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- ----------------------------------------------------------
- February 1989 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 8, No. 2
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- DEGREES OF FOLLY: PART I
- by William Bennetta
-
- [On 8 December 1988, the "New York Times" told that the Institute
- for Creation Research -- the most prominent center of creationist
- pseudoscience in the United States -- had suffered a setback: The
- California State Department of Education had barred the ICR from
- issuing masters' degrees in science.
-
- That news, by itself, might not have seemed remarkable, for the
- ICR's charlatanry had been widely publicized for several years, and
- the idea of the ICR's awarding degrees in science was absurd. But
- the "Times" also told some things that surely WERE remarkable. The
- ICR already had been approved once by the Department, some seven
- years earlier, and actually had been passing out degrees. Moreover,
- the ICR's new application for approval, submitted in 1987, had led
- to some strange proceedings: The Department had sent a committee
- of five men to examine the ICR's programs, and three had voted
- favorably. The application had been denied only after one of the
- three changed his vote.
-
- How had all this happened?
-
- Here is the first part of an article in which Bill Bennetta, one
- of BAS's advisors, will answer that question. Bennetta has
- collected the relevant documents and has interviewed the members
- of the committee. In this installment, he tells how the committee's
- visit to the ICR resulted in a misleading report that omitted or
- distorted anything that might have conveyed the real nature of the
- ICR, its aims and its programs. Next month, he will recount how two
- members of the committee later told the real story, and he will
- describe what occurred after that.]
-
- When California's legislature adopted the Private Postsecondary
- Education Act of 1977, its statement of legislative intent spoke
- of "protecting the integrity of degrees and diplomas" issued by
- private institutions.
-
- The Act sought, among other things, to impose discipline on the
- operation of unaccredited schools and to inhibit the distribution
- of bogus degrees by diploma mills. It said that no school in
- California could award degrees unless the school had been certified
- by a recognized accreditation agency or had been approved by the
- superintendent of public instruction -- the chief of the State
- Department of Education. To gain the superintendent's approval, the
- school would have to demonstrate, to a committee of examiners, that
- its academic resources and programs were comparable to those at
- accredited schools that offered their same degrees.
-
- In 1981, when the superintendent was Wilson Riles, the Department
- overtly scorned the legislature's vision: After what was evidently
- a mock examination that would seem superficially to comply with the
- Act, it approved the granting of advanced degrees in science and
- in science education by the Institute for Creation Research (ICR).
-
- The ICR (which then was in El Cajon, but now is in Santee) is the
- creation of Henry Morris, a fundamentalist preacher and former
- engineer who poses as an expert in geology, biology, paleontology
- and various other fields in which he has no detectable credentials.
- Like Morris himself, the ICR is avidly committed to "creation-
- science," the fundamentalist enterprise that seeks technical
- validation for the doctrine that the Holy Bible is an absolutely
- accurate account of history and an infallible textbook of science.
-
- The functionaries of the ICR spend a lot of their time in devising
- quasi-scientific "evidences" that will seem to verify the Bible's
- creation narratives, other biblical episodes, and the
- fundamentalists' belief that the age of the universe is only 6,000
- years -- a figure based on the sum of the lifespans of the
- patriarchs listed in the Book of Genesis. They spend even moretime
- in purporting to refute evolutionary views of the universe, of
- Earth, and of living things. (Henry Morris has suggested that the
- concept of evolution was devised by Satan himself and other "evil
- spirits," while they were perched atop the Tower of Babel. (1)
-
- At first glance, doing "creation-science" may seem to be a tough
- job: Isn't it hard to peddle, as scientific, a book that says that
- beetles have only four feet and that a newborn animal's color
- pattern is determined by what the parent animals happened to see
- when they were mating? In fact, the job is easy, because "creation-
- science" has nothing to do with science; nor is it intended to win
- the allegiance of scientists or of anybody else who might be
- tempted to count a beetle's feet or to think about genetics.
- Instead, it has been concocted for two extra-scientific audiences
- and two extra-scientific purposes.
-
- The first purpose is to bolster the religious faith and anti-
- intellectualism of fundamentalists at large, most of whom know
- nothing of science and very little of what the Bible really says;
- rather than reading the Bible itself, they rely on preachers'
- accounts e biblical beliefs seem scientific to public officials
- -- who typically know as little as the fundamentalists know about
- science or about the Bible -- so that such beliefs can be injected
- into public-school science classrooms.
