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- From: paj@uk.co.gec-mrc (Paul Johnson)
- Newsgroups: sci.skeptic,sci.answers,news.answers
- Subject: sci.skeptic FAQ: The Frequently Questioned Answers
- Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions
- about scientific skepticism and various fringe topics. It
- should be read by anyone who wishes to post to sci.skeptic.
- Message-ID: <skeptic-faq_765042688@gec-mrc.co.uk>
- Date: 30 Mar 94 15:52:37 GMT
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- Archive-name: skeptic-faq
- Last-modified: 94/02/23
- Version: @(#)skeptic-faq.text 1.17
-
- The Frequently Questioned Answers
- =================================
-
- Introduction
- ============
-
- This is the sci.skeptic FAQ. It is intended to provide a factual base
- for most of the commonly discussed topics on sci.skeptic.
- Unfortunately I don't have much time to do this in, and anyway a FAQ
- should be the Distilled Wisdom of the Net rather than just My Arrogant
- Opinion, so I invite submissions and let all the net experts out there
- fill in the details. Submissions from any point of view and on any
- sci.skeptic topic are welcomed, but please keep them short and to the
- point. The ideal submission is a short summary with one or two
- references to other literature. I have added comments in square
- brackets where I think more information is particularly needed, but
- don't let that stop you sending something else.
-
- Many FAQs, including this one, are available on the archive site
- rtfm.mit.edu in the directory pub/usenet/news.answers. The name under
- which a FAQ is archived appears in the Archive-name line at the top of
- the article. This FAQ is archived as skeptic-faq.
-
- In general it is not very useful to criticise areas of the FAQ as "not
- explaining it properly". If you want to see something changed then
- please write a submission which explains it better. Grammar and
- spelling corrections are always welcome though.
-
- If you send me information related to the FAQ, please say whether I
- can use your words in the next edition. I have to be careful about
- this, lest I be accused of publishing private email.
-
- If you are reading this with a newsreader and want to follow up on
- something, please copy the question to the subject line. This is more
- informative than a reference to the entire FAQ.
-
- Please mail submissions and comments to <paj@gec-mrc.co.uk>. If that
- bounces, try <paj%uk.co.gec-mrc@ukc.ac.uk>, which explicitly routes
- your email via the UK backbone.
-
- This is in no way an "official" FAQ. I am a computer scientist by
- profession and deeply skeptical of paranormal claims (although I may
- include some pro-paranormal arguments here). If anyone else with a
- less skeptical point of view wants to start a FAQ list, please feel
- free. I certainly can't stop you.
-
- This document is Copyright 1993 Paul Johnson. Permission is granted
- to you the reader to copy this document onto any medium, including but
- not limited to paper, electronic storage systems, and microfilm.
-
- Disclaimer: The opinions in this article are not necessarily those of
- GEC.
-
- Other Topics
- ============
-
- Please send in contact addresses for local and national skeptics
- organisations not listed in section 0.11.
-
- Credits
- =======
-
- Thanks to all the people who have sent me submissions and comments.
- There isn't enough room to thank everyone individually, but some of
- the more major contributors are listed here:
-
- York H. Dobyns <ydobyns@phoenix.Princeton.EDU> provided carbon 14
- dating information, notes about current psi researchers and other
- useful comments.
-
- Dendrochronology information came from <whheydt@pbhya.PacBell.com>.
-
- The questions "What are UFOs?" and "Are crop circles made by flying
- saucers?" were answered by Chris Rutkowski <rutkows@ccu.umanitoba.ca>
-
- Ken Shirriff <shirriff@sprite.Berkeley.EDU> provided information on
- perpetual motion machines, Leidenfrost reference and the AIDS section.
-
- Robert Sheaffer <sheaffer@netcom.com> sent information about Philip
- Klass and UFO abductions.
-
- The Ezekiel information comes from a posting by John Baskette
- <jfb@draco.macsch.com>.
-
- John Boyd <jboyd@uk.ac.ed> provided skeptical references on acupuncture.
-
- Eric Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> contributed information on
- acupuncture, the origin of life, and the CIA AIDS theory.
-
- Kirlian photography information was paraphrased from an article by
- Dave Palmer <dpalmer@csulb.edu>.
-
- Cold reading information came from an article by Pope Charles
- <popec@brewich.hou.tx.us>.
-
- Todd Stark <tark@com.dec.ENET.dwovax> sent information on acupuncture
- analgesia.
-
- Geoff Lane <zzassgl@uk.ac.manchester-computing-centre.uts> provided
- the article and references on Tunguska.
-
- The skeptic organisation list came from Holger Stegemann
- <holger@esfra.sub.org>.
-
- Roger Nelson <rdnelson@EDU.Princeton.phoenix> provided section 0.7:
- "Is there any scientific psi research?".
-
- Todd Stark <stark@dwovax.enet.dec.com> provided section 10.1: "What is
- False Memory Syndrome".
-
- Contents
- ========
-
- A `*' indicates a new or rewritten entry. A `+' indicates an altered
- entry.
-
- Background
- ----------
- 0.1: What is sci.skeptic for?
- 0.2: What is sci.skeptic not for?
- 0.3: What is CSICOP? Whats their address?
- 0.4: What is "Prometheus"?
- 0.5: Who are some prominent skeptics?
- 0.6: Aren't all skeptics just closed-minded bigots?
- 0.6.1: Why are skeptics so keen to rubbish fringe ideas?
- 0.6.2: How do we know Randi is honest?
- 0.6.3: Why don't skeptics challenge religions?
- 0.6.4: How can I persuade a skeptic? *
- 0.7: Is there any scientific psi research?
- 0.8: What is a "conspiracy theory"?
- 0.9: What is "cold reading?"
- 0.10: Is there a list of logical fallacies?
- 0.11: What national and local skeptics organisations are there?
- 0.12: Where can I get books on paranormal phenomena?
-
- The Scientific Method
- ---------------------
-
- 1.1: What is the scientific method?
- 1.2: What is the difference between a fact, a theory and a hypothesis?
- 1.3: Can science ever really prove anything?
- 1.4: If scientific theories keep changing, where is the Truth?
- 1.5: What evidence is needed for an extraordinary claim?
- 1.6: What is Occam's Razor?
- 1.7: Galileo was persecuted, just like researchers into <X> today.
- 1.8: What is the "Experimenter effect".
- 1.9: How much fraud is there in science?
- 1.9.1: Did Mendel fudge his results?
-
- Psychic Powers
- --------------
-
- 2.1: Is Uri Geller for real?
- 2.2: I have had a psychic experience.
- 2.3: What is "sensory leakage"?
- 2.4: Who are the main psi researchers?
- 2.5: Does dowsing work?
- 2.6: Could psi be inhibited by the presence of skeptics?
- 2.7: Why don't the skeptics test the *real* psychics?
- 2.8: What is the ganzfeld?
-
- UFOs/Flying Saucers
- -------------------
- 3.1 What are UFOs?
- 3.1.1: Are UFOs alien spacecraft?
- 3.1.2: Are UFOs natural phenomena?
- 3.1.3: But isn't it possible that aliens are visiting Earth?
- 3.2: Is it true that the US government has a crashed flying saucer?
- (MJ-12)?
- 3.3: What is "channeling"?
- 3.4: How can we test a channeller?
- 3.5: I am in telepathic contact with the aliens.
- 3.6: Some bozo has just posted a load of "teachings" from a UFO. What
- should I do?
- 3.7: Are crop circles made by flying saucers?
- 3.7.1: Are crop circles made by "vortices"?
- 3.7.2: Are crop circles made by hoaxers?
- 3.7.3: Are crop circles radioactive?
- 3.7.4: What about cellular changes in plants within crop circles?
- 3.8: Have people been abducted by UFOs?
- 3.9: What is causing the strange cattle deaths?
- 3.10: What is the face on Mars?
- 3.11: Did Ezekiel See a Flying Saucer?
- 3.12: What happened at Tunguska?
- 3.13: How did the Dogon know about Sirius?
-
- Faith Healing and Alternative Therapies
- ---------------------------------------
-
- 4.1: Isn't western medicine reductionistic and alternatives holistic?
- 4.2: What is a double-blind trial? What is a placebo?
- 4.3: Why should scientific criteria apply to alternative therapies?
- 4.4: What is homeopathy?
- 4.5: What is aromatherapy?
- 4.6: What is reflexology?
- 4.7: Does acupuncture work?
- 4.8: What about psychic surgery?
- 4.9: What is Crystal Healing?
- 4.10: Does religious healing work?
- 4.11: What harm does it do anyway?
-
- Creation versus Evolution
- -------------------------
-
- 5.1: Is the Bible evidence of anything?
- 5.2: Could the Universe have been created old?
- 5.3: What about Carbon-14 dating?
- 5.4: What is "dendrochronology"?
- 5.5: What is evolution? Where do I find out more?
- 5.6: "The second law of thermodynamics says...."
- 5.7: How could living organisms arise "by chance"?
- 5.8: But doesn't the human body seem to be well designed?
- 5.9: What about the thousands of scientists who have become Creationists?
- 5.10: Is the speed of light decreasing?
- 5.11: What about Velikovsky?
-
- Fire-walking
- -----------
-
- 6.1: Is fire-walking possible?
- 6.2: Can science explain fire-walking?
-
- New Age
- -------
-
- 7.1: What do New Agers believe? +
- 7.2: What is the Gaia hypothesis?
- 7.3: Was Nostradamus a prophet?
- 7.4: Does astrology work?
- 7.4.1: Could astrology work by gravity?
- 7.4.2: What is the `Mars Effect'?
- 7.5: What is Kirlian photography?
-
- Strange Machines: Free Energy and Anti-Gravity
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- 8.1: Why don't electrical perpetul motion machines work?
- 8.2: Why don't magnetic perpetual motion machines work?
- 8.3: Why don't mechanical perpetual motion machines work?
- 8.4: Magnets can levitate. Where is the energy from?
- 8.5: But its been patented!
- 8.6: The oil companies are conspiring to suppress my invention!
- 8.7: My machine gets its free energy from <X>
- 8.8: Can gyroscopes neutralise gravity?
- 8.9: My prototype gets lighter when I turn it on
-
- AIDS
- ----
-
- 9.1: What about these theories on AIDS?
- 9.1.1: The Mainstream Theory
- 9.1.2: Strecker's CIA Theory
- 9.1.3: Duesberg's Risk-Group Theory
-
- You Must Remember This
- ----------------------
-
- 10.1: What is "False Memory Syndrome ?"
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Background
- ==========
-
- 0.1: What is sci.skeptic for?
- -----------------------------
-
- [Did anyone save the Charter? PAJ]
-
- Sci.skeptic is for those who are skeptical about claims of the
- paranormal to meet with those who believe in the paranormal. In this
- way the paranormalists can expose their ideas to scientific scrutiny,
- and if there is anything in these ideas then the skeptics might learn
- something.
-
- However this is a very wide area, and some of the topics covered might
- be better kept in their own newsgroups. In particular the evolution
- vs. creation debate is best kept in talk.origins. General New Age
- discussions belong in talk.religion.newage. Strange "Heard it on the
- grapevine" stories belong on alt.folklore.urban, which discusses such
- things as vanishing hitchhikers and the Everlasting Lightbulb
- conspiracy. Serious conspiracy theories should be kept on
- alt.conspiracy, and theories about the assassination of President
- Kennedy should be kept on alt.conspiracy.jfk. CROSS-POSTING from
- these groups is NOT APPRECIATED by the majority of sci.skeptic
- readers.
-
- The discussion of a topic in this FAQ is not an attempt to have the
- final word on the subject. It is simply intended to answer a few
- common questions and provide a basis for discussion of common topics.
-
- Conversely, the ommission of a topic from this FAQ does not indicate
- that the topic is not suitable for sci.skeptic. It just means that it
- has not been discussed recently. If you want to start a thread on it
- then go ahead.
-
- 0.2: What is sci.skeptic not for?
- ---------------------------------
-
- The scope of sci.skeptic extends into any area where hard evidence can
- be obtained, but does not extend into speculation. So religious
- arguments about the existence of God are out of place here (take them
- to alt.atheism or talk.religion.*). On the other hand discussion
- about miracles is to be welcomed, since this is an issue where
- evidence can be obtained.
-
- Topics that have their own groups should be taken to the appropriate
- group. See the previous answer for a partial list.
-
- Also out of place are channelled messages from aliens. If your
- channelled message contains testable facts then post those. Otherwise
- we are simply not interested. Take it to alt.alien.visitors.
-
- The posting of large articles (>200 lines) is not a way to persuade
- people. See the section on "closed minded skeptics" below for some
- reasons for this. I suggest you summarise the article and offer to
- mail copies to anyone who is interested.
-
- Sci.skeptic is not an abuse group. There is a regrettable tendency
- for polite discussion here to degenerate into ad-hominem flames about
- who said what to whom and what they meant. PLEASE DO NOT FLAME. You
- won't convince anyone. Rather the opposite.
-
- 0.3: What is CSICOP? What is its address?
- ------------------------------------------
-
- CSICOP stands for the "Committee for the Scientific Investigation of
- Claims Of the Paranormal". They publish a quarterly magazine called
- "The Skeptical Inquirer". Their address is:
-
- Skeptical Inquirer,
- Box 703,
- Buffalo, NY 14226-9973.
-
- Tel. 716-636-1425 voice, 716-636-1733 fax.
-
- Note that this is a new address.
-
- 0.4: What is "Prometheus"?
- --------------------------
-
- Prometheus Books is a publisher specialising in skeptical books.
- Their address is:
-
- Prometheus Books
- 59 John Glenn Drive,
- Buffalo, NY 14215-9918
-
- Phone (800)-421-0351.
- Fax (716)-691-0137.
-
- 0.5: Who are some prominent skeptics?
- -------------------------------------
-
- James "The Amazing" Randi is a professional stage magician who spends
- much time and money debunking paranormal claims. He used to offer a
- reward of $10,000 (briefly augmented to $100,000 by a TV company some
- years ago) to anyone who can demonstrate paranormal powers under
- controlled conditions. Unfortunately he has had to exhaust that fund
- to pay legal expenses in the series of lawsuits that have been brought
- against him since 1988. Anyone who wants to contribute to his defense
- can do so via:
-
- The James Randi Fund
- Suite 12H
- 142 West 49th Street
- New York, NY 10019
-
- Note that this is a new address. Checks should be made payable to The
- James Randi Fund.
-
- The lawsuit by Geller against Randi is still going on. There is a
- mailing list for updates on the situation, which originates from the
- account <geller-hotline@ssr.com>. [To subscribe, you should probably
- send mail to <geller-hotline-request@ssr.com>.]
-
- Martin Gardner is an author, mathematician and amateur stage magician
- who has written several books dealing with paranormal phenomena,
- including "Science: Good, Bad and Bogus" and "Fads and Fallacies in
- the Name of Science".
-
- Philip J. Klass retired after thirty-five years as a Senior Editor of
- "Aviation Week and Space Technology" magazine, specializing in
- avionics. He is a founding fellow of CSICOP, and was named a Fellow of
- the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He has
- won numerous awards for his technical journalism. His principal books
- are:
-
- UFO Abductions, A Dangerous Game (Prometheus, 1988)
-
- UFOs, The Public Deceived (Prometheus, 1983)
-
- UFOs Explained (Random House, 1974)
-
- Susan Blackmore holds a Ph.D in parapsychology, but in the course of her
- Ph.D research she became increasingly disillusioned and is now highly
- skeptical of paranormal claims.
-
- Ray Hyman is a professor of psychology at the University of Oregon.
- He is one of the major external, skeptical critics of parapsychology.
- In 1986, he and parapsychologist Charles Honorton engaged in a
- detailed exchange about Honorton's ganzfeld experiments and
- statistical analysis of his results which was published in the Journal
- of Parapsychology. A collection of Hyman's work may be found in his
- book The Elusive Quarry: A Scientific Appraisal of Psychical Research,
- 1989, Prometheus. This includes "Proper Criticism", an influential
- piece on how skeptics should engage in criticism, and "'Cold Reading':
- How to Convince Strangers that You Know All About Them."
-
- James Alcock is a professor of psychology at York University in
- Toronto. He is the author of the books Parapsychology: Science
- or Magic?, 1981, Pergamon, and Science and Supernature: A Critical
- Appraisal of Parapsychology, 1990, Prometheus.
-
- Joe Nickell is a former private investigator, a magician, and
- an English instructor at the University of Kentucky. He is the
- author of numerous books on paranormal subjects, including Inquest
- on the Shroud of Turin, 1982, Prometheus. He specializes in
- investigating individual cases in great detail, but has recently
- done some more general work, critiquing crop circles, spontaneous
- human combustion, and psychic detectives.
