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- --------------------------------------------------------
- August 1990 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- --------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 9, No. 8
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- BOLLING FOR FACTS
- by Wayne Bartz, Ph.D. and Richard Rason, Ed.D.
-
- [What follows is an analysis of astrological claims of the
- Sacramento area's hottest media psychic, Sherri Bolling. She has
- appeared on all three local network stations and is frequently
- quoted in print.
-
- This article first appeared in the "Psientific American",
- newsletter of the Sacramento Skeptics.]
-
- Sherri Bolling's astrological readings and "prosperity recipes"
- have been a staple of the "Noon News" of channel 13 (KOVR-TV,
- Sacramento). To test the accuracy of her claims to special psychic
- powers, we recorded her appearance on the 7 October 1988 show and
- extracted 15 statements -- four applicable to Libras, nine for
- other callers, and two for the spouses of callers. Then we deleted
- all references to specific signs. For example, the statement, "All
- Libras are kicking over old traces for a new image. . . ." became
- "You are kicking over old traces for a new image."
-
- These statements were then given to 232 Introductory Psychology
- students in American River College. They were told only that we
- were interested in their self-perception of their own life events,
- and they were asked to rate each of the statements for how well it
- fit their life, using a five-point scale, with "1" being "almost
- dead wrong" and "5" being an "almost perfect fit."
-
- Statistical test were then done to compare the scores from Libras
- (on the four items supposedly applying specifically to them) with
- scores from non-Libras. If Ms. Bolling's statements apply to Libras
- and not others, Libras should show higher agreement than people
- with other signs.
-
- Tests also compared females to males and single females with
- married females. Averages on each item were also determined, to
- show how well or poorly each item tended to fit the entire group --
- as a means of determining how universal or general each statement
- might be.
-
- RESULTS
-
- LIBRA ITEMS: Three of the four statements supposedly applying to
- Libras were rated by Libras more in the WRONG direction -- although
- NONE OF THE FOUR WAS SIGNIFICANTLY DIFFERENT FROM NON-LIBRAS.
- Clearly, Ms. Bolling's statements specifically for Libras just
- didn't apply to them more than anyone else.
-
- SEX DIFFERENCES: Women showed a small but significantly higher
- agreement with all statements than did men (3.20 vs. 3.05 at the
- .01 level). This could be because most of Ms. Bollings's callers
- were female, or because females may be more prone than males to
- accept vague statements about themselves.
-
- SPECIFIC STATEMENTS: Only four of the fifteen statements had a mean
- overall rating below the middle of the scale. In other words, the
- statements are so general they apply to a large number of people
- asked if they "fit your life." This is the stock-in- trade of the
- cold reader: make a number of vague and general statements, then
- focus in on the "hits," knowing there will be a number of them, no
- matter who is getting the reading.
-
- The overall mean rating is 3.14, slightly above 50/50 toward "Good
- fit."
-
- Looking at specific items helps illustrate what types of statements
- people are more likely to see as applicable to their lives:
-
- => The most agreed-upon statement was 13: "You have a
- tendency to push yourself too much and/or you worry too
- much sometimes."
-
- Is there anyone on earth to whom this would not apply? Women rated
- notably higher than males on this one.
-
- => Number 11 was, "There are a lot of changes around your
- entire life right now, and you sort of have to ride over
- the top of it. You've got to have a lot of patience with
- the next two months. . . ."
-
- => The third highest (#3) and fifth highest items are both
- about finances, suggesting concern and possible change.
-
- Again, who is NOT concerned about money?
-
- => The fourth-rated statement, #10, says, "You are probably
- going to be having a move in the next 18 months to 2
- years, and it's an up-grading in your living situation."
-
- Not too hard to predict this; it would fit a lot of folks in the
- Sacramento area. The lowest items, still rated between "Poor" and
- "Fair," are the most specific or the most negative.
-
- => The bottom was #1: "In the mid-80s, your life was such a
- mess that nothing could happen now that could equal that
- period of time."
-
- This supposedly described Libras, but THEY RATED IT NO DIFFERENTLY
- THAN DID NON-LIBRAS.
- => Next came another "Libra" item, suggesting domestic
- problems, followed by a specific statement of travel
- within six weeks. The other item rated lower than 50/50
- suggests changes in the work environment by next spring.
- These items (#s 2, 6, and 12) are either negative or
- fairly specific, making them less likely to be desirable
- or widely applicable.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- Ms. Bolling's claim that she can tell something about individuals
- based upon their astrological sign -- in this case, Libra -- failed
- to be supported in this test. Results suggest that subjects:
-
- => Simply respond to general statements fitting virtually
- anyone;
-
- => Tend to accept the more positive or general statements;
-
- => Tend to reject statements that are more negative or
- specific.