-
- Given their naive audiences, the creation-scientists are free to
- reject most of 20th-century science and to offer in its place a
- stew of weird tales and fatuous assertions, spiced with distorted
- quotations from legitimate scientific literature. They offer an
- astronomy in which the asteroids seem to have originated during a
- battle between good and evil angels, (2) and in which the sun is,
- and always has been, continuously shrinking. (By extrapolating the
- shrinkage backward through time, they find that the solar system
- cannot be billions of years old, as scientists say it to be.) They
- offer an astrophysics in which the speed of light is adjustable,
- so that photons from remote galaxies, millions of light-years away,
- have been able to reach Earth in the mere 6,000 years since the
- universe began.
-
- They offer a geophysics in which rates of radioactive decay are
- capricious, so that radiometric dating can indicate that a rock is
- millions of years old although it really was formed only a few
- thousand years ago. They offer a geology in which many of Earth's
- features, including the fossil record of life, were formed during
- Noah's Flood. And they offer a biology in which organisms occur as
- immutable, separately created "kinds" -- a term that they have
- borrowed from the King James version of Genesis and that they
- cannot define or explain.
-
- To promote the dignification and dissemination of "creation-
- science," Henry Morris in 1981 set up something that he called the
- ICR Graduate School. And he promptly sought approval from the
- Department of Education to award masters' degrees -- not in Bible-
- study or religion but in geology, biology, "astro/geophysics" and
- science education.
-
- The Department's record of what ensued is far from complete, but
- it does retain the names of the people whom the Department picked
- to evaluate the four degree programs that the ICRGS had proposed.
- I have checked on those people, and I have found nothing to suggest
- that they were qualified to assess programs in science or in
- science education. There is, however, evidence that at least one
- of them was connected with the ICR or with some of the ICR's
- leaders.
-
- The result of their efforts was a signal event in the annals of
- quackery: In June 1981, Wilson Riles gave his Department's
- endorsement to the ICR and, in effect, lent the prestige of the
- state of California to the whole nonsensical business of "creation-
- science" -- talking serpent, shrinking sun, fantastic photons, and
- all.
-
- Like all approvals granted under the Act of 1977, the ICRGS's
- approval had a term of three years. If things had proceeded
- normally, the school would have had to apply again, and would have
- been examined again, in 1984. But in that year the legislature was
- amending the Act, so all existing approvals were extended for three
- years. The ICRGS did not have to re-apply, then, until the end of
- 1987. Its application, signed by Henry Morris, was submitted on 24
- December.
-
- Consider the context in which that new application was received.
- During the preceding few years, "creation-science" and the men who
- purveyed it had been repeatedly exposed and publicly denounced by
- scientists and jurists alike. One of the most potent analyses had
- been issued in January 1982 by Judge William Overton, of the U. S.
- District Court in Little Rock, when he ruled unconstitutional an
- Arkansas statute that would have authorized the teaching of
- "creation-science" in that state's public schools.
-
- Overton wrote a highly readable, analytical opinion that considered
- the nature of science and showed repeatedly that "creation-science"
- was not science at all: It was biblical religion in disguise. His
- text described tactics by which specific creation-scientists had
- distorted science and had misrepresented their own enterprise; and
- among the people whom he named were Henry Morris and two other
- preachers who worked at the ICR -- Duane Gish and Richard Bliss.
- (Bliss, who was and is the ICR's "professor of science education,"
- thus became (as far as I know) the only such professor whose weird
- writings about science have been excoriated by a federal court.
-
- Creation-science soon suffered further debunking in a number of
- trenchant books, most of which analyzed specific antics of Morris,
- Gish and the ICR. These books included Niles Eldredge's "The Monkey
- Business" (1982), Norman Newell's "Creation and Evolution" (1982),
- Philip Kitcher's "Abusing Science: The Case Against Creationism"
- (1983) and Ashley Montagu's "Science and Creationism" (1984).
-
- In 1987 an especially conspicuous blow was dealt to "creation-
- science" by the Supreme Court, which upheld two lower courts in
- finding that a Louisiana creationism law -- very similar to the
- Arkansas statute that Overton had nullified -- was
- unconstitutional. Again, "creation-science" was found not to be
- science but to be an anti-scientific religious doctrine. (3)
-
- The Court's ruling preceded, by some six months, the ICRGS's
- application for renewed approval by California's Department of
- Education.