-
- Isaac Asimov wrote a great deal on skeptical issues. He had a regular
- column in _Fantasy and Science Fiction_, and collections of essays
- from it have been published. Some of these essays are on assorted
- crackpottery, like UFO's, Velikovsky, creationism, and so forth. They
- have titles like "Worlds in Confusion" (Velikovsky), "Look Long upon a
- Monkey" (creationism), "Armies of the Night" (crackpottery in
- general), "The Rocketing Dutchmen" (UFO's), and so forth.; these are
- usually on a rather general sort of level.
-
- Marcello Truzzi was one of the founders of CSICOP, but broke away from
- the organisation when it became to "dry" for him (see section 0.6.1 on
- wet vs. dry skeptics). He now publishes the "Zetetic Inquirer" on an
- occasional basis. He can be contacted at the Dept. of Sociology,
- Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI 48197, or at P.O. Box 1052,
- Ann Arbor, MI 48106. [Does anyone know if this address is still good?
- PAJ]
-
-
- [Can someone supply me with potted biographies and publication lists
- of these and other people? PAJ]
-
- 0.6: Aren't all skeptics just closed-minded bigots?
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- People who have failed to convince skeptics often say "Well all
- skeptics are just closed-minded bigots who won't listen to me!". This
- is not true. Skeptics pay close attention to the evidence. If you
- have no evidence then you will get nowhere.
-
- Unfortunately life is short. Most of us have better things to do than
- investigate yet another bogus claim. Some paranormal topics,
- especially psi research and UFOlogy, produce vast quantities of low
- grade evidence. In the past people have investigated such evidence
- carefully, but it always seems to evaporate when anyone looks at it
- closely. Hence skeptics should be forgiven for not bothering to
- investigate yet another piece of low grade evidence before rejecting
- it.
-
- Issac Asimov has suggested a triage process which divides scientific
- claims into three groups: mundane, unusual and bullshit [my terms].
- As an example, a claim that "I have 10kg of salt in my lab" is pretty
- mundane. No-one would disbelieve me, but they wouldn't be very
- interested. A claim that "I have 10kg of gold in my lab" would
- probably result in mild disbelief and requests to have a look.
- Finally a claim that "I have 10kg of Einsteinium in my lab" would be
- greeted with cries of "Bullshit!".
-
- Of course there are some who substitute flaming and rhetoric for
- logical argument. We all lose our temper sometimes.
-
- 0.6.1: Why are skeptics so keen to rubbish fringe ideas?
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- Skeptics vary on the attitude they take towards a new fringe idea,
- varying from the "wet" to the "dry". The question of which attitude
- is better is very much a live issue in the skeptical community. Here
- is a brief summary of the two extremes:
-
- DRY: There is no reason to treat these people seriously. Anyone with
- half an ounce of sense can see that their ideas are completely
- bogus. Time spent trying to "understand their ideas" and
- "examine their evidence" beyond that necessary for debunking is
- wasted time, and life is short. Furthermore, such behaviour
- lends them respectibility. If we take them seriously, so will
- other people. We must ridicule their ideas so that others will
- see how silly they are. "One belly laugh is worth a thousand
- syllogisms" (Martin Gardner).
-
- WET: If we lay into these people without giving them a fair hearing
- then we run two risks:
- 1: We might miss someone who is actually right. History contains
- many examples.
- 2: We give them a weapon against us. Ad-hominem attacks and
- sloppy logic bring us down to their level. If we are truly
- the rational, scientific people we claim to be then we should
- ask for their evidence, and then pronounce our considered
- opinion of it.
-
- The two extremes are perhaps personified by Martin Gardner (dry) and
- Marcello Truzzi (wet). Note that no particular judgement is attached
- to these terms. They are just handy labels.
-
- People who read articles by dry skeptics often get the impression that
- skeptics are as pig-headed as any fundamentalist or stage psychic. I
- think that this is a valid criticism of some skeptics on the dry end.
- However, an article which ridicules fringe beliefs may also contain
- sound logic based on careful investigation. As always, you have to
- read carefully, distinguish logic from rhetoric, and then make a
- judgement.
-
- 0.6.2: How do we know Randi is honest?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Randi has offered a large prize to anyone who can demonstrate
- paranormal powers under controlled conditions. He also has a lot of
- professional prestige tied up in his self-appointed role of psychic
- debunker. This leads to allegations that if he ever did find a
- genuine psychic then he would lie rather than lose so much money and
- prestige.
-
- When Randi tests psychic claims, he is always very careful to agree
- with the claimant before the test exactly what the conditions will be.
- The test will proceed only if both he and the claimant agree that this
- will be a fair test of the claim. The conditions usually involve
- video tapes and independant witnesses specifically to rule out
- cheating by either side.
-
- On one occasion Randi did agree that the claimant had passed the test.
- Arthur G. Lintgen claimed an ability to identify LP records without
- labels. Randi tested him, and found that he could in fact do this by
- reading the patterns of loud and quiet in the groove. Lintgen did not
- get Randi's reward because he had not demonstrated (or claimed) any
- paranormal ability.
-
- 0.6.3: Why don't skeptics debunk religions?
- -------------------------------------------
-
- Skeptics aim to debunk false claims and silly theories by using the
- *evidence*. The question of whether God exists is not one for which
- evidence is available, and so skeptics tend to treat it as a private
- matter. When someone claims to have evidence (such as a miraculous
- healing) then skeptics are as ready to test this claim as they are any
- other.
-
- Most skeptics agree that it is perfectly possible to be a skeptic
- about paranormal claims but still honestly believe in God. Martin
- Gardner is a "dry" skeptic and one of the founders of CSICOP. He also
- believes in a personal god and describes himself as a "philosophical
- theist".
-
- Most skeptics tend to take an "agnostic-atheist" attitude, assuming
- that God does not exist until evidence to the contrary turns up.
-
- If you are interested in organisations that oppose religion in general
- then see the alt.atheism FAQ "Atheist Resources" for a list of atheist
- and humanist organisations.
-
- 0.6.4: How can I persuade a skeptic?
- ------------------------------------
-
- This isn't a FAQ, but it should be!
-
- * Be prepared to offer evidence. Ideally evidence consists of an
- experiment I can reasonably do myself. Failing that, list articles
- in peer-reviewed journals.
-
- * Make predictions. These predictions should be specific and
- surprising. For example a prediction that "crime will cause
- concern" is not specific (it does not say who is going to be
- concerned about what aspect of crime when) and it is not surprising
- (someone, somewhere is going to be concerned about it). On the
- other hand a prediction that "The British House of Commons will hold
- an Emergency Debate on Juvenile Crime next month" is both specific
- (it specifies an event which either will or will not happen) and
- surprising (emergency debates on this subject don't happen every
- month).
-
- * Don't try argument by assertion. A statement such as "The evidence
- for psi is overwhelming" will generate lots of queries asking where
- this evidence may be found.
-
- * Don't try argument by authority unless the authority you are citing
- is generally acknowledged as an expert on the subject. I might cite
- C.S. Lewis in a debate on the nature of Christianity. I would not
- cite him on the age of the Universe because he is not an authority
- on that.
-
- 0.7: Is there any scientific psi research?
- ------------------------------------------
-
- [Contributed by Roger Nelson of PEAR]
-
- In short, yes. According to a recent National Research Council report,
- there is a 130 year history of scientific research, albeit with no clear
- conclusion that the classical psi effects, telepathy, clairvoyance,
- psychokinesis, precognition, have been demonstrated. Most knowledgable
- scholars would date the advent of controlled research later, to the early
- 1930's when J. B. Rhine began his work with McDougall in Duke University's
- psychology department. Rhine's work has been much criticized, and is
- widely discounted, but inappropriately for the most part.
-
- In any case, later workers built on these foundations of experimental
- design and statistical analysis, and there has been a cumulative
- increase in scientific rigor and sophistication. Most of current psi
- research is conducted by a small number of investigators in
- universities and established institutes, and reports are presented at
- conventions of professional organizations such as the
- Parapsychological Association, and the Society for Scientific
- Exploration, and published in professional journals of these groups
- or, occasionally, in mainstream journals in physics, psychology, and
- statistics. Professionals familiar with the literature, including
- recent meta-analyses, find persuasive evidence for small, replicable
- anomalous effects correlated with human consciousness and intention.
-
- There are currently perhaps a dozen active research laboratories,
- worldwide, and on the order of 50 to 100 researchers actually doing
- experiments. It is a fact that their work is not well known to the
- general public including most of the sci.skeptic readership. Thus,
- the frequently negative, and sometimes disdainful commentary on psi
- research from "skeptics" tends to be ill-informed, or refers to
- something other than scientific research. Language usage is part of
- the problem, as the terms psychic research, parapsychology, esp,
- telepathy, etc., have been usurped by non-scientists and media people.
- With suitable modifiers, the term anomalous is often used to describe
- the subject of investigation in modern research, partly to avoid the
- implied mechanisms and relationships attached to the older terms.
-
- Much of current experimental psi research is not only scientific, but
- adheres to more rigorous standards than are found in much contemporary
- work in the social and physical sciences, largely because the
- investigators understand the technical difficulties as well as the
- implications of positive findings for our general scientific models.
- It should be noted that constructive criticism from skeptics has made
- important contributions to research quality.
-
- 0.8: What is a Conspiracy Theory?
- ---------------------------------
-
- There are two general categories of conspiracy theory: Grand and
- Petty.
-
- A Grand conspiracy theory is a belief that there is a large-scale
- conspiracy by those in power to mislead and/or control the rest of the
- world. Consider the following example:
-
- There is a conspiracy amongst the computer programmers to
- control the world. They are only allowing the public to have
- simple machines, while they control the really powerful ones.
- There is a computer in <city> they call "The Beast". It has
- records about everyone. They use this information to
- manipulate the politicians and businessmen who ostensibly rule
- the world into doing their will. The Beast was prophesied in
- the Book of Revelation.
-
- Grand conspiracy theories divide the world into three groups. The
- Conspirators, the Investigators, and the Dupes. Conspirators have a
- vast secret. The Investigators have revealed parts of the conspiracy,
- but much is still secret. Investigators are always in great danger of
- being silenced by Conspirators. Dupes are just the rest of us. Often
- the Conspirators show a mixture of incredible subtlety and stunning
- stupidity.
-
- Evidence produced by the Investigators is always either circumstantial
- or evaporates when looked at carefully. The theories can never be
- disproved, since any evidence to the contrary can be dismissed as
- having been planted by the Conspirators. If you spend any time or
- effort digging into the evidence produced by Investigators then you
- will be labelled a Conspirator yourself. Of course, nothing a
- Conspirator says can be believed.
-
- Petty conspiracy theories are smaller than the Grand variety, and
- sometimes turn out to be true. Watergate and "Arms for Hostages"
- episodes both started life as Petty conspiracy theories. Just because
- a theory involves a conspiracy does not make that theory false. The
- main difference between Grand and Petty Conspiracy Theories is the
- number of alleged conspirators. Grand Conspiracy Theories require
- thousands or even millions.
-
- [Since this FAQ was first posted I have heard that the Beast computer
- is in Holland and that you can be saved by converting to a particular
- cult. In addition the cult claims that every product bar code
- includes three 6 digits as frame markers, hence 666, the number of the
- beast. In fact this is not true, and even if it were it would not
- fulfill the prophecy in Revelation. Meanwhile the cult members were
- *meant* to rise up to heaven on 29/10/92 but very embarrassingly
- didn't. The Korean founder was also discovered to have bought millions
- of $ worth of stocks and bonds which didn't mature until 1995, and was
- convicted of fraud.]
-
- 0.9: What is "cold reading"?
- ----------------------------
-
- [From a posting by Pope Charles <popec@brewich.hou.tx.us>]
-
- Cold reading is the technique of saying little general things and
- watching a persons reactions. As one goes from very general to more
- specific things, one notes the reaction and uses it as a guide to find
- out what to say. Also there are stock phrases that sound like
- statements but are really questions. If these subtle questions evoke
- answers, these answers are used as a basis for the next round of
- statements.
-
- Many people get involved in various things like this because of their
- interest in the usual things, health, love, sex, etc. One can
- develop a set of stock questions and statements that will elicit
- positive responses fom 90% of your 'clients'.
-
- In the hands of an expert, these simple techniques can be frightening
- almost. But they are simple things. Of course a paintbrush and a
- canvass are simple things too. It all depends on skill and talent for
- these things.
-
- One can learn these things coldbloodedly knowing them as the tricks
- they are, or as probably most use them, learned at the feet of other
- practitioners as it were by rote, and developed by practice and
- adapted to the tastes of the reader and his or her sitters. As
- skeptics have pointed out, it is the best cold readers that make the
- best Tarot Readers, Astrologers, Palm Readers, or what have you.
-
- If your library is lucky enough to have it, Check The Zetetic, (later
- renamed Skeptical Inquirer), Vol. 1, #2 Summer 1977 "Cold Reading: How
- to convince strangers you know all about them" by Ray Hyman.
-
- These techniques are not confined to the occult world by any means.
- Religous workers, salesmen and the like use the principles to build
- rapport with people.
-
- 0.10: Is there a list of logical fallacies?
- -------------------------------------------
-
- A complete list of formal and informal logical fallacies is posted by
- Mathew <mathew@mantis.com> as part of his excellent alt.atheism FAQ
- file series. This should be read carefully by anyone wishing to
- construct a logical argument to support their position on any group.
-
- For those who want more information, "The Book of the Fallacy" by
- Madsen Pirie covers the same ground in more detail.
-
- Formal and informal statistical fallacies are dealt with in the book
- "How To Lie With Statistics" by Darrell Huff. I strongly recommend
- this one.
-
- 0.11: What national and local skeptics organisations are there?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The following addresses are not guaranteed correct. Please check the
- addresses you know, and send in any updates and corrections.
-
- Argentina: CAIRP, Director, Ladislao Enrique Maiquez, Jose Marti, 35
- dep C, 1406 Buenos Aires
-
- Australia: Australian Skeptics Inc., P.O.Box E324, St. James NSW 2000,
- Australia
-
- Belgium: Committee Para, J. Dommanget, Observatoire Royal de Belgique,
- Avenue Circulaire 3, B-1180 Brussels
-
- SKEPP, W. Betz, Laarbeklaan 105, B-1090 Brussels
-
- Canada: James E. Alcock, Chairman, Glendon College, York University,
- 2275 Bayview Avenue, Toronto, Ontario
-
- Finland: Skepsis, Lauri Groehn (o Umlaut!), Ojahaapolku 8 B 17,
- SF-01600 Vantaa
-
- France: Comit'e Francais pour l'Etude des Ph'enom`enes Paranormaux,
- Dr. Claude Benski, General Secretary, Merlin Gerin, RGE/A2,
- F-38050 Grenoble Cedex
-
- Germany: Gesellschaft zur wissenschaftlichen Untersuchung von
- Parawissenschaften e.V. (GWUP) Postfach 1222 64374 Rossdorf
- Germany. Tel: +49-6154-8946, Fax: +49-6154-81912
-
- Great Britain: British Committee, Michael J. Hutchinson, Secretary, 10
- Crescent View, Loughton, Essex IG10 4PZ
-
- "The Skeptic", P.O. Box 475, Manchester, M60 2TH, UK.
-
- India: B. Premanand, Chairman, 10 Chettipalayam Road, Podanur, 641-023
- Coimbatur, Tamil Nadu
-
- Ireland: Irish Skeptics, Peter O'Hara, Dept. of Psychiatry, Airedale
- General Hospital, Steeton, Keighly, West Yorkshire,
- UK BD20 6TD
-
- Italy: Comitato Italiano per il Controllo delle Affermazioni sul
- Paranormale (CICAP), Lorenzo Montali, Via Ozanam 3, I-20129
- Milano
-
- Mexico: SOMIE, Mario Mendez-Acosta, Apartado Postal 19-546, Mexico
- 03900, D.F.
-
- New Zealand: Vicki Hyde, Chairperson, NZCSICOP, New Zealand Science
- Monthly, PO Box 19-760, Christchurch 5, New Zealand. Tel:
- (NZ)-3-384-5137, Fax: (NZ)-3-384-5138,
- email: nzsm@spis.equinox.gen.nz
-
- Netherlands: Stichting Skepsis, Rob Nanninga, Westerkade 20, NL-9718
- AS Groningen
-
- Norway: K. Stenodegard, NIVFO, P.O.Box 2119, N-7001 Trondheim
-
- Russia: Science & Religion, Ulyanovskaya 43, kor. 4, 109004 Moscow,
- Russia
-
- South Africa: Assn. for the Rational Investigation of the Paranormal
- (ARIP), Marian Laserson, Secretary, 4 Wales Street,
- Sandringham 2192
-
- Spain: Alternativa Racional a las Pseudosciencias (ARP), Mercedes
- Quintana, Apartado de Correos 17.026, E-28080 Madrid
-
- Sweden: Vetenskap och folkbildning, Box 185, S-101 23 Stockholm,
- Sweden.