-
- There is nothing found in this study that would validate any
- paranormal or clairvoyant powers -- but it does tend to support
- what we already know about human suggestibility.
-
-
-
- THE "LIFE THROUGH TIME" EXHIBIT
- by John Taube
-
- The California Academy of Science, in Golden Park, San Francisco,
- has put together a most authentic, stimulating display entitled
- "Life Through Time." It is a vivid explanation of evolution. Its
- sixty-plus exhibits span three billion years of life on Earth.
-
- Here are a few of its exhibits. Protoceratops, the horned dinosaur
- (a relative of Triceratops) who lived 80 million years ago, is
- depicted finding its way home to her clutch of eggs.
-
- There is a lively exhibit of an 8-inch-long cockroach. Another
- interesting exhibit is a millipede relative perfectly shaped for
- plowing through leaf litter while it munches club-moss.
-
- Among the beautiful exhibits is the "Age of Coal Forests." It
- existed 300 million years ago when giant insects, spiders and their
- relatives ruled. They lived in swampy forests that over time became
- coal. Without this energy source it is questionable if our
- technological age would be possible.
-
- These are just a few of what one may see. They give one the feeling
- of traveling back through a time warp.
-
- Bay Area Skeptics is fortunate to have Dr. Eugenie (Genie) Scott,
- whose expertise is biological anthropology, as one of its
- directors. Genie has consented to act as our personal guide on a
- tour through the "Life Through Time" exhibit. This will not only be
- stimulating for you, so you must bring your children or
- grandchildren. Don't forget a camera, either.
-
- The date is Saturday, September 22nd at 1:30 p.m. at the Academy,
- Golden Gate Park. Advance tickets reservations are $1.00 and
- children under 5 are free. John Taube will be the coordinator of
- this event, so please send your check for $1.00 per person, made
- out to Bay Area Skeptics. John's address is: 55 Chumasero Drive 7E,
- San Francisco, CA 94132. Phone John at (415) 334-3733 if you want
- more information.
-
-
-
- BROTHER AUSTIN MILES ADDRESSES BAY AREA SKEPTICS
- by Bob Steiner
-
- Brother Austin Miles addressed the June 1990 meeting of Bay Area
- Skeptics. Nattily dressed in a white suit, white shirt, and a
- bright blue tie, the reverend's matching bright blue silk
- handkerchief in his jacket pocket topped off the ensemble.
-
- Attended by tens of people, the turnout tested the limits of our
- meeting area in the El Cerrito Public Library. While we are at it,
- once more, much appreciation is hereby expressed to the El Cerrito
- Public Library, and especially to Grace MacNeill, for enormous
- cooperation with Bay Area Skeptics and for hosting our meetings
- over the years.
-
- "Brothers and Sisters," began Brother Miles. He told us about the
- righteousness of evangelists. This was followed by a statement of
- his own human worth, and his worthy goals. Then, guess what. He
- pitched for money.
-
- He protested the innocence of the televangelists. He assured us: "I
- only want to serve you. I have never swindled anybody. All I'm
- asking for is a chance."
-
- He told a story about a good sister of the church who, in the
- morning, kissed her husband goodbye at the front door. When the
- story continued with her kissing her lover good morning at the back
- door, a resounding "A-men, Brother!" was heard from the back of the
- meeting hall.
-
- Let us take it from the top. Austin Miles is author of the book
- "Don't Call Me Brother" (Prometheus Books, 1989. $19.95.). It tells
- of Austin's life in the Assemblies of God Church. It is exciting,
- and will rip at you. I highly recommend it.
-
- Back to the talk. Austin had been one of the top clowns in the
- circus world. He went on to become a world-famous ringmaster. Then
- the church lured him into the world of the evangelists. He appeared
- on the Jim Bakker show, as well as elsewhere around the world.
-
- It was exciting to hear from a man who forthrightly and
- courageously admits that he was taken in by the evangelists. He had
- lived and breathed the world of lying in the name of God.
-
- We learn of the savage, avaricious ways of some of the high profile
- preachers -- and Miles names names! For example, he told us the
- following story:
-
- At an executive staff meeting at a leading university, a staff
- member collapsed with a heart attack. A well-known minister
- affiliated with the University, laid hands on him and prayed for
- his healing. Then, when healing seemed to be delayed, they called
- for an ambulance.
-
- Later the minister instructed his staff: "If that ever happens to
- me, you call the ambulance first. Then pray for me."
-
- The university was Oral Roberts University, and the minister was
- Oral Roberts. Austin Miles specifically confirmed this story -- for
- this article.