-
- The application was governed by section 94310.2 in Article 1.5 of
- the state's education code. Article 1.5 incorporates the Act of
- 1977 and amendments to it. Section 94310.2 provides that the
- superintendent of public instruction shall not approve the granting
- of degrees by an unaccredited institution unless an assessment of
- each degree program has shown that "The curriculum is consistent
- in quality with curricula offered by appropriate established
- accredited institutions" and that "The course for which the degree
- is granted achieves its professed or claimed academic objective for
- higher education, with verifiable evidence of academic achievement
- comparable to that required of graduates of other recognized
- schools accredited by an appropriate accrediting commission. . .
- ."
- In the processing of the application, decisive roles were played
- by three officers of the Department. Bill Honig, who succeeded
- Wilson Riles in 1982, is the current superintendent of Public
- instruction. Joseph Barankin works directly for Honig, in
- Sacramento, as an assistant superintendent and as the director of
- the Department's Private Postsecondary Education Division (PPED),
- the branch that handles all applications from postsecondary schools
- seeking state approval. Roy Steeves works for Barankin, at the
- Department's Los Angeles office, as an assistant director of the
- PPED.
-
- In March 1988, Barankin gave the ICRGS case to Steeves. Henry
- Morris and his associates by then had begun to amend their
- application to meet the PPED's standard requirements for
- documentation. They resubmitted it, in final form, on 9 June.
- During the next few weeks, Steeves recruited the committee that
- would visit the ICR, examine its programs, and recommend
- whether approval should be granted. By law, the actual decision
- about approval would rest wholly with Bill Honig, notwithstanding
- any finding or recommendation that the committee might report.
-
- The members of the committee were: Robert L. Kovach, professor of
- geophysics at Stanford; Stuart H. Hurlbert, professor of biology
- at San Diego State; G. Edwin Miller, vice-president for
- administration at United States International University (in San
- Diego); James A. Woodhead, professor of geology at Occidental
- College; and George F. Howe, professor of biology at The Master's
- College, a religious school in Newhall.
-
- The committee had no professor of education, even though one of the
- ICRGS's programs was in "science education" and was aimed chiefly
- at preparing teachers.
-
- The five men of the committee, along with Steeves (who was their
- coordinator), visited the ICR on 3, 4 and 5 August. Their report
- was typed in final form, and was signed by all five and by Steeves,
- on the 5th. It was spread over ten pages, but it had much blank
- space and several unfilled sheets; if competently designed, it
- would have fit onto six.
-
- The text of the report was, in a word, baloney. It continually
- omitted or obfuscated any information that might have told the real
- nature or aims of the ICR, the ICR's graduate school or the men on
- the schools's faculty, and it repeatedly promoted the pretense that
- the ICR was doing scientific work. For example:
-
- Since the spring of 1985, the ICR has published a quarterly booklet
- of devotional readings called "Days of Praise". Each issue has had,
- on its back cover, a some boiler-plate that calls the ICR "A UNIQUE
- complex of evangelistic, missionary and educational ministries" and
- lists the "ICR Graduate School of Creationist Science" as one of
- the "Typical ICR Ministries." Yet the report never told that the
- ICR itself calls the ICRGS a religious outlet.
-
- On page 2, the report said: "The stated purposes of ICR are
- twofold: to conduct research (and educational programs) with the
- goal of validating the theory of creation science and to conduct
- education programs primarily designed to train science teachers in
- elementary and secondary schools. . . . (4) The three master's
- degrees in science relate to the first stated objective and the
- degree in science education relates to the other objective."
-
- THAT THROW-AWAY LINE ABOUT "VALIDATING THE THEORY" WAS THE ONLY
- REFERENCE TO "CREATION-SCIENCE" IN THE ENTIRE REPORT. THERE WAS NOT
- A WORD ABOUT ITS CONTENT OR ITS SORDID, RICHLY DOCUMENTED HISTORY.
-
- The report absolutely avoided a question that any alert reader must
- ask: If the "three master's degrees in science" were related to the
- objective of validating "creation-science," why were the degrees
- to be awarded in biology and geology and astro/geophysics and not
- in "creation-science"?