-
- USA: Skeptical Inquirer, Box 703, Buffalo, NY 14226-9973. Tel:
- 716-636-1425, Fax: 716-636-1733
-
- Center for Scientific Anomalies Research, P.O. Box 1052, Ann
- Arbor, MI 48106
-
- Prometheus Books, 59 John Glenn Drive, Buffalo, NY 14215-9918
-
-
- 0.12: Where can I get books on paranormal phenomena?
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- Skeptics who want to obtain books on paranormal allegations are faced
- with a minor ethical dilemma, in that they want the books but do not
- want to hand money to the purveyors of flummery and nonsense. One
- solution is to buy the books second hand. In addition to your local
- second hand bookshop, Richard Trott <trott@gandalf.rutgers.edu> has
- volunteered to provide a free referral service for sellers and seekers
- of such second hand books.
-
- A huge annotated bibliography of books on paranormal and skeptical
- issues is available by email or FTP.
-
- 1. Through mail: Send "get skeptic biblio" to
- LISTSERV@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU or @JHUVM.BITNET.
-
- 2. Anonymous ftp: connect to "jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu", log on with
- "skeptic" and use any non-blank password, do "get skeptic.biblio".
-
- The Scientific Method
- =====================
-
- 1.1: What is the "scientific method"?
- -------------------------------------
-
- The scientific method is the best way yet discovered for winnowing
- the truth from lies and delusion. The simple version looks something
- like this:
-
- 1: Observe some aspect of the universe.
- 2: Invent a theory that is consistent with what you have
- observed.
- 3: Use the theory to make predictions.
- 4: Test those predictions by experiments or further
- observations.
- 5: Modify the theory in the light of your results.
- 6: Go to step 3.
-
- This leaves out the co-operation between scientists in building
- theories, and the fact that it is impossible for every scientist to
- independently do every experiment to confirm every theory. Because
- life is short, scientists have to trust other scientists. So a
- scientist who claims to have done an experiment and obtained certain
- results will usually be believed, and most people will not bother to
- repeat the experiment.
-
- Experiments do get repeated as part of other experiments. Most
- scientific papers contain suggestions for other scientists to follow
- up. Usually the first step in doing this is to repeat the earlier
- work. So if a theory is the starting point for a significant amount
- of work then the initial experiments will get replicated a number of
- times.
-
- Some people talk about "Kuhnian paradigm shifts". This refers to the
- observed pattern of the slow extension of scientific knowledge with
- occasional sudden revolutions. This does happen, but it still follows
- the steps above.
-
- Many philosophers of science would argue that there is no such thing
- as *the* scientific method.
-
- 1.2: What is the difference between a fact, a theory and a hypothesis?
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- In popular usage, a theory is just a vague and fuzzy sort of fact.
- But to a scientist a theory is a conceptual framework that *explains*
- existing facts and predicts new ones. For instance, today I saw the
- Sun rise. This is a fact. This fact is explained by the theory that
- the Earth is round and spins on its axis while orbiting the sun. This
- theory also explains other facts, such as the seasons and the phases
- of the moon, and allows me to make predictions about what will happen
- tomorrow.
-
- This means that in some ways the words "fact" and "theory" are
- interchangeable. The organisation of the solar system, which I used as
- a simple example of a theory, is normally considered to be a fact that
- is explained by Newton's theory of gravity. And so on.
-
- A hypothesis is a tentative theory that has not yet been tested.
- Typically, a scientist devises a hypothesis and then sees if it "holds
- water" by testing it against available data. If the hypothesis does
- hold water, the scientist declares it to be a theory.
-
- 1.3: Can science ever really prove anything?
- --------------------------------------------
-
- Yes and no. It depends on what you mean by "prove".
-
- For instance, there is little doubt that an object thrown into the air
- will come back down (ignoring spacecraft for the moment). One could
- make a scientific observation that "Things fall down". I am about to
- throw a stone into the air. I use my observation of past events to
- predict that the stone will come back down. Wow - it did!
-
- But next time I throw a stone, it might not come down. It might
- hover, or go shooting off upwards. So not even this simple fact has
- been really proved. But you would have to be very perverse to claim
- that the next thrown stone will not come back down. So for ordinary
- everyday use, we can say that the theory is true.
-
- You can think of facts and theories (not just scientific ones, but
- ordinary everyday ones) as being on a scale of certainty. Up at the
- top end we have facts like "things fall down". Down at the bottom we
- have "the Earth is flat". In the middle we have "I will die of heart
- disease". Some scientific theories are nearer the top than others,
- but none of them ever actually reach it. Skepticism is usually
- directed at claims that contradict facts and theories that are very
- near the top of the scale. If you want to discuss ideas nearer the
- middle of the scale (that is, things about which there is real debate
- in the scientific community) then you would be better off asking on
- the appropriate specialist group.
-
- 1.4: If scientific theories keep changing, where is the Truth?
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- In 1666 Isaac Newton proposed his theory of gravitation. This was one
- of the greatest intellectual feats of all time. The theory explained
- all the observed facts, and made predictions that were later tested
- and found to be correct within the accuracy of the instruments being
- used. As far as anyone could see, Newton's theory was the Truth.
-
- During the nineteenth century, more accurate instruments were used to
- test Newton's theory, and found some slight discrepancies (for
- instance, the orbit of Mercury wasn't quite right). Albert Einstein
- proposed his theories of Relativity, which explained the newly
- observed facts and made more predictions. Those predictions have now
- been tested and found to be correct within the accuracy of the
- instruments being used. As far as anyone can see, Einstein's theory
- is the Truth.
-
- So how can the Truth change? Well the answer is that it hasn't. The
- Universe is still the same as it ever was, and Newton's theory is as
- true as it ever was. If you take a course in physics today, you will
- be taught Newton's Laws. They can be used to make predictions, and
- those predictions are still correct. Only if you are dealing with
- things that move close to the speed of light do you need to use
- Einstein's theories. If you are working at ordinary speeds outside of
- very strong gravitational fields and use Einstein, you will get
- (almost) exactly the same answer as you would with Newton. It just
- takes longer because using Einstein involves rather more maths.
-
- One other note about truth: science does not make moral judgements.
- Anyone who tries to draw moral lessons from the laws of nature is on
- very dangerous ground. Evolution in particular seems to suffer from
- this. At one time or another it seems to have been used to justify
- Nazism, Communism, and every other -ism in between. These
- justifications are all completely bogus. Similarly, anyone who says
- "evolution theory is evil because it is used to support Communism" (or
- any other -ism) has also strayed from the path of Logic.
-
- 1.5: What evidence is needed for an extraordinary claim?
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- Extraordinary evidence.
-
- An extraordinary claim is one that contradicts a fact that is close
- to the top of the certainty scale discussed above. So if you are
- trying to contradict such a fact, you had better have facts available
- that are even higher up the certainty scale.
-
- 1.6: What is Occam's Razor?
- ---------------------------
-
- Ockham's Razor ("Occam" is a Latinised variant) is the principle
- proposed by William of Ockham in the fifteenth century that
- "Pluralitas non est ponenda sine neccesitate", which translates as
- "entities should not be multiplied unnecessarily". Various other
- rephrasings have been incorrectly attributed to him. In more modern
- terms, if you have two theories which both explain the observed facts
- then you should use the simplest until more evidence comes along. See
- W.M. Thorburn, "The Myth of Occam's Razor," _Mind_ 27:345-353 (1918)
- for a detailed study of what Ockham actually wrote and what others
- wrote after him.
-
- The reason behind the razor is that for any given set of facts there
- are an infinite number of theories that could explain them. For
- instance, if you have a graph with four points in a line then the
- simplest theory that explains them is a linear relationship, but you
- can draw an infinite number of different curves that all pass through
- the four points. There is no evidence that the straight line is the
- right one, but it is the simplest possible solution. So you might as
- well use it until someone comes along with a point off the straight
- line.
-
- Also, if you have a few thousand points on the line and someone
- suggests that there is a point that is off the line, it's a pretty
- fair bet that they are wrong.
-
- A related rule, which can be used to slice open conspiracy theories, is
- Hanlon's Razor: "Never attribute to malice that which can be
- adequately explained by stupidity". See the Jargon File (edited by
- Eric Raymond) for more details.
-
- 1.7: Galileo was persecuted, just like researchers into <X> today.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- People putting forward extraordinary claims often refer to Galileo as
- an example of a great genius being persecuted by the establishment for
- heretical theories. They claim that the scientific establishment is
- afraid of being proved wrong, and hence is trying to suppress the
- truth.
-
- This is a classic conspiracy theory. The Conspirators are all those
- scientists who have bothered to point out flaws in the claims put
- forward by the researchers.
-
- The usual rejoinder to someone who says "They laughed at Columbus,
- they laughed at Galileo" is to say "But they also laughed at Bozo the
- Clown". (From Carl Sagan, "Broca's Brain", Coronet 1980, p79).
-
- Incidentally, stories about the persecution of Galileo Galilei and the
- ridicule Christopher Columbus had to endure should be taken with a
- grain of salt.
-
- During the early days of Galileo's theory church officials were
- interested and sometimes supportive, even though they had yet to find
- a way to incorporate it into theology. His main adversaries were
- established scientists - since he was unable to provide HARD proofs
- they didn't accept his model. Galileo became more agitated, declared
- them ignorant fools and publicy stated that his model was the correct
- one, thus coming in conflict with the church.
-
- When Columbus proposed to take the "Western Route" the spherical
- nature of the Earth was common knowledge, even though the diameter was
- still debatable. Columbus simply believed that the Earth was a lot
- smaller, while his adversaries claimed that the Western Route would be
- too long. If America hadn't been in his way, he most likely would have
- failed. The myth that "he was laughed at for believing that the Earth
- was a globe" stems from an American author who intentionally
- adulterated history.
-
-
- 1.8: What is the "Experimenter effect"?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- It is unconscious bias introduced into an experiment by the
- experimenter. It can occur in one of two ways:
-
- o Scientists doing experiments often have to look for small effects
- or differences between the things being experimented on.
-
- o Experiments require many samples to be treated in exactly the same
- way in order to get consistent results.
-
- Note that neither of these sources of bias require deliberate fraud.
-
- A classic example of the first kind of bias was the "N-ray",
- discovered early this century. Detecting them required the
- investigator to look for very faint flashes of light on a
- scintillator. Many scientists reported detecting these rays. They
- were fooling themselves. For more details, see "The Mutations of
- Science" in "Science since Babylon" by Derek Price (Yale Univ. Press).
-
- A classic example of the second kind of bias were the detailed
- investigations into the relationship between race and brain capacity
- in the last century. Skull capacity was measured by filling the empty
- skull with lead shot or mustard seed, and then measuring the volume of
- beans. A significant difference in the results could be obtained by
- ensuring that the filling in some skulls was better settled than
- others. For more details on this story, read Stephen Jay Gould's "The
- Mismeasure of Man".
-
- For more detail see:
-
- T.X. Barber, "Pitfalls of Human Research", 1976.
- Robert Rosenthal, "Pygmalion in the Classroom".
-
- [These were recommended by a correspondant. Sorry I have no more
- information.]
-
- 1.9: How much fraud is there in science?
- ----------------------------------------
-
- In its simplest form this question is unanswerable, since undetected
- fraud is by definition unmeasurable. Of course there are many known
- cases of fraud in science. Some use this to argue that all scientific
- findings (especially those they dislike) are worthless.
-
- This ignores the replication of results which is routinely undertaken
- by scientists. Any important result will be replicated many times by
- many different people. So an assertion that (for instance) scientists
- are lying about carbon-14 dating requires that a great many scientists
- are engaging in a conspiracy. See the previous question.
-
- In fact the existence of known and documented fraud is a good
- illustration of the self-correcting nature of science. It does not
- matter if a proportion of scientists are fraudsters because any
- important work they do will not be taken seriously without independant
- verification. Hence they must confine themselves to pedestrian work
- which no-one is much interested in, and obtain only the expected
- results. For anyone with the talent and ambition necessary to get a
- Ph.D this is not going to be an enjoyable career.
-
- Also, most scientists are idealists. They perceive beauty in
- scientific truth and see its discovery as their vocation. Without
- this most would have gone into something more lucrative.
-
- These arguments suggest that undetected fraud in science is both rare
- and unimportant.
-
- For more detail on more scientific frauds than you ever knew existed,
- see "False Prophets" by Alexander Koln.
-
- The standard textbook used in North America is "Betrayers of the
- Truth: Fraud and Deceit in Science" by William Broad and Nicholas Wade
- (Oxford 1982).
-
- There is a mailing list SCIFRAUD for the discussion of fraud and
- questionable behaviour in science. To subscribe, send
- "sub scifraud <Your Name>" to "listserv@uacsc2.albany.edu".
-
- 1.9.1: Did Mendel fudge his results?
- ------------------------------------
-
- Gregor Mendel was a 19th Century monk who discovered the laws of
- inheritance (dominant and recessive genes etc.). More recent analysis
- of his results suggest that they are "too good to be true". Mendelian
- inheritance involves the random selection of possible traits from
- parents, with particular probabilities of particular traits. It seems
- from Mendel's raw data that chance played a smaller part in his
- experiments than it should. This does not imply fraud on the part of
- Mendel.
-
- First, the experiments were not "blind" (see the questions about
- double blind experiments and the experimenter effect). Deciding
- whether a particular pea is wrinkled or not needs judgement, and this
- could bias Mendel's results towards the expected. This is an example
- of the "experimenter effect".
-
- Second, Mendel's Laws are only approximations. In fact it does turn
- out that in some cases inheritance is less random than his Laws state.
-
- Third, Mendel might have neglected to publish the results of `failed'
- experiments. It is interesting to note that all 7 of the
- characteristics measured in his published work are controlled by
- single genes. He did not report any experiments with more complicated
- characteristics. Mendel later started experiments with a more complex
- plant, hawkweed, could not interpret the results, got discouraged and
- abandoned plant science.
-
- See "The Human Blueprint" by Robert Shapiro (New York: St. Martin's,
- 1991) p. 17.
-
- Psychic Powers
- ==============
-
- 2.1: Is Uri Geller for real?
- ----------------------------
-
- James "The Amazing" Randi has, through various demonstrations, cast
- doubt on Geller's claims of psychic powers. Geller has sued Randi.
- Skeptics are advised to exercise extreme caution in addressing this
- topic, given the pending litigation. Some skeptics organisations have
- been threatened with litigation over this matter, which could be
- expected to be extremely expensive and time-consuming whatever the
- eventual outcome.
-
- 2.2: I have had a psychic experience.
- -------------------------------------
-
- That is pretty remarkable. But before you post to the Net, consider:-
-
- * Could it just be coincidence? The human mind is good at
- remembering odd things but tends to forget ordinary things, such as
- premonitions that didn't happen. If psychic experiences happen to
- you on a regular basis then try writing down the premonitions when
- you have them and then comparing your record to later events.
-
- * If you think you have a mental link with someone you know, try a
- few tests with playing cards [Has anyone got a good protocol for
- this kind of thing? PAJ].
-
- * If you are receiving messages from elsewhere (e.g. UFOs), ask for
- specific information that you can then check. The complete prime
- factorisation of 2^1024+1 would be a good start: we don't know it,
- but any proposed answer is easy to check.
-
- If you want to make a formal registration of your predictions, send
- mail to <prediction_registry@sol1.gps.caltech.edu>.
-
- 2.3: What is "Sensory Leakage"?
- -------------------------------
-
- Sensory leakage is something that designers of tests for psi must be
- careful to guard against. Tests for psi use powerful statistical
- tests to search for faint traces of communication. Unfortunately the
- fact that communication has taken place does not prove that it was
- done by telepathy. It could have been through some more mundane form
- of signal.
-
- For instance one experiment involved a "sender" in one room with a
- stack of numbered cards (1-10) and a "receiver" in another room trying
- to guess what the next card was. The sender looked at a card and
- pressed a button to signal to the receiver. The receiver then tried
- to guess the number on the card. There was a definite correlation
- between the card numbers and the guesses. However the sender could
- signal the receiver by varying the delays between buzzes. When this
- channel of communication was removed, the effect disappeared.
-
- 2.4: Who are the main psi researchers?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Targ and Puthoff spring to mind, but actually, Puthoff is no longer
- doing psi research (I don't have any idea what Targ is up to these
- days.) Granted, their SRI work is quite famous, but if we want to
- review the historical (rather than currently active) figures, you
- probably want to go back at least as far as the Rhines.
-
- Helmut Schmidt, a physicist who has been looking at PK, is still
- active at the Mind Science Foundation in Texas. (Sorry, I don't know a
- more specific address than that.)