-
- We heard how Austin Miles had liked, admired, and trusted Jim and
- Tammy Faye Bakker . . . and then how he learned, to his enormous
- dismay, the truth.
-
- As a successful ringmaster, Austin Miles had accumulated fame and
- fortune. The church found those two attributes very appealing.
- After luring Austin into their ranks, they traded on the fame, and
- encouraged Austin to divest himself of the fortune . . . to be
- given to the worthy causes of the church, of course.
-
- With courage and wisdom, Austin Miles has managed to put all of
- this into perspective. Angry -- yes; bitter at life -- absolutely
- not. He is a nice, congenial man, who is able to retain a sense of
- humor in the face of having undergone adversity which would have
- done in a lesser person.
-
- Thank you, Austin Miles, for sharing your experiences with us.
-
-
-
- 13 HAZARDS OF NEW AGE THINKING
- by Pat Kehoe
-
- Many people believe that the New Age is at worst an innocuous pest.
- Most of those same people have not ever thought things through.
- Consider:
-
- => It lays the public open to fraud and exploitation by
- failing to provide either the means or the encouragement
- to evaluate paranormal and pseudoscientific claims.
-
- => It disseminates misinformation, stating as facts events
- and phenomena that are unsupported or unsupportable.
-
- => It encourages the belief that intuition and subjective
- experience are more valid avenues of knowledge than
- public, specifiable, observable and repeatable ways of
- verifying experience and inference.
-
- => It encourages the belief in arbitrary and sometimes
- malevolent supernatural forces.
-
- => It reduces personal responsibility by attributing
- behavior to powers and influences beyond direct human
- experience and control.
-
- => It implies that knowledge can be gained without effort
- and that events can be predicted and controlled through
- powers that are supernaturally bestowed.
-
- => It rejects and even disparages critical thinking analysis
- and skepticism, which are fundamental to scientific and
- rational processes.
-
- => It encourages a belief in the equality of options,
- regardless of the evidence for them.
-
- => Lacking any system of checks and balances, it permits
- claims to be made without foundation, challenge or
- scrutiny.
-
- => It employs and therefore models explanatory devices
- (e.g., the hypothesis that cannot be refuted) that are
- counter-productive in the search for knowledge and
- understanding.
-
- => Some claims can be actively harmful, e.g., by encouraging
- physically or psychologically dangerous practices. Others
- can be passively harmful by discouraging an appropriate
- action, e.g., by rejecting conventional medical
- treatment.
-
- => Social policies may be developed on the basis of
- erroneous, pseudoscientific claims, Nazi racial theory
- being a classic example.
-
- => It has special appeal to the naive and vulnerable
- (adolescents, the poorly educated, or the emotionally
- troubled), who are taken in by the claims of exotic,
- mysterious and wonderful forces and powers, some of which
- can be acquired or used, and other of which are to
- feared, marveled at, or defended against.
-
- [Pat Kehoe is the director of the Mental Health Clinic in
- Whitehorse, Yukon. Her article first appeared in the "Western New
- York Skeptics Newsletter".]
-
-
-
- IT'S GOTTA BE YOU
- by Prentiss Willson, M.D.
-
- On March 20th, KCBS talk show (not likely in innocence) did an
- expose, a Peeping Tom into the weird bedroom of astrology. A rare
- delight it was. As the debate ensued, I hear your question: "Who
- won?"
-
- Considering the cooperative competency of those program headlines,
- Art Finley, the talk show host, and BAS board member physicist
- Shawn Carlson, Ph.D., who indeed? Besides competency, unlike the
- hoodwinked astrology buffs, Art and Shawn had only to dispense
- truth. No need for the contrived, the scheming, or the parading of
- murky obfuscations.
-
- Believe me. It was a shoo-in.
-
- Art's introduction set a meaty tone. He compared Joan Quigley,
- newsworthy if nothing else (recall the Reagan administration's
- brouhaha), with Rasputin, the debauched, semi-literate mad monk
- whose astrological mumbo-jumbo mesmerized tsar Nicholas (mostly
- through tsarina Alexandria) into backing him and his pernicious
- ways. Result: in 19l6 down went Russia's last Tsar.
-
- Following Art's bewitching moment in introductory history, now
- enters Dr. Carlson, poised to contribute his long-into-fraud-
- exposing expertise. And he did it without recourse to heavy-going,
- esoteric physics. He was instead pledged to argue logically, in a
- lucid, laid-back manner that stressed facts, not emotions or
- frenzied polemics. One example: Shawn, replying to a fervidly
- pro-astrology call-in participant's questions simply said that
- innumerable times astrologers had tried for the $11,000 (local) or
- $100,000 (national) standing offer for anyone successful
- invalidating astrology as a science, but that not once had any
- succeeded. Never a pay-out.
