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- ----------------------------------------------------------
- February 1998 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 17, No. 1
- Editor: Ken Beseder
-
-
-
- IN THIS ISSUE . . .
- Austin Miles addresses BAS, by Bob Steiner
- In Memoriam, by Bob Steiner
- The Kookie Jar, by Robert A. Baker
- Air Force Denies UFO Crash, by A. E. Mous
- Steiner Caught Red-Handed, by Tully McCarroll
- The Hundredth Monkey, by Rick Moen
- The Mysterious UFB, by Bob Steiner
- Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine
- Is Psychology a Pseudoscience? (Terry Sandbek addresses BAS), by Patrick
- O'Reilly
-
-
-
- AUSTIN MILES ADDRESSES BAY AREA SKEPTICS
- by Bob Steiner
-
- The title of the talk at our November 19, 1997 meeting was . . .
-
- How Right Is the Religious Right?
-
- Austin Miles, Christian minister-chaplain, was our speaker. He is
- author of several books, including the blockbuster best-seller
- _Don't Call Me Brother_. I am on safe ground when I say that
- Austin Miles is both interesting and controversial. No one who
- attended the November 1997 Bay Area Skeptics (BAS) meeting has
- even a shred of doubt about that.
-
- So far, so good. Interesting speakers are the life blood of BAS.
- That fact keeps skeptics, believers, doubters, New Agers, and
- people with all shades of philosophical opinion attending our
- meetings.
-
- Rev. Miles discussed cults, and the devastating effect they have
- not only on the cult members, but also on their families,
- friends, and society as a whole.
-
- He told us that the enemy in life is not God, not the church,
- and not religion. "The enemy is man -- corrupt, greedy,
- power-seeking man." He went on to say that the enemy is the one
- who cloaks himself or herself in a particular group's identity,
- but is ignorant of the message of the group.
-
- Rev. Miles told us that "a real Christian is a good neighbor",
- and that an extremist is an extremist, regardless of whether the
- person is a Christian, an atheist, or a humanist.
-
- His rules for success in life included the following:
-
- o A freethinker should never have a closed mind.
-
- o To be successful in life, you must master two things: the thing
- that you love, and the thing that you hate.
-
- o Just because something is unexplainable does not prove that it
- does not exist.
-
- Next came what I consider to be the defining point of the
- meeting -- the assertions by Rev. Miles that effectively drew
- the battle lines.
-
- He told us that, just a few decades ago, the main problems of
- teachers with students in school were such things as talking in
- class, chewing gum, and running in the halls. Today, the
- problems are such things as rape, robbery, and assault. He then
- pointed out a correlation that many audience members inferred
- was an assertion of causation:
-
- "Back then, we had prayer in school; today, we do not."
-
- He explained how he believed that not only is prayer in school
- harmless, but also that it helps. The audience reaction was
- immediate and intense.
-
- Several people pointed out that there are _numerous_ differences
- between today and a few decades ago that could easily explain
- the difference in problems in the schools.
-
- One person informed us that "under God" was added to The Pledge
- of Allegiance about the same time, and that one could with equal
- logic and justification state that perhaps _that_ caused the
- change in behavior.
-
- Another person correctly informed the group that prayer in
- school had been ruled by the Supreme Court to be in violation of
- the Constitution of the United States.
-
- An audience member stated that any prayer would necessarily be
- discriminatory: "There is no such thing as a generic prayer."
- The person went on to explain that when one prays, there must be
- an object of the prayer -- someone or some thing to whom or to
- which the people pray. That is necessarily denominational, and
- excludes some religions, and _any_ prayer excludes _all_ unbelievers
- and _all_ agnostics.
-
- Others challenged Rev. Miles to name the studies that prove that
- his cited differences do indeed exist. He did not name any study.
-
- It was at this high emotional pitch in the meeting that Rev.
- Miles asserted what he perceives to be "arrogance in the
- scientific community." That escalated both the emotional pitch
- and the decibels in the room.
-
- An audience member called for a definition of a Christian. Rev.
- Miles responded: "One who lives the love of Christ."
-
- Another audience member asserted that most persecutions come
- from religious people.