-
- The Foundation for Research into the Nature of Man (FRNM), which is
- what Rhine's work at Duke eventually developed into, is still active
- near Duke. It is currently headed by K. Ramakrishna Rao.
-
- The Koestler Chair of Parapsychology at the University of Edinburgh
- is, as far as I know, still active. The current incumbent is, I think,
- named Robert Morris; his main assistant is Deborah Delanoy.
-
- Roger Nelson is active in the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research
- center (PEAR) and occasionally posts to the net.
-
- Active workers in the field that I can think of currently include Dean
- Radin, who also posts to sci.skeptic as <dir2@gte.com>,
- Jessica Utts, and Ed May. The Parapsychological Association has a much
- larger roster than that, of course, but I'm not a member myself and
- don't have access to their membership roll.
-
- 2.5: Does dowsing work?
- -----------------------
-
- Dowsing is the art of finding underground water by extra-sensory
- perception. Sometimes tools are used. The traditional one is a
- forked hazel stick. When held in the correct way this will twitch in
- response to small muscle movements in the back and shoulders. Another
- tool that has become popular in recent years is a pair of rods mounted
- in tubes that are held in each hand just in front of the user.
-
- Rod bent into tube.
- |
- V
- r-------------------------------
- || ^
- || |
- || <- Tube Rod
- ||
- ||
- ||
-
- When water (or something else) is dowsed, the rods turn towards each
- other. Like the forked hazel stick it amplifies small movements of
- the arm and shoulder muscles.
-
- Unfortunately careful tests of dowsers have revealed absolutely no
- ability to find water or anything else by extra-sensory perception.
- Dowsing success stories can be explained by noting that wherever you
- dig you will find water. You just have to dig deep enough. It has
- also been suggested that dowsers may unconsciously use clues in the
- environment.
-
- James Randi has tested more than 100 dowsers (I don't know the actual
- count). He tells that only 2 tried to cheat. This suggests that
- dowsers are basically honest people.
-
- The Skeptical Inquirer has published a number of articles on dowsing.
- James Randi's "A Controlled Test of Dowsing" was in vol. 4, no. 1, pp.
- 16-20. Michael Martin's "A New Controlled Dowsing Experiment" was in
- vol. 8, pp. 138-140. Dick Smith's "Two Tests of Divining in
- Australia" was in vol. 6, no. 4, pp. 34-37. Randi's book Flim-Flam!
- has a section on dowsing. The main skeptical book about dowsing is
- Vogt, E.Z. and Hyman R. (1959, 2nd edition 1979) "Water witching USA".
- The University of Chicago Press. 260 pages. Available as a paperback.
-
-
- 2.6: Could psi be inhibited by the presence of skeptics?
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- Psychic researchers have noted something they call the "shyness
- effect" (or more grandly "psi-mediated experimenter effects"). This
- is invoked to explain the way in which many subjects' psychic powers
- seem to fade when exposed to careful scrutiny and proper controls.
- Often it is alleged that having a skeptic in the audience can prevent
- the delicate operation of psi.
-
- In its most extreme form this hypothesis becomes a "catch-22" that
- makes any results consistent with a psi hypothesis. This renders the
- hypothesis unfalsifiable and therefore unscientific. Less extreme
- forms might be testable.
-
- 2.7: Why don't the skeptics test the *real* psychics?
- -----------------------------------------------------
-
- A claim is sometimes made that the Skeptics movement only tests those
- psychics which it knows to be frauds. The real psychics are supposedly
- being ignored by skeptics who are afraid to be proved wrong.
-
- There are three problems with this claim.
-
- Firstly, it assumes that all the skeptics are engaged in a conspiracy
- to persuade the world that psychic powers do not exist. This is only
- a Petty Conspiracy theory (see section 0), since it only requires the
- involvment of a few dozen of the most prominent skeptics, but it is
- still difficult to see any motive for such a deception. "Fear of
- being proved wrong" implies that they already know they are wrong,
- which makes their continued activity rather puzzling.
-
- Secondly, most skeptics are always ready to take part in any
- reasonable test. The "real" psychics are perfectly at liberty to
- challange the skeptics.
-
- Thirdly, there are always more alleged psychics. Hence this
- argument presents the skeptics with an ever-receeding target. The
- dialogue goes something like this:
-
- Paranormalist: Yes, I conceed that Mr. Adams is a fake, but what about
- Mr. Brown. The things that he does could never be
- faked.
-
- [Some months later]
-
- Skeptic: Here is how Brown did it....
-
- P: OK, I conceed that Adams and Brown are fakes, but Mrs Carver is the
- surely the real thing.
-
- [Some months later]
-
- S: Here is how Carver did it...
-
- P: OK, maybe Adams, Brown and Carver were fakes, but what about Digby
- and Ender?
-
- S: I give up. There's no convincing some people.
-
- P: [shouting] Digby and Ender are real psychics: the skeptics are
- afraid to test them. They only test the fakes!
-
- 2.8: What is the ganzfeld?
- --------------------------
-
- A state of sensory deprivation which may enhance psychic abilities.
- The subject lies on a soft bed, with a "white noise" hissing sound
- played through headphones and half of a ping-pong ball placed over
- each eye to give an empty field of view. The subject then talks to a
- tape recorder, describing any ideas which enter his or her mind.
-
- To test whether psychic communication is occuring, a "sender"
- concentrates on some image while the "receiver" is in the ganzfeld.
- Then the image is shown to the receiver along with three other images.
- The receiver must pick the image that was seen by the sender.
-
- Dean Radin <dradin@festival.ed.ac.uk> has been conducting some careful
- ganzfeld experiments, which he describes as follows:
-
- > ... our unit has recently conducted pilot replications of the
- > ganzfeld telepathy studies reported by Bem & Honorton. In 76
- > sessions we obtained 25 direct hits, which is quite close to the 33%
- > meta-analytic hit rate previously reported by Honorton et al..
-
- > Our methodology was based on Honorton's auto-ganzfeld setup, which
- > automated most aspects of the experiment, except we were even more
- > obsessive: Our system uses a computer to randomly select the target,
- > to automatically present the target clip to the sender, to
- > automatically present the judging clips in a random order to the
- > receiver, and to store the data. The receiver and sender rooms are
- > 25 meters apart, behind 4 doors, and sound-shielded to 100 dB.
-
- > We only use volunteer subjects claiming no special abilities,
- > typically for one or two sessions. The methodology and preliminary
- > study results will be reported in detail in August at the annual
- > Parapsychological Association convention. Some of our other plans
- > are reported in the 15 May 93 New Scientist cover article on
- > telepathy.
-
- UFOs and Flying Saucers
- =======================
-
- 3.1 What are UFOs?
- -------------------
-
- UFOs are, simply, Unidentified Flying Objects, no more, no less. The
- word "object" is used in a very broad way, not to imply a physical
- "object" but more an experienced phenomenon, e.g. something seen,
- heard, "sensed" etc. This means that if you are out one night and see
- a light moving in the sky and cannot immediately identify it as a
- certain star, planet or other object, then it is by definition a UFO.
- THIS DOES NOT MEAN YOU HAVE SEEN AN ALIEN SPACESHIP.
-
- A better question would be:
-
- 3.1.1 Are UFOs alien spacecraft?
- ---------------------------------
-
- Probably not. The vast majority of UFO reports, when investigated by
- competent researchers (and that is a problem all by itself), can be
- easily explained as natural or manmade objects misidentified for one
- reason or another. The actual percentage is around 95%. A very few
- reports are provable hoaxes. The remaining few percent (some skeptics
- argue that there are no remaining reports) are not explained at this
- time. Again, this does not mean that they are observations of alien
- spaceships. All we can say is that, given the information presently
- available, some cases don't appear to be stars, balloons, airplanes,
- aurorae. etc. Given a great deal more time and effort, many more
- could likely be identified. It's possible that the witness(es) were
- in error, or are very good liars. And the remaining few cases? Well,
- the best we can say, as true skeptics, is that we don't know what they
- were, but there is NO proof that they were alien spacecraft.
-
- 3.1.2 Are UFOs natural phenomena?
- ----------------------------------
-
- Possibly. A number of theories have been proposed, suggesting that
- some UFOs are "plasmas" or variations of ball lightning or earthquake
- lights. Unfortunately, the theories seem to change to fit observed
- data, rather than predict the observations. Also, studies designed to
- support the theories have used newspaper articles and raw, unsifted UFO
- case lists for data, and therefore the studies do not appear to be
- completely unbiased. Perhaps time will tell. Until then it is safe to
- say that SOME UFOs are probably ball lightning or other rare natural
- phenomena.
-
- 3.1.3 But isn't it possible that aliens are visiting Earth?
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Yes. But it is also possible that there is an invisible snorg reading
- this over your shoulder right now.
-
- Basically, some astronomers (e.g. Carl Sagan) are convinced that there
- are other habitable planets in our galaxy, and that there may be some
- form of life on them. Assuming that parallel evolution occurred on
- these other planets, there MIGHT be intelligent life forms there. It
- is possible that some of these life forms could have an advanced
- civilization, and perhaps have achieved space travel. BUT - there is
- no proof that this is so. SETI programs such as the High Resolution
- Microwave Search now being conducted by NASA under the direction of
- Jill Tartar are "listening" to other stars in the hope of detecting
- radio signals that might indicate intelligent life - kind of
- listening for the equivalent of "Watson, come here, I need you!", or
- "I love Lucy" in the infancy of our early communications. Such
- searches have been fruitless, so far.
-
- If there are aliens on distant planets, then it is possible that they
- might have found a way to travel between stars in their lifetimes.
- According to our present understanding of physics, this is not likely,
- given the vast distances between stars. Even travelling at the speed
- of light (which cannot be done), a round trip to the nearest star would
- take about ten years. This does not rule out interstellar ships, but
- it does make it seem unlikely that we are being visited.
-
- If *even one* civilization has found a way to travel between stars in
- the entire history of the Milky Way Galaxy (about ten billion years),
- it ought to fill the entire Galaxy in only a hundred million years or
- so. The question, then, is why don't we observe evidence of alien
- civilization everywhere? This question is known as the Fermi Paradox,
- and there is no really satisfactory answer. If, however, we postulate
- alien visits to Earth, we must also accept a Galaxy-wide civilization
- and ask why we see no evidence of it.
-
- 3.2: Is it true that the US government has a crashed flying saucer (MJ-12)?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The MJ-12 documents purportedly established that the U.S. government
- had established a secret organization of 12 people called MJ-12 or
- Majestic-12 to deal with UFOs. These 12 people were all conveniently
- dead at the time the documents were discovered. Klass proved that the
- documents are fakes.
-
- The "Roswell Incident" refers to an alleged UFO crash in Roswell, NM.
- Philip Klass has also investigated this one and shown the reports to
- be bogus. One of the more notable items of "evidence" was a document
- "signed by the president". Klass showed that this signature was a
- photocopy of an existing presidential signature. See SI 14:2 (Winter
- 1990) pp 135-140.
-
- All such allegations involve a conspiracy theory. Sometimes these
- conspiracy theories get very big indeed. One common one involves a
- treaty between the government and the saucer people whereby the
- government stays in power and the saucer people get to abduct humans
- for various gruesome purposes.
-
- 3.3: What is "channeling"?
- --------------------------
-
- "Channeling" is remarkably similar to Spiritualism. The main
- difference is that the relatives "on the other side" are replaced by a
- wide variety of other beings. This means that the channeler does not
- have to worry about providing accurate information about people in the
- audience. The beings that channelers claim to speak for range from
- enlightened aliens to humans who lived thousands of years ago to
- discarnate intelligences who have never had bodies.
-
- 3.4: How can we test a channeler?
- ---------------------------------
-
- Some channelled entities are alleged to come from the distant past.
- They can be asked about events, climate and language in ways that can
- be checked.
-
- If the entity is from a technically advanced race, try asking for the
- complete factorisation of 2^1024+1.
-
- 3.5: I am in telepathic contact with the aliens.
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- See the earlier section on psychic experiences and then try testing
- your aliens to see if you get a specific answer. If you can come up
- with new facts that can be tested by scientists then you will be
- listened to. Otherwise you would do better on alt.alien.visitors.
-
- 3.6: Some bozo has just posted a load of "teachings" from a UFO. What
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- should I do?
- ------------
-
- You have several choices:
-
- * Ignore it.
-
- * Ask for evidence (see question 3.4 above).
-
- * Insult or flame the poster. This is a bad idea.
-
- 3.7: Are crop circles made by flying saucers?
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- There is no convincing evidence that crop circles or any other kind of
- UGM (Unusual Ground Markings) were made by aliens. There are some
- reports of lights being seen in and around crop circle sites, and a few
- videos showing objects flitting over fields. The lights are hardly
- proof, and the objects in the videos seem to be pieces of foil or paper
- being tossed about by the wind.
-
- In a deliberate attempt to test crop circle "experts", a crop circle
- was faked under the watchful eyes of the media. When cerealogists were
- called in, they proclaimed it genuine.
-
- 3.7.1: Are crop circles made by "vortices"?
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- Probably not. There are a number of meteorologists who believe that
- crop circle formations are created by rare natural forces such as
- "ionised plasma vortices". Basically, winds blowing across rolling
- hills sometimes form eddies, which in some circumstances (that have
- never been quantified) become strong, downward spiralling drafts that
- lay down the crop. Cerealogists claim to have over two dozen witnesses
- to such events. Unfortunately, many more have said they have seen
- flying saucers do the same thing.
-
- Scientific articles arguing for the reality of these vortices have
- appeared regularly in the Journal of Meteorology. But its editor is
- the leading proponent of the theory, Dr. Terence Meaden.
-
- Winds can lay down crop in patches known as lodging. But geometric
- patterns in fields can hardly be attributable to natural phenomena.
- Meaden has changed his theory to first accommodate complex circles,
- ovals and even triangles (!), but now admits that most circles are
- hoaxes and the theory can only explain simpler patterns.
-
- 3.7.2: Are crop circles made by hoaxers?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- Of course. Although most people have heard only of two, Doug Bower and
- Dave Chorley of England, many others have been caught, not only in
- Britain but in other countries such as Canada. Their methods range
- from inscribed circles with a pole and a length of rope to more complex
- systems involving chains, rollers, planks and measuring devices.
-
- And as a further note: just because you can't prove a crop circle was
- made by a hoaxer, you should not assume aliens were involved. Remember
- Occam's Razor (Section 1.6).
-
- 3.7.3: Are crop circles radioactive?
- --------------------------------------
-
- This is a claim that has received wide circulation in UFO/cerealogy
- circles (pardon the pun). It is also untrue. Examination of the data
- from spectral analyses of soil taken from crop circles has shown that
- there were no readings above the normal background levels. The
- proponents of this claim are debating this, however.
-
- 3.7.4: What about cellular changes in plants within crop circles?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Yes, what about the changes? Although this is another claim that is
- widely circulated among ufologists and cerealogists, the evidence is
- simply not very good. A few photographs of alleged changes in the
- "crystalline structure" of wheat stems were published in some
- magazines and UFO publications. The method used was spagyrical
- analysis. This is a technique involving crystallization of the
- residue of organic material after harsh processing, invented three
- centuries ago and popularized by Sir Kenelm Digby. Digby is known for
- other wonderful inventions like condensation of sunlight and the
- development of sword salve (which you had to put on the weapon rather
- than on the wound, in order to cure the wound). The fact that this
- technique was tried at all casts serious doubts on the "researchers"
- involved.
-
- 3.8: Have people been abducted by UFOs?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- While the number of people who believe themselves to have been
- abducted by flying saucer aliens must number at least many thousands,
- not one of them has produced any physical evidence to establish the
- reality of their claim. On the contrary, a number of factors clearly
- point to a subjective basis for the "UFO abduction" phenomenon.
- Probably the strongest factor is that of the cultural dependence of
- such claims. Such claims were virtually unknown until the famous
- abduction story of Betty and Barney Hill received widespread publicity
- in the late 1960s. Also, the appearance and behavior of supposed UFO
- occupants varies greatly with location and year. UFO abduction claims
- are made much less frequently outside North America, especially in
- non-English-speaking countries, although foreign reports have started
- to catch up since the publication of Whitley Strieber's "Communion".
- Furthermore, the descriptions of supposed UFO aliens contain clear
- cultural dependencies; in North America large-headed grey aliens
- predominate, while in Britain abducting aliens are mostly tall, blond,
- and Nordic. Aliens that are claimed to steal sperm, eggs, and fetuses,
- or make scars or body implants on those supposedly abducted, were
- practically unknown before the publication of Budd Hopkins's books.
- This particularly alarming type of abduction seems to be quite rare
- outside North America.
