in between, this episode offers a chance to engage the questions underneath the disagreements.

✨ Resources 👉 Paul’s website with articles and books: https://www.painscience.com

🌱 Sponsor Offers: - Books of Discovery – Save 15% with code thinking at https://booksofdiscovery.com/ - ABMP – Save $24 on new membership at https://abmp.com/thinking - Advanced-Trainings – Try one month free of the A-T Subscription at https://a-t.tv/subscriptions/ with code thinking - Academy of Clinical Massage – Grab Whitney’s free Assessment Cheat Sheet at https://academyofclinicalmassage.com/cheatsheet

✨ Watch the video / connect with us: • Til Luchau – https://advanced-trainings.com | Facebook: https://facebook.com/advancedtrainings | Instagram: https://instagram.com/til.luchau • Whitney Lowe – https://academyofclinicalmassage.com | Facebook: https://facebook.com/WhitneyLowe 

📧 Email us: [email protected]

The Thinking Practitioner Podcast is intended for professional practitioners of manual and movement therapies — bodywork, massage therapy, structural integration, physical therapy, osteopathy, and similar professions. It is not medical or treatment advice.

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