-
- Someone else said that most religions are big business: "They
- are there to make money."
-
- Then, someone began quoting what that person believed it said in
- _The Bible_. Then came more quotations, and more arguments about
- interpretations of _The Bible_.
-
- One person boldly stated that all quotations stated that evening
- as being from _The Bible_ were in error. That person gave us his
- credentials: He has an e-mail Guide to _The Bible_, and spoke with
- great authority.
-
- As a point of miscellaneous information, I had a follow-up
- e-mail exchange with that self-anointed expert, wherein I proved
- -- _even to his satisfaction_ -- the correctness of what I had
- said, and that what he had, falsely and in ignorance, told a
- room full of people was wrong!
-
- To summarize:
-
- Some people in attendance believe that Rev. Austin Miles
- addressed to almost no degree the title of his talk (chosen by
- him): How Right Is the Religious Right?
-
- Some believe that the talk turned into a session of
- proselytizing for Christianity.
-
- The talk of Rev. Austin Miles certainly got the adrenaline
- flowing in the audience.
-
- At a few points, the meeting got a tad out of hand. It is
- difficult to set _formal rules_ to preclude that in the future.
- Bay Area Skeptics has been holding monthly meetings for fifteen
- years, and a case can be made that the meetings got slightly --
- just slightly -- out of hand four or five times. That works out
- to about once every three years.
-
- We encourage questions, comments, and discussion, including
- disagreement with the speaker or others. Please keep your
- comments issue-oriented. The speaker will decide whether
- questions and comments will be allowed during the talk, or
- whether the audience should hold questions and comments until
- the discussion period at the end of the presentation.
-
- Our rules, such as they are, can be summed up in just four
- words: Please Show Common Courtesy.
-
- Back to the November meeting:
-
- I introduced Rev. Miles, and, by any reasonable standard, it was
- my place to act as moderator.
-
- The first "interruption", which at least one person believes
- "opened the floodgates" for the meeting to get out of hand, was
- when someone addressed a comment to Austin Miles.
-
- First, I do not believe the meeting got anywhere near as much
- out of hand as a few people believe it did.
-
- Did the meeting bring forth excitement, enthusiasm, and
- emotions? You bet it did! However, that is not all bad. The
- feedback I got from many people is that the meeting was exciting
- and interesting, and they are glad that they attended.
-
- Could the meeting have been handled better? Although we can
- easily concede that it was not perfect, given the highly charged
- emotional content of the talk, I am not sure how things could
- have necessarily been improved. With issue-oriented comments
- (which most, but not all, were), one approach is to allow the
- discussion to freely run. The alternative approach is, depending
- upon your point of view, either _keeping order_ or _squelching the
- free exchange of ideas_.
-
- All right, here was my problem, and the decision I had to make.
- I ask each reader to think about what you would have done in my
- circumstances.
-
- Our speaker, Austin Miles, is an accomplished public speaker. He
- is a Christian minister-chaplain, has conducted hundreds of
- religious services, is a renowned ringmaster, has been
- ringmaster for hundreds of circus performances throughout the
- world, was Historic Narrator for the Royal Lipizzan Stallion
- Show National Tour, has made numerous appearances on television
- (including "Larry King Live" and "Entertainment Tonight"), and
- has been Master of Ceremonies for special events at Madison
- Square Garden, Radio City Music Hall, the United Nations, the
- Brooklyn Academy of Music, and two events at the White House.
-
- When the audience member made the comment, Austin Miles
- immediately recognized the person making the comment, called her
- by name, and commenced to address the comment she made.
-
- I have seen many speakers, and I have done it myself, simply say
- something along the lines of "Please hold questions and comments
- until later. At the end, I shall allow enough time for
- discussion. Thank you." From my observation, that works every
- time: easily and gracefully, with never a hassle.
-
- If I, as moderator, had spoken up to stop the exchange in
- progress, it would have been Austin Miles whom I would have had
- to interrupt: I would have halted the flow of conversation by
- throwing a roadblock in the middle of a response that our
- speaker chose to make.
-
- All right, how many of you, acting as moderator, would have
- interrupted the proceedings and interrupted the speaker at that
- point?