-
- Clear "borrowings" from popular science fiction stories can be traced
- in certain major "UFO abductions." Barney Hill's description of his
- supposed abductors' "wraparound eyes" (an extreme rarity in science
- fiction films), first described and drawn during a hypnosis session on
- Feb. 22, 1964, comes just twelve days after the first broadcast of an
- episode of "The Outer Limits" featuring an alien of this quite unique
- description. Many other elements of the Hill story can be traced to
- the 1953 film "Invaders from Mars," including aliens having "Jimmy
- Durante" noses, an alien medical examination, something done to her
- eyes to relax her, being probed with a needle, a star map hanging on a
- wall, a notebook offered as a remembrance, even the imagery of a
- needle in the navel. Other "abductees" borrowed other ideas from
- "Invaders From Mars," including brain implants, aliens drilling into a
- human skull, and aliens seeking to revitalize a dying world.
-
- Originally, stories of UFO abductions were obtainable solely by
- hypnotic regression of the claimant, although in recent years the
- subject of "UFO abductions" has become so generally known that some
- subjects claim to remember their "abduction" without hypnosis.
- Hypnosis is a NOT a reliable method for extracting so- called "hidden
- memories", and its use in this manner is likely to lead to fabrication
- and error. Moreover, if it is suggested to a hypnotized person that
- fictitious events have occurred, the subject himself may come to
- believe this (See the article "Hypnosis" in the 1974 "Encyclopaedia
- Brittanica" by Martin Orne).
-
-
- 3.9: What is causing the strange cattle deaths?
- -----------------------------------------------
-
- The only information I have on these is a long file that came to me
- via Len Bucuvalas <lpb@stratus.swdc.stratus.com> from ParaNet. The
- gist is that cattle and other animals have been found dead with
- strange mutilations. Organs, especially genitals, have been removed
- but no blood appears to have been lost. These events are also
- sometimes associated with reports of alien encounters and UFOs.
-
- The best source of information on cattle mutilations is the
- book Mute Evidence by Ian Summers and Daniel Kagan, a couple
- of investigative journalists who started out believing that
- something mysterious was happening, but ended up skeptics.
- SI has published James Stewart's "Cattle Mutilations: An Episode
- of Collective Delusion" (way back in vol. 1, no. 2, pp. 55-66).
- Stewart is a sociologist who examined the pattern of reports and
- found that new reports were inspired by previous media coverage.
- It came in "waves" or "flaps".
-
- 3.10: What is the face on Mars?
- -------------------------------
-
- One of the Mars orbiters took a photograph of a part of Mars (Cydonia)
- when the sun was very low on the horizon. The picture shows a "face"
- and some nearby pyramids. Both these structures are seen more by
- their shadows than their actual shape. The pyramid shadows appear
- regular because their size is close to the limit of resolution of the
- camera, and the "face" is just a chance arrangement of shadow over a
- couple of hills. The human brain is very good at picking out familiar
- patterns in random noise, so it is not surprising that a couple of
- Martian surface features (out of thousands photographed) vaguely
- resemble a face when seen in the right light.
-
- Many people find the "face" more reminiscent of a monkey than a human
- being.
-
- Richard Hoagland has championed the idea that the Face is artificial,
- intended to resemble a human, and erected by an extraterrestrial
- civilization. Most other analysts concede that the resemblance is most
- likely accidental. Other Viking images show a smiley-faced crater and
- a lava flow resembling Kermit the Frog elsewhere on Mars. There exists
- a Mars Anomalies Research Society (sorry, don't know the address) to
- study the Face and related features.
-
- The Mars Observer spacecraft had (and for all we know it still has) a
- camera that could give 1.5m per pixel resolution. Unfortunately NASA
- scientists lost contact with the spacecraft just before it arrived at
- Mars. Among the theories proposed to explain this are:
-
- 1: The failure of a couple of transistors after spending years in
- space.
-
- 2: The presence of evil beings on Mars who wish to hide their
- existence from humanity (so why did they build the Face and let
- Viking see it?).
-
- 3: The existence of a conspiracy on the part of NASA and the US
- government to hide the existence of aliens from humanity (see
- section 0.8 on Conspiracy theories).
-
- Anyone who wants to learn some more about this should look up "Image
- Processing", volume 4 issue 3, which includes enhanced images of the
- "face". Hoagland has written "The Monuments of Mars: A City on the
- Edge of Forever", North Atlantic Books, Berkeley, California, USA,
- 1987.
-
- [Some of this is from the sci.space FAQs]
-
- 3.11: Did Ezekiel See a Flying Saucer?
- --------------------------------------
-
- The chapter in question is Ezekiel 1:4-28. This vision is an example
- of apocalyptic writing common in the centuries before and after
- Christ. (Good examples are chapters 2 and 7-12 of Daniel and the book
- of Revelation.) Apocalyptic literature is difficult to interpret
- because the language is symbolic and figurative. In some cases the
- writer will reveal what is meant by the symbols. Verse 28 identifies
- Ezekiel's wheels within wheels vision as, "the appearance of the
- likeness of the glory of the LORD." This "glory" is the "Khabod", a
- manifestation of brilliant light thought to be present in the temple.
- The wheels are described as appearing in a *vision* which is more like
- an hallucination than a physical event. The wheels are seen again in
- Ezekiel chap 10 leaving the temple in Jerusalem, but Ezekiel sees this
- while sitting inside his house which is in Babylon (see Eze. 1:1-2 and
- Eze. 8:1). In other words this was a message from God (or a
- hallucination) rather than a physical event.
-
- 3.12: What happened at Tunguska?
- --------------------------------
-
- At 7:17 in the morning of June 30th 1908, close to the Stony Tunguska
- River, on the Central Siberian Plateau, a huge air explosion occurred.
- The explosion was powerful enough to be heard hundreds of miles away.
- The area around the Stony Tunguska River is inaccessible and consists
- mostly of bogs and pine forests. The seismic shocks from the
- explosion were detected around the Earth. The London Times of July
- 4th, 1908 reported "The remarkable ruddy glows which have been seen on
- many nights lately...seen...as far as Berlin."
-
- When an expedition eventually reached the epicentre of the explosion
- they found that the pine trees had been pushed over, pointing away
- from the centre. The trees directly under the explosion remained
- standing. Some small craters *were* observed at the time but have
- disappeared over the years due to the boggy land. The pattern is now
- recognised as being similar to that produced by an air-burst nuclear
- bomb.
-
- Currently the event is usually explained as a small, unnoticed, comet
- hitting the upper atmosphere somewhere over China and finally
- exploding a few seconds later above Tunguska. A number of other
- explainations have been offered...
-
- * an atomic explosion. Some reports collected some time after the
- event describe a typical mushroom cloud. The problem here is
- that such clouds are typical of large explosions due to any cause
- - they are not peculiar to atomic explosions. There is also the
- difficulty in explaining how the Russians first developed and
- then forgot the technology when it would have been very useful in
- two major wars!
-
- * a small black hole weighing a few million tons passed through the
- Earth. The other entry/exit point was unnoticed as it was in the
- ocean. Steven Hawking has now shown that black holes of such a
- size have very short lives in cosmic terms due to an
- `evaporation' effect.
-
- * a small anti-matter meteor. This now seems very unlikely with
- the recent discovery of large amounts of inter-stellar matter in
- which, although still close to a vacuum, is quite sufficient to
- erode any small amount of anti-matter quite rapidly. In addition,
- the very existance of anti-matter in any sizable amounts in our
- universe is now thought to be very unlikely.
-
- * an alien spaceship, damaged and out of control, exploded during
- an emergency landing. There is no supporting evidence for this
- apart from eye witness reports of the vapour trail caused during
- the objects passage through the atmosphere showing a distinct
- `bend', which is supposed to be due to a course change. Such
- bends can also be found in the vapour trails of aircraft which
- can be seen to be flying straight and are caused by winds in the
- upper atmosphere.
-
-
- The event is not such a mystery as some suppose. In 1969 a Soviet
- periodical published a bibliography of more than 1000 entries. Though
- these are mostly in Russian it is not difficult to find references in
- western scientific publications. `Nature' has published a number of
- papers covering most of the above explanations.
-
- References
-
- John Baxter and Thomas Atkins, "The Fire Came By", Futura
- Publications Ltd, 1977, ISBN 0 86000 7540 0
-
- Oliver, Charles P. "The Great Siberian Meteorite," Scientific
- American, Vol. 139, No. 1(1928), 42-44
-
- Growther, J.G. "More About the Great Siberian Meteorite,"
- Scientific American, Vol. 144, No. 5 (1931), 314-317
-
- Zigel, Felix. "Nuclear Explosion over the Taiga: Study of the
- Tunguska Meteorite," Znaniye-Sila, No. 12 (1961), 24-27 [English
- translation available from Joint Publications Research Service,
- Washington, DC., JPRS-13480 (April 1962)
-
- Parry, Albert. "Russia's Rockets and Missiles" Macmillan 1962,
- pp 248-267
-
- Cowan,C.,C.R. Atluri and W.F. Libby. "Possible Anti-Matter
- Content of the Tunguska Meteor of 1908," Nature, Vol. 206, No.
- 4987 (1965), 861-865
-
- Jackson, A.A., and M.P. Ryan, "Was the Tungus Event Due to a
- Black Hole?", Nature, Vol. 245, No. 5420 (1973), 88-89
-
- 3.13: How did the Dogon know about Sirius?
- ------------------------------------------
-
- The story goes that when they were first contacted by Europeans, a
- small stone-age tribe in Africa called the Dogon knew about a string
- of astronomical phenomena, including Jovian satellites, the rings of
- Saturn and the invisible companion star of Sirius ("The Pup"). Some
- UFO enthusiasts have taken this as proof of visits to the Dogon by
- aliens.
-
- In "Broca's Brain", Carl Sagan writes:
-
- The most striking aspects of Dogon astronomy have been recounted
- by Marcel Griaule, a French anthropologist working in the 1930s
- and 1940s. While there is no reason to doubt Griaule's account,
- it is important to note that there is no earlier Western record of
- these remarkable Dogon folk beliefs [...]
-
- The facts known to the Dogon were mostly discovered over a century
- before Griaule discovered them. It is most likely that the Dogon got
- this knowledge from human visitors rather than extra-terrestrial ones.
- In addition their astronomy included a number of facts which were
- widely accepted in the 1920s but which are now known to be false. It
- seems odd that visiting aliens would have made the same mistakes.
-
- Faith Healing and Alternative Therapies
- =======================================
-
- Disclaimer: I am not medically qualified. If you have a medical
- problem then I strongly recommend that you go to a
- qualified medical practitioner. Asking the Net for
- specific medical advice is always a bad idea.
-
- 4.1: Isn't western medicine reductionistic and alternatives holistic?
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Practitioners of alternative therapies often put forward the idea that
- modern scientific medicine is reductionistic: it concentrates on those
- parts of the body that are not working properly, and in so doing it
- reduces the patient to a collection of organs. Alternative therapies
- try to consider the patient as a whole (a holistic approach).
-
- This is a fine piece of rhetoric, but it's wrong. It is true that
- modern medicine looks at the details of diseases, trying to find out
- exactly what is going wrong and what is causing it. But it also looks
- at the life of the patient, and tries to understand how the patient
- interacts with his/her environment and how this interaction can be
- improved. For instance, smoking is known to cause a wide variety of
- medical problems. Hence doctors advise patients to give up smoking as
- well as treating the individual illnesses that it causes. When a
- patient presents with an illness then the doctor will not only treat
- the illness but also try to understand how this illness was caused in
- order to avoid a recurrence.
-
- 4.2: What is a double-blind trial? What is a placebo?
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- A double-blind trial is the standard method for deciding whether or
- not a treatment has any "real" effect.
-
- A placebo is a "treatment" that has no effect except through the mind
- of the patient. The usual form is a pill containing a little lactose
- (milk-sugar), although a bitter-tasting liquid or injections of 1cc
- saline can be used instead.
-
- The "placebo effect" is the observed tendency for patients to display
- the symptoms they are told to expect.
-
- The problem is that the state of mind of a patient is often a
- significant factor in the effect of a course of treatment. All
- doctors know this; it is why "bedside manner" is considered so
- important. In statistical tests of new treatments it is even more
- important, since even a small effect from the state of mind of a small
- fraction of the patients in the trial can have a significant effect
- on the results. Hence new medicines are tested against a placebo.
- The patients in the trial are randomly divided into two groups. One
- of these groups is given the real medicine, the other is given the
- placebo. Neither group knows which they have been given. Hence the
- state of mind for both groups will be similar, and any difference
- between the two groups must be due to the drug. This is a blind trial.
-
- It has been found that patients can be unconsciously affected by the
- attitude and expectations of the doctor supplying the drug, even if
- the doctor does not explicitly tell them what to expect. Hence it is
- usual for the doctor to be equally unaware which group is which. This
- is a "double blind" trial. The job of remembering which group is
- which is given to some administrative person who does not normally
- come into contact with patients.
-
- This causes problems for many alternative therapies because they do
- something to the patient which is difficult to do in a placebo-like
- manner. For instance, a treatment involving the laying-on of hands
- cannot be done in such a way that both patient and practitioner are
- unaware as to whether a "real" laying on of hands has taken place.
- There are partial solutions to this. For instance one study employed
- a three-way test of drug placebo, counseling and alternative therapy.
-
- 4.3: Why should scientific criteria apply to alternative therapies?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- So that we can tell if they work or not. If you take a patient
- and give them treatment then one of three things will happen: the
- patient will get better, will get worse, or will not change. And this
- is true whether the treatment is a course of drugs chosen by a doctor,
- an alternative therapy, or just counting to ten.
-
- Many alternative therapies depend on "anecdotal evidence" where
- particular cases got better after the therapy was applied. Almost any
- therapy will have some such cases, even if it actually harms the
- patients. And so anecdotal evidence of Mrs. X who was cured of cancer
- by this wonderful new treatment is not useful in deciding whether the
- treatment is any good.
-
- The only way to tell for sure whether or not an alternative treatment
- works is to use a double-blind trial, or as near to it as you can get.
- See the previous question.
-
- 4.4: What is homeopathy?
- ------------------------
-
- Homeopathy is sometimes confused with herbalism. A herbalist
- prescribes herbs with known medicinal effects. Two well known
- examples are foxglove flowers (which contain digitalin) and willow
- bark (which contains aspirin). Folk remedies are now being studied
- extensively in order to winnow the wheat from the chaff.
-
- Homeopathists believe that if a drug produces symptoms similar to
- certain disease then a highly diluted form of the same drug will cure
- the disease. The greater the dilution, the stronger this curative
- effect will be (this is known as the law of Arndt-Schulz). Great
- importance is also attatched to the way in which the diluted solution
- is shaken during the dilution.
-
- People are skeptical about homeopathy because:
-
- 1: There is no known mechanism by which it can work. Many homeopathic
- treatments are so diluted that not one molecule of the original
- substance is contained in the final dose.
-
- 2: The indicator symptoms are highly subjective. Some substances have
- hundreds of trivial indicators.
-
- 3: Almost no clinical tests have been done.
-
- 4: It is not clear why trace impurities in the dilutants are not also
- fortified by the dilution mechanism.
-
- Reports of one scientific trial that seemed to provide evidence for
- homeopathy until a double-blind trial was set up can be found in
- Nature vol 333, p.816 and further, and the few issues of Nature
- following that, about until November of that year (1988).
-
- SI ran a good article on the origins and claims of homeopathy:
- Stephen Barrett, M.D., "Homeopathy: Is It Medicine?", SI,
- vol. 12, no. 1, Fall 1987, pp. 56-62.
-
- 4.5: What is aromatherapy?
- --------------------------
-
- A belief that the essential oils of various flowers have therapeutic
- effects. These effects are psychological rather than physical, and so
- its a bit difficult to define what we mean by a statement that "it
- works". After all, if people do it and feel better then that is a
- real effect, whether it occured because of suggestion or because the
- flowers contain a powerful psychoactive drug.
-
- 4.6: What is reflexology? What is iridology?
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- Reflexology is an alternative therapy based on massage of the feet.
- The idea is that parts of the body can be mapped onto areas of the
- feet. There is no known mechanism by which massaging the feet can
- affect other parts of the body (other than the simple soothing and
- relaxing effect that any massage gives) and no evidence that it
- actually works.
-
- Iridology is a remarkably similar notion. Diseases are detected and
- diagnosed by examining the iris of the eye. A good critique of
- iridology: Russell S. Worrall, "Iridology: Diagnosis or Delusion?",
- SI, vol. 7 no. 3, pp. 23-35.
-
- 4.7: Does acupuncture work?