-
- Page 4 said: "We commend the institution for having recruited
- faculty members who have demonstrated academic and research
- capabilities." Yet the report did not cite any academic or research
- achievement by any member of the ICRGS faculty, nor had any
- such thing been claimed in the ICRGS's application. Indeed, one of
- the striking features of the application was that its resumes of
- faculty members FAILED TO SHOW ANY SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATION OR
- PROJECT.
-
- Page 5 said that the ICR's courses tried "to present a two-model
- evaluation addressed to the origin of life." There was nothing to
- tell what that meant. There was no explanation that the "two-model"
- system is the doctrine saying that every person must embrace
- either godless, pernicious, evolutionary science or fundamentalist
- Christianity. (No other religions merit consideration; this is why,
- conveniently, the number of models is only two.) There was no
- explanation that "two-model" nonsense had been soundly discredited
- and that Judge Overton had called it "a contrived dualism which
- has no scientific factual basis or legitimate educational purpose."
-
- The report was baloney through and through. Was it intended for a
- reader who knew nothing about the ICR and would rely on the report
- for all his information? If so, it would thoroughly mislead him.
- Was it intended for a reader who already knew much about the ICR?
- If so, it could only lead him to conclude that it had been composed
- by six rubes who had not done their homework and had been fully
- fooled by the ICR -- or that it had been composed by the ICR's own
- public-relations specialist.
-
- The report did include some comments that were critical of the ICR,
- but they were uniformly cryptic and incomprehensible. They
- mentioned for example, course titles that "did not accurately
- define course content"; courses that were "unstructured, with
- variable instructor contact time and inadequate or lacking
- classical textbooks"; "a great need to strengthen laboratory
- instruction and improve lab facilities"; and a failure to make an
- even presentation of "conventional interpretations of scientific
- evidence." But they never cited examples or told what they really
- were talking about, and so they never told what really was going
- on at the ICR.
-
- The report ended with a one-sentence paragraph: "The committee
- recommends to the superintendent by a vote of 3 to 2 that full
- institutional approval be granted."
-
- The superintendent, Bill Honig, was not misled. And professors
- Hurlbert and Woodhead, the two committee members who had voted
- against approval, soon submitted documents that furnished Honig
- with real information -- not only about the ICR but also about the
- fatuous proceedings of the committee itself.
-
- End of Part I
-
- NOTES:
-
- 1. See chapter 3 of his book "The Troubled Waters of Evolution
- (second edition; 1982).
-
- 2. See Henry Morris's book "The Remarkable Birth of Planet Earth"
- (1972).
-
- 3. For a detailed account of the Louisiana case, see my two-part
- piece in the July/August and September/October 1988 issues of
- "Terra", the bimonthly of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles
- County.
-
- 4. Notice how the report adopted creationist lingo in falsely
- suggesting that the creationists have a "theory."
-
-
-
- FACE TALKS BACK
- by Roger Keeling
-
- [The following article is in rebuttal to John Hewitt's October
- "BASIS" piece on the Face on Mars. Roger Keeling is the coordinator
- on the Board of Directors of the Mars Project.]
-
- John Hewitt's article (Oct. 1988) is a facade of calm and measured
- reason, but of science, there is precious little . . . and that
- mostly in the form of notes caged from Michael Carr's book, "The
- Surface of Mars".
-
- Hewitt begins his attack with appeals to nameless authority, a
- scientific sin he commits repeatedly. He says, "Most scientists
- state flatly that there is `absolutely no evidence' for Hoagland's
- et al. claims."
-
- Most scientists? How does Hewitt know that "most scientists" have
- dismissed this? Has he done a survey to show that 51% of scientists
- have informed themselves about the matter, much less dismissed the
- anomalies as entirely natural?
-
- If such all-embracing opinion does exist in the scientific
- community, why have scientists like Dr. David Webb (a member of
- the President's Commission on Space), Dr. John Brandenburg, Dr.
- Brian O'Leary, Dr. Randolfo Pozos, author Eric Burgess (co- founder
- of the British Interplanetary Society), and others supported
- further investigation? Why have NASA people like Chris McKay and
- Thomas Paine -- while carefully indicating their own skepticism -
- - publicly defended the Cydonia anomalies as of increasing interest
- to NASA?
-
- Hewitt doesn't qualify his use of "authority"; he simply waves it
- like a sword. And that is absurd.