-
- With these attributes working for them -- competency and truth --
- Finley and Carlson proceeded not merely to discredit astrology, not
- just to discombobulate it, but rather to dismember that trumped-up
- tarradiddle know as astrology. For the audience that night it
- translated as pure cat-purr-pleasuring captivation.
-
- For all? All except some doubting Thomas mutterings from the graves
- of two famous skeptics. Both scoffed at Art and Shawn even having
- a chance at persuading that audience. H. L. Mencken muttered that
- no one ever grew poor overestimating the stupidity of the American
- public.
-
- And Jacques Monod, the French biologist, once again asked when
- would people ever realize that the true story of human origins is
- so incredibly more unbelievable or fanciful than any man-made-in-
- God's-image myth?
-
- But for once those two worthies were wrong. That night, those
- people were persuaded and will persuade others. Hopefully, more
- bordering skeptics will be persuaded to speak out for the cause.
-
- Whether they will or not, Shawn please oblige me. Stay close by, an
- emergency looms, one for which you particularly, will be needed.
- It's this: an AP press release recently flashed this headline, "Man
- Stabs Wife, Lightning Bolt Then Stabs Him."
-
- Count on it -- to all pie-in-the-sky pipers, all slime-mold
- evangelist healers and salvation sellers, that will mean sky
- balloons thundering out: "WE told you so. He sees all, watches over
- all, rules with thunder bolts."
-
- Shawn, it's true that yesterday's newspaper does wrap today's
- garbage, but only you can while wrapping, rebut this particular
- kind of garbage.
-
- So indulge us, as we now all clasp hands and sing out, Shawn "It's
- Gotta Be You."
-
-
-
- RAMPARTS
-
- [Ramparts is a regular feature of "BASIS", and your participation
- is urged. Clip, snip and tear bits of irrationality from your local
- scene and send them to the EDITOR. If you want to add some comment
- with the submission, please do so.]
-
- The New Age has fostered a colony of cottage industry that fetches
- the furthest reaches of credulity in search of the Inner Self. From
- the august pages of the "Wall Street Journal", we learn how mantras
- and chakras are ceding to high-tech gizmos that go whizz and pop.
-
- The come-on never loses its luster, despite its time-worn failure:
- you get something for nothing. (The multi-billion dollar diet
- industry applies the formula very well, promising ways to "melt off
- the fat" while you eat anything you want.)
-
- Wouldn't it be nice to possess the facile pen of Shakespeare, or
- the gliding wit of Thoreau? Without any sweat in English Lit. 305?
- You can do it in the comfort of a chaise longue as you don your ski
- goggles and headphones. Through the headphones is piped static.
- Yes, STATIC. What the goggles are supposed to accomplish is not
- exactly clear, but they aid in "synchronizing your energies" with
- those of Mother Earth.
-
- One patron, 24-year-old Jerome Edwards, said after a brain massage,
- "I feel mentally relaxed but not mentally energized."
-
- Well gollee, Jerry, ask Maryellen Visconti (owner of the "Mind
- Gym") for a refund. She will tell you that you cannot expect
- miracles on the first session. At $20 per half-hour, Einstein can
- only be about 400 bucks away. Mensa massages here are evidently as
- good as pectoral pulling in the weight room, according to those who
- have had their creative juices squeezed out.
-
- Naturally, some stick-in-the mud psychologists pooh-pooh this
- contraption with predictable prose: "I think you can get smarter
- through a little device called hard work," said Dr. Jim McGaugh, a
- brain researcher at UCD.
-
- Aarg! Perish the thought. Visconti has written several cook books,
- so she knows as much about brain function as any fool Ph.D. brain
- researcher.
-
-
- The redoubtable Stanton Friedman, UFOlogist extraordinaire, is
- never at a loss for ways to milk UFOdom. The author of many books
- and innumerable articles, Friedman has decided that the way of Jose
- Canseco (Jose made over $800,000 in three months on his 1-900 line)
- is the way of the future: He has teamed with Ryan Wood, a Menlo
- Park business partner in a 1-900 hotline to report UFO sightings.
-
- They want to build a data base, you see.
-
- If the popular press is correct, polls show that more than 50
- percent of us believe in UFOs. That translates into megabucks if
- only a small fraction of them were to call the hotline. It is
- difficult to imagine how any kind of quality database could be
- assembled by uncontrolled calls of the kind Friedman proposes.