- ----------------------------
-
- There is evidence that acupuncture treatment has an analgesic ("pain
- killing") effect. The mechanism seems to involve the endogenous
- opiate system (at least in part), but the exact mechanism by which
- endogenous opiates are released by acupuncture skin stimulation is not
- yet known. It does not appear that the effect can be explained simply
- by pain caused by the needles. However it is possible to achieve
- similar effects by suggestion alone.
-
- There have been reports of measurable physiological effects,
- apparently via local changes in the activity of the sympathetic and
- parasympathetic nervous systems. While much more detail remains to be
- elucidated, this is at least a testable hypothesis which brings
- acupuncture within the realm of science.
-
- This suggests that acupuncture can be a useful tool in pain
- management, but that it is unlikely to be of value in curing the
- underlying cause of the pain.
-
- The traditional theory of acupuncture involves balancing the yin and
- yang (male and female principles) which flow in pathways through the
- body. Nothing bearing any resemblance to this has been found by
- medical researchers.
-
- References:
-
- Skrabanek, Paul: Acupuncture: Past, Present and Future. In: Examining
- Holistic Medicine by Stalker D & Glymour G (eds), Prometheus Books, NY
-
- Skrabanek, Paul: Acupuncture and Endorphins. Lancet 1984;i:220
-
- Skrabanek, Paul: Acupuncture and the Age of Unreason. Lancet
- 1984;i:1169-1171
-
- Skrabanek, Paul: Acupuncture-Needless Needles. Irish Medical
- Journal1986;79:334-335
-
- A 1977 study, Stern, Brown, Ulett, and Sletten, 'A comparison of
- hypnosis, acupuncture, morphine, Valium, aspirin, and placebo in the
- management of experimentally induced pain,' Annals_of_the_New_York_
- Academy_of_Sciences, 296, 175-193, found that acupuncture,
- morphine, and hypnostic analgesia all produced significantly reduced
- pain ratings for cold pressor and ischemic pain.
-
- Mayer,Price, Raffi, 1977,
- "Antagonism of acupuncture analgesia in man by the narcotic
- antagonist naloxone," _Brain_Research_, 121, 368-372.
-
- Sjolund, Terenius, Erikson, 1977,
- "Increased cerebrospinal fluid levels of endorphins after electroacupuncture,"
- Acta_Physiologica_Scandinavica, 100, 382-384.
-
- "Practical application of acupuncture analgesia" and it's by Cheng,
- SB (1973 Apr 27), _Nature 242(5400)_: 559-60.
-
- "Electrophysiological measures during acupuncture-induced surgical
- analgesia" by Starr A (1989 Sep) _Arch Neurol 46(9)_: 1010-12.
-
-
- 4.8: What about psychic surgery?
- --------------------------------
-
- Psychic surgeons have claimed to be able to make magical incisions,
- remove cancers and perform other miracles. To date, no investigation
- of a psychic surgeon has ever found real paranormal ability. Instead
- they have found one of two things:
-
- 1: Simple conjuring tricks. The "surgeons" in these cases are
- confidence tricksters who prey on the desperate and the foolish.
-
- 2: Delusions of grandeur. These people are even more dangerous than
- the first category, as their treatments may actually cause harm in
- addition to whatever was wrong with the patient in the first
- place.
-
- 4.9: What is Crystal Healing?
- -----------------------------
-
- The belief that carrying a small quartz crystal will make you a
- healthier person. People selling these crystals use phrases like "the
- body's natural energy fields" and "tuning into the right vibrational
- frequencies". All this sounds vaguely scientific but means absolutely
- nothing. Crystal Healing is mostly a New Age idea. See the section
- on the New Age below for more information.
-
- 4.10: Does religious healing work?
- ----------------------------------
-
- Miraculous healing is often put forward as a proof of the existence
- and approval of God. The Catholic and Christian Scientist churches in
- particular often claim that believers have been healed, but none of
- these healings have stood up to careful scrutiny. However it should
- be noted that the Catholic church does investigate alleged miracles.
-
- One famous "healing" which has been carefully investigated is the case
- of Mrs. Jean Neil. Many people have seen the video of her getting out
- of a wheel-chair and running around the stadium at meeting led by the
- German evangeist Reinhard Bonnke. This was investigated by Dr. Peter
- May, a GP and member of the General Synod of the Church of England.
- His findings were reported in the Skeptic (organ of the UK Skeptics).
- Here is a summary of the report. [Any errors are mine. PAJ].
-
- May found that Mrs. Neil was helpful and enthusiastic when he
- contacted her, and there is little doubt that her quality of life has
- improved greatly since the "healing". However May was unable to find
- any physical changes. His report lists each of the illnesses claimed
- by Mrs. Neil, and he found that they were either not recorded by
- doctors previous to the healing or that no physical change had taken
- place. It seems that the only change in Mrs. Neil was in her mental
- state. Before the healing she was depressed and introverted.
- Afterwards she became happy and outgoing.
-
- A more sinister aspect of the story is the presentation of the Neil
- case in a video promoted by CfaN Productions. This represented Mrs.
- Neil before the healing as a "hopeless case", implied that she had a
- single serious illness rather than a series of less major ones, and
- included the false statement that she had been confined to a
- wheelchair for 25 years (in fact Mrs. Neil had used a wheelchair for
- about 15 months and could still walk, although with great difficulty).
- A report on her spine was carefully edited to include statements about
- her new pain-free movement but to exclude the statement that there was
- no evidence of physical changes.
-
- For the full report, see "The Skeptic" p9, vol. 5, no. 5, Sept. 91. Back
- issues are available from "The Skeptic (Dept. B), P.O. Box 475,
- Manchester, M60 2TH, U.K. Price UKL 2.10 for UK, UKL 2.70 elsewhere.
-
- The video is entitled "Something to Shout About --- The Documentation
- of a Miracle". Presumably "CfaN Productions" is part of Bonke's
- organisation "Church for all Nations" [does anyone have an address?]
-
- Of course, this does not disprove the existence of miraculous healing.
- Even Mrs. Neil's improvement could have been due to divine
- intervention rather than a sub-conscious decision to get better (as
- most skeptics would conclude, although the May report carefully
- refrains from doing so). I include this summary here because the Neil
- case is often cited by evangelical Christians as an undeniable
- miracle. In fact the case demonstrates that even such dramatic events
- as a cripple getting up and running may not be so very inexplicable.
-
- For more general coverage of this topic, see James Randi's book "The
- Faith Healers". Free Inquiry magazine has also run exposes on
- fraudulent faith healers like Peter Popoff and W.V. Grant.
-
- 4.11: What harm does it do anyway?
- ----------------------------------
-
- People have died when alternative practitioners told them to stop
- taking conventional treatment. Children have died when their parents
- refused to give them conventional treatment. These issues matter.
-
- Most alternative treatments are harmless, so the "complementary
- medicine" approach where conventional and alternative therapies
- proceed in parallel will not hurt anyone physically (although it is a
- waste of time and money).
-
-
- Creation versus Evolution
- =========================
-
- 5.1: Is the Bible evidence of anything?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- Apart from the beliefs of those who wrote it, no. It is true that
- most Christians take the truth of at least some parts of the bible as
- an article of faith, but non-Christians are not so constrained.
- Quoting the bible to such a person as "evidence" will simply cause
- them to question the accuracy of the bible. See the alt.atheism FAQ
- lists for more details.
-
- Some things in the bible are demonstrably true, but this does not make
- the bible evidence, since there are also things in the bible that are
- demonstrably false.
-
- 5.2: Could the Universe have been created old?
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- An argument is sometimes put forwards along the following lines:
-
- We know from biblical evidence (see above) that the Universe
- is about 6,000 years old. Therefore God created it 6,000
- years ago with fossils in the ground and light on its way from
- distant stars, so that there is no way of telling the real age
- of the Universe simply by looking at it.
-
- This is the "Omphalos" (Navel) theory of Edmund Gosse. Adam had no
- mother so did not need a navel, but was created by God with one, i.e.
- physical proof of connection with a nonexistent mother. Similarly, at
- the moment of Creation the world was chock-full of things that must
- have happened yesterday, when yesterday did not exist.
-
- The hypothesis is unfalsifiable, and therefore not a scientific one
- (see the section on the scientific method). It could also be made for
- any date in the past (like last Tuesday). Finally it requires that
- God, who is alleged to speak to us through His Works, should be lying
- to us by setting up a misleading Creation. This seems to be rather
- inconsistent with Biblical claims of God being the source of all
- truth.
-
- One might also argue that in creating the universe "old", God also
- created the past of the universe. This "fake" past must be a perfect
- match with the "real" past (otherwise we could spot the join). Hence
- the events from before the moment of "creation" are just as real as
- the events which have happened since. Since God is supposed to exist
- independently of time and space, this makes the whole idea
- meaningless.
-
- Note that this argument is not put forward by creation scientists.
- They hold that modern science has misinterpreted the evidence about
- the age of the universe.
-
- 5.3: What about Carbon-14 dating?
- ---------------------------------
-
- Isotope dating takes advantage of the fact that radioactive materials
- break down at a rate independent of their environment. Any solid
- object that formed containing radioactive materials therefore steadily
- loses them to decay. If it is possible to compare the amount of
- radioactive material currently present with the amount originally
- present, one can deduce how long ago the object was formed. The amount
- originally present cannot, of course, be observed directly, but can be
- determined by indirect means, such as identifying the decay products.
-
- C-14 dating uses an unstable isotope of carbon that is constantly
- being produced in the upper atmosphere by cosmic rays. This process is
- assumed to be in equilibrium with the decay of C-14 throughout the
- biosphere, so the proportion of carbon that is C-14 as opposed to the
- stable C-12 and C-13 isotopes is essentially constant in any living
- organism. When an organism dies, it stops taking up new carbon from
- its environment, but the C-14 in its body continues to decay. By
- measuring the amount of C-14 left in organic remains, one can
- establish how long ago the organism they came from died. Because C-14
- has a half-life of only a few thousand years, C-14 dating can only be
- used for remains less than a few tens of thousands of years old--
- after that, the C-14 is entirely gone, to all practical purposes.
- Other isotopic dating techniques, such as potassium-argon dating, use
- much longer-lived radionuclides and can reliably measure dates
- billions of years in the past.
-
- Actually the production rate isn't all that constant, so the amount of
- C-14 in the biosphere varies somewhat with time. You also need to be
- sure that the only source of carbon for the organism was atmospheric
- carbon (via plants). The nominal date from a C-14 reading, based on
- the present concentration, therefore has to be corrected to get the
- real date --- but once the correction has been calculated using an
- independent dating tool like dendrochronology (see below), it can be
- applied to almost any sample.
-
- There are some known anomolies in C14 dating, such as molluscs that
- get their carbon from water. Creationists seem to make a habit of
- taking samples that are known to be useless for C14 dating, presenting
- them to scientists for examination, representing them as other than
- they are, and then claiming the anomalous dates they get for them as
- evidence that C14 dating is all a sham.
-
- While it is true that there *may* be unknown errors in some dating
- methods (see the note in section 0 about science "proving" things)
- this assertion cannot be used to write off isotope dating as evidence
- of an ancient Earth. This is because:
-
- o There are several independent ways of dating objects, including
- radio-isotopes, dendrochronology, position in rock strata etc.
- These all give a consistent picture.
-
- o Dating methods all point to an *old* Earth, about *half a million*
- times older than the Creationists claim. This requires dating
- methods which are accurate up to 6,000 years ago and then suddenly
- start to give completely wrong (but still consistent) answers. Even
- if our dating methods are out by a factor of 10 or 100, the earth is
- still thousands of times older than Creationists claim.
-
- 5.4: What is dendrochronology?
- ------------------------------
-
- The science of dating wood by a study of annual rings.
-
- [These figures and references come from a longer summary e-mailed to me
- by <whheydt@pbhya.PacBell.com>. Any mistakes are mine. PAJ]
-
- Everyone knows that when you cut down a tree the cut surface shows a
- series of concentric rings, and that one of these rings is added each
- year as the tree grows. The lighter part of the ring is the summer
- growth and the darker part is the winter growth. Hence you can date a
- tree by counting the rings.
-
- But the rings are not evenly spaced. Some rings are wider than
- others. These correspond to good and poor growing seasons. So if you
- have a piece of wood cut down a few thousand years ago, you can date
- it by comparing the pattern of rings in your sample to known patterns
- in recently cut trees (Bristlecone pines exist which are over 4600
- years old, and core samples allow ring counting without killing the
- tree).
-
- Now for the clever bit. The tree from which your sample came may have
- been old before any trees now alive were even saplings. So you can
- extend the known pattern of rings back even further, and hence date
- samples of wood which are even older. By lining up samples of wood in
- this way, dendrochronologists have been able to produce a continuous
- pattern of rings going back around 9,900 years. This easily refutes
- the chronology of Bishop Usher, who calculated from dates and ages
- given in the Bible that the Earth was created in 4004 BC.
-
- Dendrochronology is also valuable in providing calibration data for
- C14 and other isotope dating methods. See the previous question for
- more details.
-
- References:
-
- "Dendrochronology of the Bristlecone Pine....."
- by C. W. Ferguson, 1970. Published in a book called
- "Radiocarbon Variations and Absolute Chronology"
-
- This takes the record back 7484 years. I am told that more recent
- work published in Nature in 1991 [exact reference anyone?] has pushed
- this back to the 9,900 years I mentioned above.
-
- 5.5: What is evolution? Where can I find out more?
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- Many creationist "refutations" of evolution are based on a straw-man
- argument. The technique is to misrepresent the theory of evolution,
- putting forward an absurd theory as "what scientists claim". The
- absurdity of this pseudo-evolution theory is then ridiculed.
-
- Debunking all these refutations would take a lot of space. Instead I
- suggest that anyone interested should go and read the FAQ lists over
- on talk.origins. These contain good explanations of what evolution is
- (and isn't). The talk.origins Welcome FAQ is posted every 14 days to
- news.answers and talk.answers. It contains instructions for FTPing
- the other FAQs.
-
- Books and essays on the subject by Stephen Jay Gould are good, and
- "The Blind Watchmaker" by Richard Dawkins is the sort of book that
- makes you want to find a creationist to argue with.
-
- Also see "Darwinism Defended: a guide to the Evolution Controversies"
- by Michael Ruse (Addison-Wesley, 1982).
-
- 5.6: "The second law of thermodynamics says....
- -----------------------------------------------
-
- ...that entropy is always increasing. Entropy is a measure of the
- randomness in a system. So the universe is getting more and more
- disordered. But if this is so, how can life happen, since
- evolutionists claim essentially that life is a system that becomes
- more ordered with time?"
-
- In fact this is a misstatement of the law. What the Law actually says
- is that you can't get work except by exploiting a temperature gradient
- (at least, not thermodynamically - forms of potential energy other
- than heat may be used - but they can also be used to make a heat
- gradient).
-
- Notice that this statement of the second law doesn't mention the word
- "disorder". In fact, the principle of entropy increase also does not,
- since entropy is a thermodynamic state variable whose definition is
- independent of such ill-defined terms as "disorder".
-
- So, where does this idea that entropy is a measure of "disorder" come
- from - and what does it mean anyway? Well, the idea comes from a
- misstatement of the theory of statistical mechanics. And the meaning
- is nil - since the term "disorder" has no precise scientific meaning
- anyway.
-
- In statistical mechanics, "entropy" is defined in terms of the number
- of distinct energy "microstates" that are possible within the system.
- This diversity of states was (and sometimes still is) informally
- called "disorder" by some statistical mechanics experts when trying to
- convey a feel for the subject to lay audiences. It was never a
- technical term - and never had any specific meaning in the theory.
- The term "disorder" applied in this way is misleading (or, at best,
- meaningless). A room which is messy would be informally called
- "disordered" by most people - even if they're ignorant (as most are)
- of the entropy of the room. The room might actually have a *higher*
- entropy after it has been cleaned.
-
- In addition the laws of thermodynamics only apply to closed systems
- (which the Earth is not). Small parts of such a closed system can
- show a decrease in entropy, but only if some other part has a higher
- entropy. Entropy in the system as a whole will always increase.
-
- For instance, when you freeze water the molecules of H2O line up in
- beautifully organised crystals. This organisation does not violate
- the second law of thermodynamics because the work done by the freezer
- in extracting the heat from the water has caused the total entropy of
- the *universe* to rise, even though the entropy of the *water* has
- decreased.
-
- Similarly the existence of life on earth has not decreased the entropy
- of the universe, so the second law has not been violated.
-
- 5.7: How could living organisms arise "by chance"?
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- This is actually a less sophisticated version of the question above.
- Consider the freezing water in the example. The wonderful arrangement
- in crystals arises from the random movement of water molecules. But
- ice crystals do not require divine intervention as an explanation, and
- neither does the evolution of life.