-
- Nor is this an isolated slip. A bit later he says: "To professional
- planetologists, who specialize in interpreting the geomorphology
- of alien landscapes, there is nothing artificial whatsoever about
- the face. . . ."
-
- Make that, "To SOME professional planetologists," and the statement
- would be entirely true. Nor is he yet done with this mode of
- argument. Later, attempting to smear the reputation of Dr. Mark
- Carlotto, he says, "Most scientists remain unimpressed by
- Carlotto's effort."
-
- In reality Hewitt hasn't the slightest idea what "most scientists"
- think. He supports his "most scientists" nonsense by quoting one
- scientist, ignoring how Carlotto's article passed peer review prior
- to publication -- a peer review that was ESPECIALLY RIGOROUS
- precisely because of the subject matter's controversial nature.
- And he fails to note -- perhaps does not know -- that Dr. Carlotto
- is nationally recognized as one of the leading experts in the field
- of image enhancement and interpretation. Not only does Dr. Carlotto
- have impeccable academic credentials, but he currently heads a team
- of scientists who provide critically-vital interpretations of
- satellite imaging to the government.
-
- In any case, this absurd leitmotif of commanding readers to believe
- in a unanimity of opinion among professionals is at best
- intellectual sloppiness.
-
- Argument #2: Hewitt says, "The face does not live up to even the
- most basic claims of its promoters. It does not follow the profile
- of a face, human or prehuman." He expends much verbiage trying to
- convince readers of this. He says the Face has but one principal
- face-like feature -- "a single shadow which gives the illusion of
- an eye socket in the late afternoon light."
-
- Hewitt's argument is very innovative; before now, what common
- ground critics and proponents occupied was agreement that the Face
- does bear an uncanny resemblance to a face. Personally, I think
- critics and proponents STILL have this common ground; pardon my
- pun, but the images themselves create a prima facie case against
- Hewitt's argument.
-
- Indeed, judge for yourself. Here is frame 35A72.
-
- In it, MOST people see more than the suggestion of an eye socket;
- they see a nearly perfect eye-socket shape. Most see the precisely-
- aligned teeth. Most see the Face framed by a helmet or
- representation of hair. Most see the symmetrical criss-cross
- pattern of lines above the forehead. Most see a reasonable bi-
- symmetry to the overall structure. And most see how the shadow
- precisely follows the same line you see on a human head when
- starkly illuminated from about the 10 o'clock position. Most see
- how the shadow starts in the left temple, moves to the bridge of
- the nose, angles sharply around the nose, bisects the mouth, then
- angles sharply again into the throat area.
-
- Now we arrive at Hewitt's heavy artillery: his definitive disproof
- of our thesis. Indeed, based on this argument, Hewitt asserts "In
- classic pseudoscientific fashion, the Face-on-Mars promoters are
- making selective use of the data available to them, and have drawn
- conclusions unsupported by the data they HAVE used. They failed to
- obtain all relevant data initially, and they have ignored
- overwhelming evidence contrary to their claims."
-
- In fact, it is Hewitt's argument that crumbles upon examination.
-
- All Cydonia researchers to our knowledge rely primarily upon two
- images when considering the Face: frames 35A72 and 70A13 (35A72 was
- the 72nd shot by the A orbiter on its 35th day in orbit around
- Mars; 70A13 was the 13th shot taken on the 70th day). These images
- were taken at approximately 1,500 kilometers (about 900 miles)
- above the planet, both in late afternoon light. Four other known
- images contain the Face: 673B54, 673B56, 753A33 and 753A34. Hewitt
- notes that these were acquired by Mr. Norman Sperling simply by
- writing to the National Space Science Data Center, but that
- "Hoagland and company" were "presumably . . . unaware of" two of
- these (673B54 and 753A34).
-
- Hewitt describes Carlotto's image enhancement efforts and work to
- simulate morning light on the Face. Then Hewitt says, "A lower
- resolution image containing the face shows the area illuminated by
- REAL morning light, but Carlotto dismisses the frame as having
- insufficient resolution for his purpose. A second, lower resolution
- frame (673B56) has mid-afternoon light," also rejected for
- analysis.
-
- After quoting one scientist who dismisses Carlotto's work, and
- adding his own amateurish disparagement, Hewitt returns to these
- two frames: "Frames 673B56 and 753A33 (mentioned by Carlotto) both
- contain information at odds with the assertions. In the morning
- light of 753A33, our favorite mesa lacks any impression of facial
- features. The `eye socket' becomes a broad, shallow hollow; and the
- base appears as an asymmetrical erosional polygon like its
- neighbors. It's easy to see why these images get little attention.