-
- Friedman "denounced news professionals and doubting scientists like
- astronomer Carl Sagan as `noisy negativists' ["Peninsula Times
- Tribune", courtesy Jim Wheeler]. Stanton said that there will be
- information given out on the line: the "Cosmic Watergate" coverup
- of what the U.S. government knows about crashed UFOs.
-
- Friedman brushed aside the suspicion of a money-making scheme with
- a simple, "So what? Five percent of the American public thinks we
- haven't sent a man to the moon."
-
- As a side issue to Friedman's latest antics, UFOlogy itself is in
- the worst condition since its inception in the late 1940s.
- Membership has swelled in the major UFO groups around the country,
- but many -- too many -- of the new faces are simply loony tunes.
- This, coupled with some of the savage turf and inside fighting, has
- seriously damaged whatever credibility UFOlogy may have ever had.
-
-
-
- CSICOP IS COMING
- by Mark Hodes
-
- The Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the
- Paranormal (CSICOP) has chosen Bay Area Skeptics to host the 1991
- conference. It will be held in the San Francisco Bay area in 1991.
-
- The preliminary indication from CSICOP is that the conference will
- occur the first weekend in May on the campus of UC Berkeley. BAS
- will provide liaison services for CSICOP including registration of
- attendees. "BASIS" will publish a registration form and the exact
- conference schedule when it becomes available. The "Skeptical
- Inquirer" also will publish the latest information. "SI" is issued
- quarterly, and available by subscription.
-
- The CSICOP Conference is a major event that generates considerable
- publicity for the work of the Committee. It is an opportunity for
- public discussion of skeptical issues with the distinguished
- scholars who present their work to the conference. Past conference
- speakers have included Nobel Laureate Murray Gell-Mann and Harvard
- biologist Stephen Jay Gould. The recent 1990 CSICOP Conference in
- Washington, D.C., featured keynote speaker Gerard Piel, chairman
- emeritus of "Scientific American" and past president of the
- American Association for the Advancement of Science.
-
- In past years the Conference has attracted 500-1000 participants.
- An undertaking of this magnitude requires much work, which can be
- supplied only by volunteers. To coordinate their efforts, Bay Area
- Skeptics has formed a steering committee chaired by Yves Barbero,
- vice-chair of BAS. The steering committee includes representatives
- from Berkeley Skeptics, the East Bay Skeptics Society, and
- Sacramento Skeptics. If you wish to help ensure the success of the
- 1991 Conference, please telephone (415) LA TRUTH or send Yves a
- message on the BAS BBS: (415) 648-8944. We will need your help!
-
-
-
- COURTS VS. RELIGION
- by John Taube
-
- The subject of the "New York Times" article, April 24, 1990,
- "Supreme Court Sends Amish Dispute Back to State Court" is of
- interest because it illustrates the harm that can come by relying
- on fate when technology demands a more practical approach.
-
- BAS's position on religious matters is that religion is the private
- property of individuals, and the State must not interfere with ones
- right to believe as he/she chooses.
-
- However, if the result of religious belief infringes upon the
- community's welfare, then for it's benefit laws must be enacted to
- curtail those religious activities.
-
- The article discusses a law passed in Minnesota requiring all
- slow-moving vehicles on the highway to have reflecting triangles on
- the rear of the vehicle. The Amish, who eschew all the trappings of
- modern society, travel by horse-drawn carriage. They refused to
- comply stating that obedience to civil law would be putting trust
- in man instead of God.
-
- While it is difficult to tolerate such thinking, unfortunately we
- have to contend with those whose religion distorts their judgment.
-
- The safety of Minnesota motorists may be in jeopardy by this group
- of people who refuse to obey the law. The "Times" article commented
- on the Supreme Court's decision which, unfortunately, did not rule
- on the matter, but sent it back to the Minnesota Supreme Court for
- reconsideration. The only reason one may surmise why no firm stand
- was taken is that the courts (and politicians more so) are loathe
- to place themselves in the position of what may appear as
- challenging religion.
-
- There is no more sacred cow than religion itself. Austin Miles's
- talk to Bay Area Skeptics emphasized that the judiciary is well
- aware of the fraud extant in the name of religion, but it feels its
- hands are tied.
-
-
-
- FAREWELL
- by Kent Harker
-
- It's been a great three years for me . . . and now it's time to
- move on. Editing our newsletter has been a wonderful privilege for
- me. It has put me right in the thick of things in BAS as they
- happen. That is exciting. I have always felt a deep sense of
- responsibility with this job -- we have such a select group of
- people in the readership. The weight of that responsibility has
- sometimes been troublesome: you out there can be an intimidating
- bunch of people because of your accomplishments and the confidence
- you have expressed in the organization. So, with all this, it is
- not without some conflicting emotions that I leave the position. I
- will miss having the continual contact with some of the marvelous
- people who are working very hard to have some influence in the Bay
- Area. The opportunity to rub shoulders with some of the very
- talented people in BAS is a thrilling one.