-
- Also, consider a casino. An honest casino makes a profit from
- roulette wheels. The result of a spin of a particular wheel is purely
- random, but casinos make very predictable profits. So in evolutionary
- theory, even though the occurence of a particular mutation is random,
- the overall effect of improved adaptation to the environment over time
- is not.
-
- The actual origin of life is more problematical. If you stick some
- ammonia, methane and a few other simple chemicals into a jar and
- subject them to ultraviolet light then after a week or two you get a
- mixture of organic molecules, including amino acids (the building
- blocks of protein). So current theories propose a "primordial soup"
- of dilute organic chemicals. Somewhere a molecule happened to form
- which could make copies of itself out of other molecules floating
- around in the soup, and the rest is history.
-
- Ilya Prigogine's work in non-equilibrium thermodynamics (for which he
- received a Nobel prize) shows that thermodynamic systems far out of
- equilibrium tend to produce spontaneous order through what he calls
- "dissipative structures". Dissipative structures trade a *local*
- increase in orderliness for faster overall increase in entropy. Life
- can be viewed as a dissipative structure in exactly this sense --- not
- a wildly improbable freak of combinations but as a natural, indeed
- inevitable result of the laws of thermodynamics.
-
- For more on this, see the relevant chapter in "Paradigms Lost" by John
- L. Casti (Avon paperback, 1989).
-
- 5.8: But doesn't the human body seem to be well designed?
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- Not to me. Consider a few pieces of the human body for a moment. The
- back for instance. The reason we poor humans suffer so much from back
- problems is that the back is actually not well designed. And what
- about human reproduction. Can you imagine any engineer being proud of
- having designed *that*?
-
- 5.9: What about the thousands of scientists who have become Creationists?
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This outrageous claim is frequently made by creationists, but somehow
- these mystery scientists are never identified. It is claimed that
- these conversions have been caused by "the evidence", but this
- evidence never seems to be forthcoming either.
-
- To test this claim, try looking up "creation" and "bible" in any
- biology or paleontology journal index.
-
- Even if this claim were true, it would not be a reason to become a
- creationist. The only reason for adopting creationism as a scientific
- theory would be the production of convincing evidence.
-
- 5.10: Is the Speed of Light Decreasing?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- The origin of this claim is a paper by Norman & Setterfield which
- plots various historical measurements of the speed of light and claims
- to show a steady decrease. Extrapolating backwards, they conclude
- that the Universe is only about 6,000 years old.
-
- The first point about their paper is that it was originally
- distributed in Stanford Research Institute covers, and is sometimes
- described as an SRI report. However SRI did not have anything to do
- with the report and are tired of answering queries about it.
-
- Norman & Setterfield appear to have selected their data in order to
- support their hypothesis: graphs include only those points which are
- close to the "theoretical" curve while ommitting points which are not
- close to the curve. This curve gives an inverse cosecant relationship
- between time and the speed of light. There is no justification for
- such a curve: the usual curve for a decaying value is exponential and
- this would have fitted the plotted data just as well as the inverse
- cosecant chosen by Norman and Setterfield.
-
- 5.11: What about Velikovsky?
- ----------------------------
-
- In the 1950s a Russian psychologist named Immanuel Velikovsky wrote
- "Worlds in Collision". This book and its successors are remarkable
- for the density of scientific, archeological and mythological howlers.
- There are far too many to list here, but most are sufficient to cast
- serious doubt on his knowledge of any of these fields, and many are so
- large that even one is enough to refute the entire theory.
-
- Much of Velilovsky's proof lies in statements of the form "The reason
- for <X> is not known. My theory explains it as follows:". Many of
- these reasons were in fact known when Velikovsky wrote, and many
- others have been discovered since. None of these reasons bear any
- relationship to Velikovksy's theory. The predictive value of the
- theory appears to be nil.
-
- The books lack any mathematical analysis at all, which is strange
- considering that mathematics is the language of science, especially
- physics and astronomy.
-
- Some of the more noticable howlers are:
-
- 1: Strange orbits which cannot be explained in terms of Newtonian
- mechanics (or indeed anything less than an angel sitting on a
- planet and steering it like a starship!).
-
- 2: The Earth's spin being altered suddenly by a close encounter with
- Venus, and then restored. Where to begin? Planets just don't do
- that.
-
- 3: A confusion between hydrocarbons (e.g petrol, mineral oil, tar) and
- carbohydrates (e.g sugar, starch, glucose).
-
- 4: World-shaking events (literally) which were accurately recorded by
- the Isralites but not even noticed anywhere else, even quite close
- by.
-
- 5: Ancient records (e.g Mayan, Sumerian and Chinese astronomical
- observations) which contradict Velikovsky's theory.
-
- Velikovsy's supporters often cite a conspiracy theory to explain why
- the world of science refuses to take these ideas seriously. See
- section 0 of this FAQ.
-
- For more information, see:
-
- Worlds in Collision
- Immanuel Velikovsky
-
- Earth in Upheaval
- Immanuel Velikovsky
-
- Velikovsky Reconsidered
- The Editors of Pensee
- (has a lot of his papers in it, along with other papers pro-V.)
-
- Scientists Confront Velikovsky
- Donald Goldsmith
-
- Beyond Velikovsky: The History of a Public Controversy
- Henry H. Bauer
-
- Broca's Brain
- Carl Sagan
-
- Jim Meritt <jmeritt@mitre.org> has posted a long article on
- talk.origins which systematically demolishes Velikovsky's ideas. I
- don't know if it is archived anywhere. This section attempts to
- summarise it. Most discussion of Velikovsky occurs on talk.origins.
-
-
- Fire-walking
- ============
-
- WARNING: Whatever the truth about firewalking may be, it is a
- potentially dangerous activity. Do not attempt it without
- expert guidance.
-
- [Please could one of the firewalkers on the net contribute a paragraph
- or two for this section. PAJ]
-
- 6.1: Is fire-walking possible?
- ------------------------------
-
- Yes. It is possible to walk on a bed of burning wood without being
- hurt.
-
- 6.2: Can science explain fire-walking?
- --------------------------------------
-
- There are a number of theories which have been put forward to explain
- firewalking. Any or all may be the explanation for a particular
- event.
-
- o The dry wood coals used by firewalkers conduct heat very poorly.
- The coal itself may be very hot but it will not transfer that heat
- to something touching it.
-
- o The coals are a very uneven surface, and the actual surface area of
- foot touching the coals is very small. Hence the conduction of heat
- is even slower.
-
- o Wood coals have a very low heat capacity, so although they are very
- hot there is actually not much heat energy to be transferred to the
- foot.
-
- o Firewalkers do not spend very much time on the coals, and they keep
- moving. Jan Willem Nienhuys <wsadjw@urc.tue.nl> adds that about 1
- second total contact time per foot seems on the safe side.
-
- o Blood is a good conductor of heat. What heat does get through is
- quickly conducted away from the soles of the feet.
-
- o The "Leidenfrost" effect may play a part. This occurs when a cold,
- wet object (like a foot) touches a hot, dry object (like a burning
- coal). The water vaporises, creating a barrier of steam between the
- hot and cold objects. Hence the two objects do not actually touch
- and evaporation from the cold object is much slower than might
- otherwise be expected. Since steam is a relatively poor conductor
- of heat the foot does not get burned. Jearl Walker, of Scientific
- American's "The Amateur Scientist" column, explains the Leidenfrost
- effect in the August 1977 issue; he walked across coals unharmed and
- attributes this to the Leidenfrost effect. Other scientists believe
- that the Leidenfrost effect is unimportant in firewalking.
-
- Pain perception is not as simple as everyday experience suggests.
- Some people experience great pain without any apparant cause.
- Others experience little or no pain despite great injury. Cognitive
- and emotional factors seem to be important. A belief that one has
- control over the pain seems to reduce the level of pain experienced.
- Fear seems to increase it.
-
- Firewalking is usually done in a religious or spiritual context. This
- would tend to reduce the level of pain experienced by firewalkers
- without affecting the amount of physical damage done to the feet.
-
- Some firewalkers put forward mystical explanations of why firewalking
- is possible without serious physical harm. A few skeptics have
- challenged these firewalkers to stand on hot metal plates instead of
- coals. Others have pointed out that making such a challenge in the
- belief that the firewalker would be seriously hurt is of dubious
- morality.
-
- New Age
- =======
-
- 7.1: What do New Agers believe?
- -------------------------------
-
- An awful lot, it would seem. New Age is not a "religion" in the
- traditional sense of a defined set of spiritual beliefs. Instead it
- seems to be a label applied to a loose collection of religious cults,
- organisations and pseudo-sciences. Some of the more common themes
- are:
-
- o Belief that conscious thought molds reality to some extent.
-
- o Belief that religions are not necessarily mutually exclusive.
- Eastern religions, especially "cult" religions, seem popular.
- Mainstream eastern religions such as Hinduism and Sihkism don't seem
- to attract New Age believers. Most New Agers are actively against
- organised Christianity, but some favour heretical variants such as
- Gnosticism. Almost any pre-Christian religious tradition has
- followers in the New Age camp.
-
- o Divination, especially Tarot, I-Ching, and Western and Chinese
- Astrology.
-
- o Green politics, especially the more extreme and mystical "deep
- green" movements.
-
- o Flying saucers.
-
- o "Alternative" health (see the earlier section).
-
- o Vegetarianism.
-
- o Pacifism.
-
- o Conspiracy theories to explain why the rest of the world does not
- follow the same beliefs.
-
- o Rejection of science and logic as tools for understanding the
- universe. A reliance on feelings and intuition as guides to action.
-
- o Pseudo-scientific jargon. New Agers talk about "rebalancing energy
- fields" and "vibrational frequencies". These sound vaguely
- scientific but in fact have no meaning at all.
-
-
- Bear in mind that not all of these are bad just because New Age people
- follow them. And by the same token, a person who follows one strand
- of New Age belief may not follow any others.
-
- Many people are of the belief that Satanism and New Age are
- synonymous. This is incorrect. First, many (probably most) people
- involved in New Age religions DO NOT believe in Heaven, Hell, the
- Christian God, the Christian Devil or any other purely Christian
- construct (there are many Christian and/or Satanic symbols [e.g. the
- pentagram] which come from older religions, which Neo Pagans also draw
- on). However, it is just as valid to call Neo-Satanism (ala Anton
- LeVay) a New Age religion as it is to apply the same label to
- Neo-Paganism.
-
- For more information on these ideas, check out the alt.pagan FAQ.
-
- 7.2: What is the Gaia hypothesis?
- ---------------------------------
-
- There are several versions. The following taxonomy was suggested by
- James Kirchner in "Scientists on Gaia":
-
- * Influential Gaia: the biota has a substantial influence over certain
- aspects of the abiotic world
-
- * Coevolutionary Gaia: the biota influences the abiotic environment, and
- the latter influences the evolution of the biota by Darwinian processes.
-
- * Homeostatic Gaia: the interplay between biota and environment is
- characterized by stabilizing negative feedback loops.
-
- * Teleological Gaia: the atmosphere is kept in homeostasis not just by
- the biosphere, but in some sense _for_ the biosphere.
-
- * Optimizing Gaia: the biota manipulates its environment for the purpose
- of creating biologically favorable conditions for itself.
-
- I'd say no one disputes Influential Gaia, and no serious scientist
- supports Optimizing Gaia (though some of Lovelock's earlier remarks
- tend in that direction. Most of the scientific debate surrounds
- Coevolutionary and Homeostatic Gaia. Some point to Le Chatelier's
- principle (a system in equilibrium, when disturbed, reacts to as to
- tend to restore the original equilibrium). However the ice ages
- suggest that the Earth is not in long-term equilibrium.
-
- References:
-
- For a range of interesting perspectives on the Gaia hypothesis, see
- the SF novel "Earth" by David Brin.
-
- James Lovelock, "Ages of Gaia", W. W. Norton, 1988.
-
- "Scientists on Gaia", ed. by Stephen Schneider and Penelope Boston,
- MIT Press 1991.
-
- The latter book is a collection of papers presented at an American
- Geophysical Union Symposium in 1988. Most are technical, but the
- introductory papers are eminently readable. The whole range of
- scientific opinion is displayed, from Lovelock and Margulis to
- critics such as James Kirchner.
-
- 7.3: Was Nostradamus a prophet?
- -------------------------------
-
- No. His supporters are very good at predicting events after the fact,
- often relying on doubtful translations of the original French to
- bolster their case. But they have had absolutely no success at
- predicting the future. Up until a few years ago most Nostradamus
- books were predicting a nuclear war between America and the USSR.
- None of them predicted the breakup of the Soviet block.
-
- Nostradamus was a Protestant in a time and place when the Inquisition
- was torturing and burning heretics. To avoid their attention,
- Nostradamus couched his political letters to other Protestants in
- obscure symbolism. It is these writings that are now being
- reinterpreted as prophecy, despite straightforward interpretations
- which link them to the time Nostradamus wrote them. If you try hard
- enough, you can find connections between the symbols and numbers used
- by Nostradamus and almost anything else, particularly if you allow
- multi-lingual puns and rhymes.
-
- A good general reference on Nostradamus is:
-
- The Mask of Nostradamus
- James Randi
- Charles Scribner's Sons
- ISBN 0-684-19056-7
- BF1815.N8R35 1990
-
- 7.4: Does astrology work?
- -------------------------
-
- No. A number of studies have been done which have failed to find any
- predictive power in astrology. Psychologists have also done studies
- showing that people will agree with almost any statement made about
- them provided that it is a mild compliment.
-
- One report about research into astrology is:
- Carlson, Shawn. (1985) "A double-blind test of astrology",
- Nature, 318 (Dec. 5), 419-425.
-
- Arguments against this position can be found in the alt.astrology FAQ.
-
- 7.4.1: Could astrology work by gravity?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- Some people argue that we are affected by the gravity of the planets
- (just as tides are caused by the gravity of the Moon and Sun), and
- that this is the connection between the motion of the planets and
- mundane events on Earth.
-
- Leaving aside the fact that astrology doesn't work (see above),
- gravity is simply too weak to do this. Gravitational force on a mass
- (such as a human being) decreases with the square of the distance to
- the other mass. But the Earth is affected just as strongly by the
- other mass, and accelerates slightly towards it. So the net effect on
- us is nil. What is important is the difference in gravity between the
- two sides of the mass. This decreases with the *third* power of the
- distance (i.e. very fast) but increases with the distance between the
- near and far sides. Hence the Moon and Sun cause tides because the
- Earth is very large. But the difference in gravity between one end of
- a human and the other is absolutely miniscule.
-
- Also, if this were the mechanism behind astrology then the most
- significant thing in astrology would be the position of the Moon, with
- the time of day coming second (as it is for tides). The position of
- the planets would be completely irrelevant because they are so much
- further away than the Moon and so much smaller than the Sun.
-
- 7.4.2: What is the `Mars Effect'?
- ---------------------------------
-
- French scientist Michael Gauquelin has discovered an apparent
- correlation between the position of some planets at the time of birth
- and the career followed as an adult. The strongest correlation is
- between the time when Mars rises on the day of birth and athletic
- prowess. However:
-
- o The Effect seems to come and go depending on exactly what the sample
- population is. Most of the controversy seems to revolve around who
- did what to which sample populations.
-
- o `Mundane' mechanisms for the Mars Effect correlations have been
- proposed which invoke the age grouping of school athletic
- activities.
-
- o Nothing found by Gaugelin bears any resemblance to classical
- astrology, so claims that Gaugelin has somehow "validated" astrology
- are bogus.
-
- For more information, see
-
- Michel Gauquelin, _Neoastrology: A Copernican Revolution_, 1991,
- N.Y.: Viking Arkana, was, I believe, his last book.
-
- Patrick Curry, "Research on the Mars Effect," _Zetetic Scholar_ #9,
- pp. 34-53. This is followed by a number of critical commentaries,
- which continue in _Zetetic Scholar_ #s 10 and 11.
-
- Curry's article and Richard Kammann's article in _ZS_ #10 are the
- most detailed and reliable sources of information on CSICOP's
- examination of Gauquelin. You should, of course, also read the
- U.S. test reports in the Winter 1979 _Skeptical Inquirer_--pay closest
- attention to Dennis Rawlins' report, which correctly criticizes both
- the main CSICOP report and Gauquelin's report. Also of great
- importance is Abell, Kurtz, and Zelen's "Reappraisal" of the Mars
- effect study in the Spring 1983 _Skeptical Inquirer_, and Suitbert
- Ertel's "Update on the 'Mars Effect'" in the Winter 1992 _SI_.
-
- You can obtain back issues of the _Zetetic Scholar_ from Marcello
- Truzzi, Dept. of Sociology, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, MI
- 48197. I suspect that issues 9, 10, and 11 are now available only
- in photocopied form. In 1987 they were $8 each.
-
- 7.5: What is Kirlian Photography?