-
- "Hoagland and company fail to mention two ADDITIONAL frames of
- Cydonia containing the face, 673B54 and 753A34. Presumably they
- are unaware of their existence. . . . The images of the face are
- small, perhaps 50 or 60 pixels (compared to over 400 pixels in the
- higher resolution views) -- but they are good enough to show all
- sorts of features on the other side. A broad, bright slope, hidden
- in the shadows of 35A72 and 70A13, rises toward two peaks along an
- ascending, ragged ridge. THE FRAMES DON'T SHOW ANYTHING THAT BEARS
- THE SLIGHTEST RESEMBLANCE TO A FACE!" [Original emphasis].
-
- Well. This seems devastating, does it not. Ah, these Cydonia quacks
- have fudged the data -- and they are incompetent, to boot, having
- missed some of that data in the first place.
-
- Hewitt's argument is false.
-
- First, note that he says that the two images found by Mr. Sperling
- (and not previously mentioned by Carlotto) provide important new
- data.
-
- Not true. The two frames procured by Sperling are PAIRS of the two
- mentioned by Carlotto. 673B54 (Sperling) was taken all of 1.6
- seconds before 673B56 (Carlotto), while 753A33 (Carlotto) was taken
- 0.8 seconds before 753A34 (Sperling).
-
- THEY ARE ESSENTIALLY THE SAME IMAGES. If, as Hewitt claims, Frame
- 753A34 disproves the existence of the Face, then 753A33 does so
- just as effectively. Likewise for 653B54 and B56.
-
- Secondly, Hewitt makes much of the fact that Mr. Sperling procured
- all four images simply by writing to the NSSDC, implying that we've
- been sloppy in our research. In fact, IT WAS MEMBERS OF THE
- ORIGINAL MARS INVESTIGATION TEAM WHO FIRST UNCOVERED THESE IMAGES
- in the early 1980s. The team presented them at the 1982 Case For
- Mars Conference in Boulder, Colorado. And all four are mentioned
- in "The Face on Mars" by Dr. Randolfo Pozos. Hewitt apparently
- neglected to look this up prior to impugning the professional
- competence of the investigators.
-
- But finally we come the the most important point: do these four
- images, especially the morning light 753A series, disprove the
- existence of the Face? Decide for yourself:
-
- 1) The Face occupies an area approximately 1.28 x 1.6 kilometers
- (0.75 x 1.0 miles) in size. Hewitt says 1.0 x 1.5 miles.
-
- 2) The two images normally used -- frames 35A72 and 70A13 -- were
- taken from about 1,500 kilometers (about 900 miles). The four low-
- resolution images were taken from about 33,000 KILOMETERS (19,500
- miles), or 22 TIMES HIGHER. Hewitt omits this entirely.
-
- 3) Frames 673B54 and B56, like 35A72, were taken near sunset, a
- fact obvious upon first glace. Hewitt says they are in "mid-
- afternoon light."
-
- 4) Frames 673B54 and 753A34 were not used by Carlotto because both
- are extremely noisy, with extensive "salt-and-pepper" errors. Both
- are far INFERIOR to the virtually identical frames 673B56 and
- 753A33; Hewitt implies that the photos are SUPERIOR.
-
- 5) In 35A72 and 70A13, the image of the Face is represented by
- about 650 pixels (not 400, as Hewitt says). In frames 673B54, B56,
- 753A33 and A34, the Face is comprised of about 35 to 40 pixels (not
- 50 to 60, as Hewitt claims).
-
- 6) In 35A72 and 70A13, each pixel covers an area of approximately
- 50 x 50 meters (2,500 square meters). In the four low resolution
- images, each pixel covers approximately 207 x 207 meters (42,800
- square meters). Hewitt never mentions this.
-
- These are all vital facts, clearly indicating the circumstances of
- the photos and just how little detail is likely to survive in them.
- So, what IS shown by the four images Hewitt so triumphantly waves?