-
- Leaving a position like this, I suppose it is normal to turn
- nostalgic and reflect upon the highlights of the experience. Then
- one thinks of the special people and the help, insight and
- encouragement they have offered. Now it becomes difficult because
- when one pulls out the list of people one wants very much to thank
- one risks offense by omission. So I'll keep it short and probably
- slight many; I hope those omitted may therefore find comfort in the
- most excellent company.
-
- Thank you Bob Steiner. I can't say anything but a heartfelt "thank
- you" for everything.
-
- We all owe special gratitude to Bruce LaCentra, the president of
- LaCentra Graphics. Bruce has given his professional services for
- some of the most significant changes in layout and format of
- "BASIS". I have received complements from all over the country for
- our layout, and all the credit is due to our readers who send in
- their suggestions, Bruce being the most important single source.
-
- Now thanks to John Taube. John has been a human calendar, calling
- to alert me about events of importance to BAS. He has kept a
- constant pipeline of tapes (audio and video), newspaper and
- magazine articles, books and information for my perusal and
- consideration, never complaining about my judgment in using or
- discarding the material.
-
- Finally, thank you, the readers. There is nothing that can come of
- all this effort but for your interest, concern and support.
-
- Yves Barbero has not had enough to do, it seems, so he has been
- chosen to take over the editorship. He has (reluctantly) agreed to
- relinquish some of his other responsibilities to give him the time
- he will need to devote to the newsletter. We still don't know if he
- realizes that he is a mere mortal. Kate Talbot has been doing
- yeoman (yeowoman?) work with the newsletter distribution, and she
- will take the responsibility of Meeting Coordinator from Yves.
-
- Good luck, Yves.
-
-
-
- BAS PICNIC!
-
- The long-awaited BAS annual picnic is here! Start your annual
- three-day healing and purging fast on Wednesday, August 15, so
- you'll be ready for Saturday, August 18, the day of the Feast. Fast
- to feast, indeed. The hard-core fastbreaking will begin around noon
- on Saturday, so boogie in and binge.
-
- The shindig will be held at Greer Park on Amarillo Ave. in Palo
- Alto. Take the Oregon Xway west from 101. At the very first stop
- light (it comes quickly, so be ready) turn left (south); this is
- Old Bayshore Road. (Ben said he will have his truck out by the stop
- light with a sign for BAS.) Go about two blocks and you will see
- the park on your right.
-
- You will salivate to the succulent delights of chicken, seafood and
- beef entrees, veggies, salads, desserts and hors d'oeuvres. As if
- this were not enough, we are providing a few moments of
- entertainment and enlightenment for your pleasure: Bob Steiner will
- do a live demonstration of psychic surgery, without anesthesia (Bob
- usually takes gas before he does the stuff); Don Henvick,
- peripatetic troublemaker, will perform some of his best slight-of-
- hand routines; and astronomer Norm Sperling will give us a 10-
- minute recap of the Hubble Telescope project (he'll try to help us
- overcome our sense of discouragement).
-
- If you don't send in your reservation today you are likely to
- forget, and when you realize slash your wrists, so mail your check
- for $5 per person ($2.50 for children under 12 and seniors). Make
- them payable to Ben Baumgartner, 2467 Betlo Ave., Mountain View
- 94043.
-
- There is a great need for some help with this considerable effort.
- Ben and Carol have done everything in the past, and we can't have
- them do it again this year. Please don't assume they have enough
- hands. Call Ben or Carol to offer help or to make late reservations
- at (415) 968-1535.
-
-
-
- DOWN-UNDER DOWSING
- by Ian Bryce and Harry Edwards
-
- The dowsing tests by the Australian Skeptics (AS) began with the
- braggadocio of mayor Dan Gleeson: He boasted, in writing, that he
- could find "a dot on the back of a beer coaster, nominate the value
- of a coin eight weeks after it had been removed from its hiding
- place, decide the value of hidden banknotes," and, of course,
- "dowse minerals and water." He claimed he could dowse from an
- aircraft flying at 9,500 feet. He expressed "100% certainty" when
- asked to appraise his chances at winning the skeptic's $20,000
- challenge. He even urged spectators at the interview to back him
- with odds so that everyone would stand to make a fortune.