-
- My assumption at the time, and it is still my assumption, is
- that when there is a highly skilled speaker, it is appropriate
- for the speaker, not the moderator, to make the decision whether
- and when the speaker will address comments and questions. It is
- not the duty of the moderator to override the decision the
- speaker has made. Nor is it the duty of the moderator to
- interrupt the speaker and to prevent him or her from addressing
- a comment that the speaker has chosen to address.
-
- A word to the students and newcomers who attended our meeting:
- Bay Area Skeptics welcomes you, and we welcome your
- participation in our discussion. When you do participate, your
- ideas should always be met with courtesy. We apologize for any
- lack of courtesy that you felt at our recent meeting. Such
- behavior is a rarity at a BAS meeting, and it comes from very
- few people.
-
- You must understand that, when you do participate, your ideas
- probably will not be met with universal acceptance. You must
- expect that your ideas will be weighed, evaluated, and
- challenged. That is part of Bay Area Skeptics, and that is how
- we all learn. Free-wheeling discussion and argument contribute a
- great deal to the increase of human knowledge.
-
- I apologize to both Rev. Miles and the audience for the fact
- that the meeting might have gotten a tad out of hand.
-
- Thank you so much to Rev. Austin Miles for an excellent
- presentation. You held the attention of the audience, and you
- got us thinking. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the purpose of
- the meetings of Bay Area Skeptics! We encourage the open, free,
- and enthusiastic exchange of ideas.
-
-
-
- Skeptics are the most gullible people, because they don't know
- what to believe.
-
- -- A.E. Mous
-
-
-
- IN MEMORY OF DON MORRIS
- by Bob Steiner
-
- It is with great sadness that I report that Don Morris died on
- August 6, 1997, at the age of 55.
-
- Don activated with Bay Area Skeptics near the very beginning.
- For years, he participated in virtually every event.
-
- Bay Area Skeptics played a large part in hosting the CSICOP
- Conference at Stanford University in November, 1984. Don and his
- wife Susie had active roles in making that event a success.
-
- Don took over managing the LA-TRUTH line (Bay Area Skeptics's
- information line) in 1984, when the telephone line was moved
- into his home. The line resides in that location to this day.
-
- Above all, what I remember about Don -- and this has been
- confirmed by everyone I have spoken to -- is his ever-joyful,
- happy, optimistic spirit. It was a pleasure to work with him on
- projects, and it was a pleasure just to talk with him.
-
- People who disagreed with Don on philosophical points related to
- skepticism often were taken aback when they found themselves
- arguing with someone who was logical, brilliant, reasonable, and
- an altogether pleasant human being.
-
- Don leaves his wife Susie and their eight-year-old son Oliver.
-
-
-
- [Ed note: This article is reprinted by kind permission of KASES
- File, the journal of the Kentucky Association of Science
- Educators and Skeptics, Vol. 10, No. 1.]
-
- THE KOOKIE JAR
- by Robert A. Baker
-
- In case you haven't heard of Fang Shui (pronounced "fung shway"),
- you're not alone, but, according to the _New York Times's_ recent
- report (courtesy of Wayne Davis), it is the latest rage among
- the well-healed with more time and money than common sense on
- their hands. This scam is based on the ancient Asian folk belief
- that the way objects are arranged and placed in one's home will
- affect chi (pronounced "chee"), i.e., invisible fields of
- electromagnetic energy that the Chinese and other Asians believe
- determines your vitality, fortune, and love life.
-
- For some reason, this folklore has caught on with a number of
- Americans, who have been spending a lot of dollars to hundreds
- of Fang Shui masters and consultants who will, for a modest fee,
- come to your home and advise you on where to put your cat's
- litter box to enhance kitty's and your well-being and future
- prospects.
-
- Thousands of people, the most respected Fang Shui say, are
- taking weekend courses and promising to change the fortunes and
- love lives of eager clients, through consultations that can cost
- "as much as $1,000 an hour", according to Molly O'Neill, the
- author of the _Times_ report of January 9 entitled "Fang Shui or
- Fang Phooey". These Asian con-artists have consulted on real
- estate developments in the United States for well over a decade
- -- mostly to Asian investors, but, just recently, ordinary
- Americans have managed to squeeze themselves into the coaches of
- this gravy train.