-
- Almost nothing. Hewitt's assertion that the morning shots "show all
- sorts of features on the other side" is patently false. As the Mars
- Project's photographic consultant Daniel Drasin explains, the
- images simply contain too little information to yield details like
- "broad, bright slopes" or "ragged ridges." For confirmation, a
- comparison of high-altitude afternoon shots (673B54 and B56) with
- the similarly-lighted 35A72 and 70A13 shows little is visible
- except the overall shape of the mesa and the familiar shadow line.
- Only the very slightest indication of the right eye socket appears;
- there are no other details.
-
- These images tell us only that the Face IS basically symmetrical
- -- what The Mars Project has stated elsewhere.
-
- When Hewitt says, "It is easy to see why these images get little
- attention," he is impugning the integrity and professional
- competence of all who are involved in the Mars investigation, most
- notably Dr. Carlotto. But in "classic pseudoscientific fashion,"
- Hewitt himself DEMONSTRABLY makes selective use of data, draws
- conclusions not supported by the data, and -- again and again --
- fails to obtain all relevant data.
-
- There's much more of this in Hewitt's article, but space
- limitations keep us from pursuing it. Hewitt's principal arguments
- are by turns intellectually bankrupt and factually flawed. Through
- them all we do not hear a love for science so much as a drumbeat
- of emotionalism.
-
- No one in The Mars Project claims that the evidence so far
- available can settle the question of the origin of the Martian
- anomalies. More data is required. But we do contend that many
- arguments raised against our evidence seem to serve deep-seated
- emotional motives rather than a search for truth.
-
- We've not been able here to present our fabric of positive
- arguments for the artificial origin hypothesis. The Face itself is
- persuasive. Yet, as we've pointed out elsewhere, other Cydonia
- features are also intriguing. From a scientific perspective, what
- is most important is not the Face per se, but the relationships of
- these landforms to each other and their surroundings. The Mars
- Project is working with several researchers examining these
- relational aspects of the anomalies in terms of geomorphology and
- fractal analysis. Two professional papers are now being readied for
- peer review.
-
- The Project will continue this research, and continue its role of
- publicizing the anomalies to the public and scientific community.
- Most importantly, we will continue laying vital groundwork for
- public backing of return trips to Mars. In the long run -- even if
- the anomalies should prove natural in origin -- we will deem
- significantly increased public interest in space exploration and
- Mars to be success enough.
-
-
-
- 1988 PSYCHIC FIZZLES
- by Robert Sheaffer
-
- The San Francisco area was not devastated by an earthquake last
- January. Mikhail Gorbachev did not divorce his wife Raisa. Dinosaur
- eggs were not hatched, and Fidel Castro was not toppled from power.
- These were just a few of the many things that had been predicted
- to occur during 1988 by famous psychics, but failed to happen, as
- chronicled by the Bay Area Skeptics.
-
- At the end of each year, many well-known psychics issue predictions
- for the coming year. Twelve months later, they issue another set
- of predictions, conveniently forgetting those made the year before,
- which are always nearly 100% wrong. Each year, however, BAS digs
- up the predictions made the year before, nearly always to the
- embarrassment of those who made them.
-
- Many of the psychic predictions made are so vague that it is
- impossible to say if they came true or not: for example, Jeane
- Dixon's predictions that "October and November will be stress-
- filled" for Frank Sinatra, or that "Prince Philip should be
- especially on guard" during the autumn, are difficult to prove true
- or false. Many other predictions involve things that happen every
- year, or else are not difficult to guess, such as tornadoes in the
- Midwest, hurricanes in Florida, or continued terrorist incidents.
- Many predictions simply state that currently ongoing problems will
- continue, such as unrest in South Africa, or fighting in Central
- America.
-
- Other supposed predictions are not really predictions at all, but
- are actually disclosures of little-known events that are already
- under way, such as movie productions, business ventures, or
- celebrity activities. While some predictions did of course come
- true, especially those that were unspecific, or not at all
- difficult to guess, not ONE prediction which was both specific AND
- surprising came true.
-
- The famous Washington, D.C. psychic Jeane Dixon, who supposedly has
- a "gift of prophecy," predicted that Jesse Jackson would face a
- sudden health problem this fall, that Fidel Castro would be
- overthrown, that Princess Diana would become pregnant, and that
- Communists would gain a "foothold" on the island of Cyprus.
-
- Clarisa Bernhardt, who claims (without justification) great
- accuracy in her psychic predictions of earthquakes, predicted that
- prehistoric dinosaur eggs would be discovered, frozen in the
- Antarctic ice, and that scientists would successfully incubate and
- hatch them. She also predicted that Clint Eastwood would this year
- declare himself a candidate for the Republican Presidential
- nomination in 1992.