-
- The protocol for the test was relatively simple. The test site, in
- a city west of Sydney, was a field of natural grass over
- undisturbed soil -- a typical area in which diviners were
- accustomed to working. For the sake of simplicity and cost, it was
- decided that targets would be buried in rows and then covered by a
- strip of carpet 6x24 feet. Each row had five staked locations about
- 4 feet apart at which holes would be dug for the targets. Diviners
- were offered a choice of objects: water (fresh or saline) in
- translucent plastic containers, gold ingots or coins, or an
- electric cable with or without current. The pre-dug holes were
- prepared for each object, and glass disks covered the holes to make
- a flat surface. Each row was separated by about 10 feet.
-
- THE CONCEALMENT
-
- AS constructed a cloth-covered portable wooden frame to conceal the
- placement of the targets. Two "concealers" would enter this "tent"
- and use a random number generator (a die in a bottle) to determine
- which location was to receive a target object. The carpet would be
- rolled over the location before moving the tent to the next
- position. When each location was prepared, the concealers left the
- area entirely so they could not even unconsciously cue someone. The
- dowsers were held under supervision away from the site while the
- samples were placed. To their credit, none tried to gain any
- advantage by peeking. Since no one involved in the test knew which
- holes contained something, the procedure was truly double blind.
- Both the organizers and the diviners agreed that the procedure for
- concealment was fair and equitable.
-
- Each of the nine entrants was to make two trials (rows) in which 9
- of 10 correct targets would result in a success. It was agreed
- beforehand that high scorers (70% plus) would be retested. AS
- decided that they would roll back the carpets as a dowser made each
- attempt for the advantage of an immediate reaction -- it would be
- good for television, with close-ups of the dowser's reactions to
- the results. All agreed that the testing would stop any time the
- results fell below 50%. The dowsers waiting for their turn at
- testing were kept out of the test area until their turn came, and
- those who had finished were not allowed to return to talk with
- those waiting.
-
- PRE-TEST CHECKOUT
-
- This was perhaps the most important phase of the test. Each diviner
- was asked to confirm that conditions "here today" were satisfactory
- and that there were no people, objects or conditions that might
- interfere with his abilities. Each was allowed to go over the test
- area with the carpet in place -- with targets absent -- to test for
- any kind of "interference," such as natural water, cables, or
- minerals. Eight gave a clear indication; one said there was a
- disturbance at a particular location and it was agreed that he
- would not be tested in that area. Only one diviner objected that
- the carpet blocked signals, so other fabric was used for that
- dowser.
-
- The case of mayor Gleeson was particularly interesting. He was to
- demonstrate how his rod worked during a pre-test session. (Gleeson
- was the one who objected to the carpet, so some curtain material
- was substituted to his satisfaction.) While he watched, the referee
- placed one of the 2-liter blue plastic bottles in a hole and
- covered it with the curtain. The committee had been openly filling
- bottles a few minutes before. Gleeson's forked stick violently
- jerked down when he placed it over the bottle. "Yes," he loudly
- proclaimed, "everything is working fine. My stick sees the water
- and I am happy to use these materials for the test." The bottle was
- placed in a hole which was then covered with a glass plate and the
- curtain material. The mayor's rod again worked just fine again, to
- his great pleasure.
-
- The bottle was in fact empty. But this was not revealed to Gleeson
- at that time.
-
- As another uncontrolled test of his powers, specifically to see if
- the Force would pass through paper, he was presented with a clear
- glass bottle with a paper label on it. The clear liquid was plainly
- visible, and, again, his fork quivered as he triumphantly
- demonstrated the water in the bottle.
-
- The bottle, in fact, contained two liters of pure (laboratory-
- tested) ethanol. Again, this was not revealed at the time.
-
- THE TESTING BEGINS
-
- The moment of truth arrives. The dowsers take their turns, going up
- and down the rows. As the carpet is rolled back, most of the pegged
- locations are empty that were called positive, or the positions
- declared empty were not. The reactions ranged from disappointment,
- through consternation, to utter disbelief. After the test some
- witchers went back over the exposed locations and found that their
- wands curiously worked properly when they could see what was in the
- holes.
-
- The highest rate of success was 4/10 (40%) for one dowser. Another
- scored 3/8 (37%), another 2/6 (33%), three scored 1/4 (25%), and
- three scored 0/4 (0%). The average of all the dowsers was 12/48
- (25%), just about the expected 1 out of 5 (20%). In other words,
- the group of diviners could have gotten together and just guessed
- at which holes contained something and done about as well. As a
- matter of interest, a newspaper reporter at the event was asked to
- make 48 guesses and he correctly identified 11/48 (23%).