- ---------------------------------
-
- [Information from a posting by Dave Palmer <dpalmer@csulb.edu>]
-
- The technique involves applying a high-frequency, high-voltage
- electrical source (such as from a Tesla coil) to a subject. The source
- is also very low-current, so the subject does not get electrocuted
- (it's the current in electricity that does the harm, not the voltage).
- When this is done, an "aura" of lightning-like electrical discharges
- forms around the subject. This field is visible to the naked eye (in
- a dark room, anyway), and may be photographed. Adherents of Kirlian
- photography claim that this field is some sort of "life energy" which
- may indicate things about the subject, such as health, psychic
- ability, and so forth. They claim that Kirlian photography sometimes
- shows the "phantom effect." That is, if a limb is amputated from the
- subject (or, less gruesomely, if a piece is torn off a leaf), that the
- field will still show the missing piece for a time, because its "life
- energy" is still there.
-
- There is no truth to the claims that it shows any sort of "aura" or
- "life energy." It is merely a coronal discharge, complete with ozone
- production. The most damaging argument against the "life energy" claim
- is that Kirlian photography works on ANY subject that conducts
- electricity, even completely lifeless metal, or synthetic sponges
- soaked in salt water.
-
- The field produced jumps around quite a bit. Because the shape of the
- field changes, it can occasionally appear to outline non-existent
- areas of the subject, hence the phantom effect. Dave Palmer reports
- producing the phantom effect with tin foil about as often with leaves.
- Far more often, he got false phantom effects, that is, pictures of
- pieces of the subject that had never existed.
-
-
- Strange Machines: Free Energy and Anti-Gravity
- ==============================================
-
- 8.1: Why don't electrical perpetual motion machines work?
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- Electrical perpetual motion machinists usually present a machine that
- causes a small battery to generate a huge amount of power. The most
- common problem here is that the "huge amount of power" was incorrectly
- measured. AC power measurements are tricky; you can't just multiply
- the voltage and current, because they may be out of phase. Thus,
- measuring 10 Volts and 10 Amps could indicate anything from 0 to 100
- Watts, depending on the power factor. In addition, most AC meters
- expect a sinusoidal wave; if they are given some other wave they may
- be totally wrong. A simple argument against these machines is; "If
- they can provide so much energy, why do they need the battery to keep
- going?"
-
- 8.2: Why don't mechanical perpetual motion machines work?
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- Mechanical perpetual motion machines depend on rising and descending
- weights. The problem is that the amount of energy that you get out of
- a descending weight is exactly the same amount that it took to raise
- the weight in the first place: gravity is said to be a "conservative"
- force. So no matter what the weights do, you can't get energy out.
-
- 8.3: Why don't magnetic perpetual motion machines work?
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- Magnetic motors have a clever arrangement of magnets which keeps the
- motor rotating forever. Not surprisingly, whenever someone tries to
- build one, the motor rotates for a while and then stops -- this is
- usually attributed to the magnets "wearing out". These motors usually
- rely on using magnets as low-friction bearings, meaning the "motor"
- can coast for a long time, but it doesn't supply any power. Magnetism
- is like gravity; you can store potential energy and get it back, but
- you can't get more energy no matter what you try.
-
- 8.4: Magnets can levitate. Where is the energy from?
- -----------------------------------------------------
-
- Levitating magnets do not require energy, any more than something
- resting on a table requires energy. Energy is the capacity for doing
- work. Work can be measured by force times distance. Although the
- magnets are exerting a force the levitated object is stationary, so
- the magnets aren't supplying any energy.
-
- 8.5: But its been patented!
- ---------------------------
-
- So what? Patent offices will not grant a patent on a "perpetual
- motion machine" (some just require a working model) but if you call it
- a "vacuum energy device" and claim that it gets its energy from some
- previously unknown source then you can probably get a patent. Patent
- offices are there to judge whether something has been invented before,
- not whether it will work. The ban on devices labelled "perpetual
- motion" is a special case because the patent officers dislike being
- cited as some sort of approval by con-men.
-
- 8.6: The oil companies are conspiring to suppress my invention
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This is a conspiracy theory. See the entry on these in section 0.
-
- In most of the US the utility companies are *required by law* to buy
- your excess electricity if you produce your own. If you've got an
- energy machine, build it in your basement, phase match it to the line,
- and enjoy.
-
- 8.7: My machine gets its free energy from <X>
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- A number of machines have been proposed which are not "perpetual
- motion" machines in the sense of violating the law of conservation of
- energy. Mostly these are based on bogus science. One inventor claims
- that atoms of copper wire are being converted to energy in accordance
- with Einstein's "e=mc^2". However he fails to explain what causes
- this transformation and how this energy is converted into electrical
- energy rather than gamma rays or heat.
-
- Occasionally one sees a machine which could work in theory but would
- produce very tiny amounts of energy. For instance, one can set up a
- gyroscope which always points in one direction (this is how the
- gyrocompass in an aircraft works). The earth will rotate underneath
- this once every day (to an observer standing on the Earth it looks
- like the gyro is rotating). So you could attach gears and a generator
- to the gyroscope and use this rotation to get electricity. The
- 4,320,000:1 gearing required is left as an exercise for the student,
- as is naming the source of the energy it would generate.
-
- 8.8: Can gyroscopes neutralise gravity?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- Gyroscopes (or gyros) are a favorite of "lift" machine inventors
- because many people have come across them and they behave rather
- oddly. However there is nothing all that mysterious about the
- behaviour of gyros. You can use Newtonian physics to explain them.
- Briefly, if you imagine a bit of metal on the edge of a spinning gyro,
- then to turn the gyro you have to stop the bit of metal moving in its
- current direction and start it moving in another direction. To do
- this when it is moving fast you have to push it rather hard. Nothing
- about this makes the thing get any lighter (in fact to be pedantic,
- the gyro gets very slightly heavier when it spins, in accordance with
- Einstein's theory of relativity.)
-
- 8.9: My prototype gets lighter when I turn it on
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- Weighing something which is vibrating on ordinary scales is a sure way
- of getting a wrong answer. The vibration from the machine combines
- with "stiction" in the scales to give a false reading. As a result
- the weight reductions reported for such machines are always close to
- the limits of accuracy of the scales used.
-
- AIDS
- ====
-
- 9.1: What about these theories on AIDS?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- There are two AIDS theories that often appear in sci.skeptic. The
- first is Strecker's theory that the CIA invented HIV by genetic
- engineering; the second is Duesberg's theory that HIV has nothing to
- do with AIDS.
-
- The sci.med.aids FAQ has more information about all these theories.
-
- 9.1.1: The Mainstream Theory
- ----------------------------
-
- The generally accepted theory is that AIDS is caused by the Human
- Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV). There are two different versions of
- HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. These viruses are believed, on the basis of
- their genetic sequences, to have evolved from the Simian
- Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV), with HIV-2 being much more similar to
- SIV. Several years after the initial HIV infection, the immune system
- is weakened to the point where opportunistic infections occur,
- resulting in the syndrome of AIDS. A good reference for more
- information on the "mainstream" view of AIDS is:
-
- The Science of AIDS : readings from Scientific American magazine.
- New York : W.H. Freeman, c1989.
-
- 9.1.2: Strecker's CIA Theory
- ----------------------------
-
- Strecker's theory is that the CIA made HIV in the 1970's by combining
- bovine leukemia virus (BLV) and sheep visna virus (OLV). The evidence for
- this theory is that the government was looking at biological warfare around
- then, and that there are some structural similarities between HIV and BLV
- and visna. The evidence against this theory is:
-
- a: HIV has been found in preserved blood samples from the 1950's.
- [Anyone have a reference for this?]
- b: We didn't have the biotechnology back then for the necessary gene
- splicing. (But maybe the CIA has secret advanced technology?)
- c: The genetic sequences for HIV, SIV, BLV, and OLV are freely
- available (e.g. from genbank). You can look at them and compare
- them yourself. The HIV sequence is totally different from BLV and
- OLV, but is fairly similar to SIV, just as the scientists say.
-
- One school of thought holds that the "AIDS was a U.S. biological
- warfare experiment" myth was extensively spread as part of a
- dezinformatsiya campaign by Department V of the Soviet KGB (their
- `active measures' group). They may not have invented the premise
- (Soviet disinformation doctrine favored legends originated by third
- parties), but they added a number of signature details such as the
- name of the supposed development site (usually Fort Meade in Maryland)
- which still show up in most retellings.
-
- According to a defector who was once the KGB chief rezident in Great
- Britain, the KGB promulgated this legend through controlled sources in
- Europe and the Third World. The Third World version (only) included
- the claim that HIV was the result of an attempt to build a "race
- bomb", a plague that would kill only non-whites.
-
- Also see the question in section 0 about Conspiracy Theories.
-
- 9.1.3: Duesberg's Risk-Group Theory
- -----------------------------------
-
- Duesberg's theory is: HIV is a harmless retrovirus that may serve as a
- marker for people in AIDS high-risk groups. AIDS is not a contagious
- syndrome caused by one conventional virus or microbe. AIDS is
- probably caused by conventional pathogenic factors: administration of
- blood transfusions or drugs, promiscuous male homosexual activity
- associated with drugs, acute parasitic infections, and malnutrition.
- Drugs such as AZT promote AIDS, rather than fight it. His theory is
- explained in detail in "Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired
- Immunodeficiency Syndrome: Correlation but not Causation", Proc. Natl.
- Acad. Sci. USA V86 pp.755-764, (Feb. 1989).
-
- Virtually the entire scientific community considers Duesberg's AIDS
- theory to be unsupportable, although he was a respected researcher
- before he proposed it. There is no suggestion that his theories are
- the result of a political agenda or homophobia.
-
- Details of the debate can be found in published rebuttals to Duesberg, such
- as in Nature V345 pp.659-660 (June 21, 1990), and in Duesberg's debate
- with Blattner, Gallo, Temin, Science V241 pp.514-517 (1988).
-
- Also see the sci.med.aids FAQ.
-
- You Must Remember This
- ======================
-
- 10.1 What is "False Memory Syndrome ?"
- ---------------------------------------
-
- [Contributed by Todd Stark <stark@dwovax.enet.dec.com>. Todd
- describes this text as a "first pass" at this section. If anyone has
- any more authorative information then please send it to me.]
-
- There is currently no such standard medical diagnosis in the U.S. as
- "False Memory Syndrome." "False Memory Syndrome" is a term coined by
- a support and advocacy group based in Philadelphia, Pa. in the U.S.,
- the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, Inc., to publicize and dramatize
- the plight of parents, alleged pedophiles, and other adults who feel
- they have been unjustly accused of child abuse. The initial
- membership of the FMS consisted of 202 families who had contacted
- psychologist Ralph Underwager, a frequent advocate for accused sex
- offenders. The current executive director is Pamela Freyd, PhD..
-
- The basic premise of the FMS idea is that :
-
- under conditions of therapy,
-
- a child's (person's) recollection of past events may be
- distorted, even radically,
-
- and that convincing evidence of psychological trauma and
- detailed false testimony against an innocent person may be
- _manufactured_ by the (unwitting) facilitation of a therapist,
-
- who is motivated to find abuse.
-
- Underwager's work has been criticized on the same basis as criticism
- of the FMS itself, that he appears biased against children alleging
- sexual abuse (Salter). This is of course met by the symmetric claim
- from FMS advocates and others, that some percentage of therapists seem
- to specialize in finding abuse, and are unfairly biased against the
- accused adults. Various examples of popular psychology literature are
- often quoted to support (and sometimes symbolize) this contention.
- _The_Courage_to_Heal_ is an example of this genre, suggesting that
- forgotten abuse is so likely that any woman who has any suspicion at
- all of having been abused probably was.
-
- The issue around "False Memory" is then the degree to which the
- therapist may have (unwittingly or deliberately) contributed to a
- remembrance of serious abuse which did not occur, or may have
- exaggerated the incidence or severity of the abusive behavior.
-
- There seems to be sufficient evidence, both from clinical tradition
- and from experimental data on human memory, to establish that there is
- a possibility for the client of a strongly motivated therapist to be
- influenced by the expectations of the therapist, even to the point of
- forgetting or distorting important life events, or manufacturing them.
- (See examples in Goldstein, 1992; general comments by Loftus, 1993;
- and descriptions by Ofshe and Tavris cited in the references).
-
- There is also evidence that people do forget unpleasant incidents
- which they could not integrate with the rest of their lives. There is
- no context in which to place the experience, and thinking about it is
- unpleasant, so it gets "walled off" and forgotten.
-
- The use of hypnosis has been particularly controversial since it
- involves an unusually intimate form of both verbal and non-verbal
- communication. In hypnosis, the client is highly motivated to respond
- with historical reconstructions at the request of the therapist, even
- if they do not have sufficient details to reconstruct past events
- accurately. This is related to what is called the 'response criterion
- problem' in experimental hypnosis research. (Klatzky and Erdely,
- 1985). Vividly imagined events under hypnosis can be difficult or
- impossible to distinguish from real life.
-
- Some experimental research also appears to confirm the potential for
- hypnotic suggestion to radically alter even the ongoing sensory
- perception of good hypnotic subjects (Spiegel, 1989). Canadian
- Psychiatrist William Sargant (see his work on political and religious
- conversion, Sargant, 1959) also did some classic work in which he
- demonstrated the therapeutic value of "abreaction," or in this case,
- vividly imagined 'false' events, with the help of hypnosis or
- sometimes ethyl ether.
-
- It is sometimes claimed that distortions introduced with the help of
- hypnotic suggestion can be picked up with standardized tests. A test
- for whether cult members had been "brainwashed" was used with some
- claimed success (Verdier, 1977). More recently, research into picking
- up stable dissociative tendencies has shown some promise.
-
- There is no known reliable way at this time to verify whether a
- particular recollection was actually introduced as a so-called "false
- memory." The most promising research in this area seems to point to
- the possibility that we may someday be able to more reliably pick out
- the 'fantasy prone,' at least as a relative number on a scale, but
- this still leaves the question open as to cause and effect. Did a
- severe early trauma provoke the need for escape into a rich inner
- fantasy world, or was the remembrance of a traumatic past solely the
- result of a therapist taking advantage of "fantasy proneness ?"
-
- So, one of the more useful functions of an advocacy group such as the
- FMS is to educate the public to the possibility that even the most
- real seeming and vivid memories could possibly have been fabricated or
- exaggerated by interaction with a therapist.
-
- One of the less useful results of a group like the FMS is to cast
- aspersions and additional frustrating doubt on the claims of an
- already desperate child who is having a difficult time understanding
- and recovering from a traumatic experience.
-
- References :
-
- Klatzky and Erdely, 1985, "The response criterion problem in tests of
- hypnosis and memory," International Journal of Clinical and
- Experimental Hypnosis , 33, 246-257.
-
- Ofshe, Richard, 1992, "Inadvertent Hypnosis During Interrogation,"
- International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis ,
- 11:125-155.
-
- Goldstein, Eleanor, 1992, Confabulations , Boca Raton, Fla:Social
- Issues Research Series
-
- Loftus, Elizabeth, June 27,1993, "You Must Remember This ... ... or
- do you ? How Real are Repressed Memories ?" Washington Post .
-
- Ofshe, Richard and Ethan Watters, (March, 1993), "Making Monsters,"
- Society .
-
- Tavris, Carole, (Jan 3,1993), "Beware the Incest-Survivor Machine,"
- N.Y. Times Book Review.
-
- Persinger MA. "Neuropsychological profiles of adults who report
- 'sudden remembering' of early childhood memories: implications for
- claims of sex abuse and alien visitation/abduction experiences."
- Perceptual & Motor Skills. 75(1):259-66, 1992 Aug.
-
- Wilson and Barber, "The Fantasy Prone Personality : Implications for
- understanding imagery, hypnosis, and parapsychological phenomena," in
- Imagery ,Current Theory, Research , and Application , from Wiley
- Press, 1983.
-
- Paul A. Verdier, "Brainwashing and the Cults, an expose on capturing
- the human mind," 1977, Wilshire Books.
-
- William Sargant, "Battle for the Mind, a physiology of conversion and
- brainwashing," 1959, N.Y.: Harper and Row
-
- John Marks, "The Search for the 'Manchurian Candidate,' The CIA and
- Mind Control," 1979, N.Y.: New York Times Book Co. pp. 190
-
- D. Spiegel et al, 1989, "Hypnotic alteration of somatosensory
- perception," American Journal of Psychiatry
-
- "A conversation with Pamela Freyd, Ph.D. Co-founder and executive
- director, False Memory Syndrome Foundation, Inc" by David Calof in
- Treating Abuse Today, Vol 3(3), 25-39
-
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- Paul Johnson (paj@gec-mrc.co.uk). | Tel: +44 245 473331 ext 3245
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