-
- New York psychic Shawn Robbins predicted that Fawn Hall, Donna
- Rice, and Jessica Hahn would star together in a new TV series based
- on "Charlie's Angels."
-
- Los Angeles psychic Marie Graciette predicted that Soviet party
- boss Mikhail Gorbachev would divorce his wife Raisa.
-
- Florida psychic and astrologer Jack Gillen predicted that "A
- massive earthquake will hit California on or about January 19 --
- causing extensive damage and loss of life in the San Francisco
- area." He also predicted the outbreak of an epidemic of a
- mysterious skin condition causing black blotches on the arms and
- legs.
-
- Denver psychic Lou Wright predicted that Dolly Parton would lose
- so much weight that she would enter the hospital to be treated for
- anorexia. She also predicted that Princesses Diana and Fergie would
- BOTH become pregnant, and BOTH give birth to babies on the same
- day.
-
- Florida psychic Noreen Renier warned the FBI in early June of a
- forthcoming major political assassination attempt that was supposed
- to occur in the next two months. In her vision she "saw a person
- getting shot in the stomach" in "a palace or a castle with high
- ceilings and arches."
-
- In San Jose, California, psychic Sylvia Brown predicted that the
- San Francisco '49ers would go "all the way" to the 1988 superbowl,
- that Senator Robert Dole would beat out George Bush for the
- Republican presidential nomination, that a terrorist attack at San
- Francisco International Airport during July would be thwarted, that
- a vaccine for AIDS and ARC would "absolutely" be found, and that
- interest rates would go down while oil prices went substantially
- up (the opposite happened). She predicted that evangelist Jerry
- Falwell would become involved in a major scandal -- he was not --
- but failed to predict the scandal that brought down Jimmy
- Swaggart. Interestingly, she also failed to predict that she would
- be accused, in court papers filed by several banks, of fraudulently
- obtaining more than $200,000 in real estate loans.
-
- Based on the continuing failure of the psychics to make accurate
- predictions over the years, Bay Area Skeptics urges everyone --
- including the media -- to exercise some healthy skepticism when
- psychics and other purveyors of the paranormal make extra- ordinary
- claims or predictions. Anyone who swallows the psychics claims year
- after year without checking the record is setting a bad example for
- youngsters and the public.
-
- It is important to note that no psychic succeeded in predicting the
- genuinely SURPRISING news stories of 1988: the controversial
- nomination and election of Indiana Senator Dan Quail as Vice-
- President; the sudden death of Christina Onassis; the surprising
- rise of the candidacy of Michael Dukakis, and its equally
- surprising collapse; the loss of over 50,000 lives in an earthquake
- in Soviet Armenia; and the prolonged drought in the American farm
- belt. These major news stories were so unanticipated that someone
- would have had to be truly psychic to have predicted them! Given
- the number of self-proclaimed psychics out there, you would expect
- that at least one so-called psychic would have -- unless, of
- course, that all such claims of psychic powers are without
- foundation.
-
- The Bay Area Skeptics is a group of people from all walks of life
- who support the critical examination of paranormal claims, such as
- psychic powers, UFOs, astrology, Bigfoot, biorhythms, etc. Similar
- skeptics' organizations are active in many other areas of the
- country, including southern California, New York, Colorado,
- Illinois, Arizona, Texas, and Ohio. The Committee for the
- Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP) is
- an international Skeptics' organization, made up of many famous
- writers, scientists, and investigators, such as Martin Gardner,
- James "The Amazing" Randi, Isaac Asimov, and many others. Similar
- skeptics' groups have also formed in many foreign countries,
- including Australia, Canada, France, the United Kingdom, Mexico,
- and India. All of these groups cooperate in making their findings
- available to other researchers, and to the public.
-
- [This is the article that Robert released to the press. Newspapers
- and TV stations have come to rely on this year-end story from BAS.
- Robert appeared on several Bay Area radio and TV programs during
- the last week of December with this press release. BAS vice-chair,
- Yves Barbero, and BAS director Shawn Carlson also put in
- appearances at year's end talking about the failure of psychics to
- make good their grandious claims. -- Ed.]
-
-
- -----
-
- 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 February, 1989 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) 1989 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-
-