-
- Although the sample is not large enough to draw hard statistical
- conclusions, this test, coupled with hundreds of others worldwide
- demonstrate that professional dowsers cannot perform any better
- than someone off the street can do throwing dice. It is easy to
- conclude that the force moving the dowsers' sticks is their own
- muscles and fanciful imaginations.
-
- EXCUSES, EXCUSES
-
- When the tests were all finished, the excuses began to pour in.
- There were now all kinds of distractions in the test area. The
- carpet was the worst villain. The excuse-of-the-day prize goes to
- the diviner who complained that the influence from one hole was
- traveling along the carpet to emerge at a different spot! Other
- diviners with similar excuses were given unofficial chances like
- the case above with the same results. When they didn't know where
- the object was they could not find it. Before the test the dowsers
- all signed statements that they had found no distractions, that the
- conditions were fair and impartial, and that they could perform to
- at least 80%.One diviner, to his credit, admitted that he would
- have to seriously reconsider his views on witching.
-
- A chap who claimed he could find gold (his test consisted in
- putting small gold ingots in assigned holes) got 0/4, and he could
- not understand why his powers had deserted him. He produced a piece
- of insulation tape with a minute piece of copper stuck to it. "Bury
- this anywhere you like," he said, waiving his arms in the direction
- of the open paddocks, "and I'll find it." When he was engaged in
- conversation the copper was secreted under a convenient pile of
- horse manure. The dowser was then called back to begin his search.
-
- To an astonished group he asked, "Where is it?"
-
- "You're the dowser, you find it!" came the unwelcome response. He
- was obviously not overjoyed with the prospect of searching the
- surrounding 500 hectares, so he asked for a little narrower area.
- The area was cut down to a swath about 3x30 feet. He walked about
- three feet into the area and his whalebone wand twisted toward the
- ground. "There it is," he declared. It wasn't. It was a good 10
- feet away.
-
- The pre-test trials in which Gleeson had selected an empty bottle
- as full and a bottle of alcohol as water were then revealed to the
- consternation of all the dowsers. The concern AS had for a "crisis
- of confidence" and subsequent psychological damage the dowsers
- might suffer did not happen. They all left with their faith
- slightly tweaked but still intact. There is nothing that changed
- their perception of their own abilities.
-
- [This article, edited and adapted for "BASIS", was published in
- "The Skeptic", (volume 9, No. 4, 1989) newsletter of the Australian
- Skeptics.)
-
-
-
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
-
- Chair: Larry Loebig
- Vice Chair: Yves Barbero
- Secretary: Rick Moen
- Treasurer: Kent Harker
- Shawn Carlson
- Andrew Fraknoi
- Mark Hodes
- Lawrence Jerome
- John Lattanzio
- Eugenie Scott
- Norman Sperling
-
-
-
- "BASIS" STAFF:
-
- Kent Harker, editor; Sharon Crawford, assoc. editor;
- Kate Talbot, distribution; Rick Moen, circulation
-
-
-
- BAS ADVISORS
-
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
- Dean Edell, M.D., ABC Medical Reporter
- Donald Goldsmith, Ph.D., Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Diane Moser, Science writer
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D.,U. C. Berkeley
- Bernard Oliver, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Technical Writer, UFO expert
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Lecturer, Writer
- Ray Spangenburg, Science writer
- Jill C. Tarter, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
-
-
-
- CALENDAR
- August Meeting
- BAS PICNIC
- by the Baumgartners
-
- Saturday, August 18th, noon - ?
- Greer Park
-
- Greer Park is in Palo Alto. Take 101 Bayshore to Palo Alto to the
- Oregon Expressway exit and get off going west. At the very first
- light turn left (south) to get to Old Bayshore Road (a frontage
- road). There should be a truck parked near the stoplight
- intersection pointing directions to the turn. The park is about two
- blocks down. It will be on your right; there should be ample
- parking.
-
- Watch for coming events in the BAS CALENDAR, or call 415-LA-TRUTH
- for up-to-the-minute details on events. If you have ideas about
- topics or speakers, leave a message on the hotline.
-
- WARNING: We STRONGLY URGE that you call the hotline shortly before
- attending any Calendar activity to see if there have been any
- changes.
-
-
- -----
-
- Opinions expressed in "BASIS" are those of the authors and do not
- necessarily reflect those of BAS, its board or its advisors.
-
- The above are selected articles from the August, 1990 issue of
- "BASIS", the monthly publication of Bay Area Skeptics. You can
- obtain a free sample copy by sending your name and address to BAY
- AREA SKEPTICS, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco, CA 94122-3928 or by
- leaving a message on "The Skeptic's Board" BBS (415-648-8944) or
- on the 415-LA-TRUTH (voice) hotline.
-
- Copyright (C) 1990 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-