-
- Fang Shui consultants and gurus are now showing up in nearly
- every American city, and articles in _Architectural Digest_ and
- other magazines are dispensing advice on how to rearrange the
- chi in your home. Seems like installing wind chimes and
- table-top waterfalls, painting the walls green, and hanging
- eight-sided mirrors also help revive your flagging libido.
-
- Believe it or not, these fang phooey hucksters claim that
- putting a pink rose in your bathroom will perk up your love
- life. Ms. O'Neill reports that, on the advice of one of these
- "wind and water" seers, she moved her cats' litter box to
- another corner of the bathroom and installed a number of potted
- plants. Although the cats loved the jungle in their privy, they
- now use a living room plant as their dumping ground.
-
- Skeptics should not be discouraged, however, at this willingness
- on the part of a moronic public to be swindled and suckered by
- anything with a reputed ancient origin. In no way is this
- gullibility new. Take heart in the fact that, if you ever do
- decide to give up your integrity, there is a veritable mountain
- of gold out there for the taking, if you put on a turban, adopt
- an accent, invent some hidden universal energy source, and refer
- to yourself as the great Wang Dang, who sprang from the root of
- all knowledge. In a month, you'll make a mint.
-
-
-
- NEWS FROM THE FIELD: DISPATCHES FROM OUR FAR-FLUNG CORRESPONDENTS
-
- [Ed. note: We received the following missive in the wake of the
- recent NASA Pathfinder mission.]
-
- AIR FORCE DENIES STORIES OF UFO CRASH
-
- Valles Marineris (MPI) - A spokesthing for Mars Air Force
- denounced as false the rumors that an alien space craft crashed
- in the desert, outside of Ares Vallis on Friday. Appearing at a
- press conference today, General Rgrmrmy The Lesser stated that
- "the object was, in fact, a harmless high-altitude weather
- balloon, not an alien spacecraft".
-
- The story broke late Friday night when a major stationed at
- nearby Ares Vallis Air Force Base contacted the _Valles Marineris
- Daily Record_ with a story about a strange, balloon-shaped object
- that allegedly came down in the nearby desert, "bouncing"
- several times before coming to a stop, "deflating in a sudden
- explosion of alien gases". Minutes later, General Rgrmrmy The
- Lesser contacted the _Daily Record_ telepathically to contradict
- the earlier report.
-
- General Rgrmrmy The Lesser stated that hysterical stories of a
- detachable vehicle roaming across the Martian desert were
- blatant fiction, provoked by incidents involving swamp gas.
-
- However, the general public has been slow to accept the Air
- Force's explanation of recent events, preferring to speculate on
- the "other-worldly" nature of the crash debris. Conspiracy
- theorists have condemned Rgrmrmy's statements as evidence of "an
- obvious government cover-up", pointing out that Mars has no
- swamps.
-
-
-
- BOB STEINER CAUGHT RED-HANDED AT BAS MEETING
- by Tully McCarroll
-
- Last month's presenter was Bob Steiner, esteemed co-founder of
- BAS and magician extraordinaire. We were treated to a glimpse
- inside his magical surgery suite, and psychically inside of Dr.
- Arnold Knepfer's abdomen: While the Channel 7 camera rolled, Bob
- performed psychic surgery. He entered the stomach area without
- gloves or instruments; "blood" oozed out as he extracted a worm.
- Exhibiting his bloodied and red but empty hands, he re-entered
- to retrieve a racquet ball. Afterward, Arnold said he felt much
- better; he was cured (just as many believers are, in the
- Philippines, where psychic surgery is very popular)! Bob then
- gave us his formula for fake blood, and showed us the fake
- fingers used to hold it.
-
- "It's theater," Bob says, "but it's not harmless." It is not
- harmless when the dishonest prey on the naive or desperate, with
- remedies of no value. It is fraud, defined as deception
- deliberately practiced in order to secure unfair or unlawful
- gain. It is also quackery.
-
- Bob defined quackery as the promotion of false or unproved
- methods for profit. Those using these methods may be doctors,
- licensed or unlicensed persons; they may be sincere or
- fraudulent. The practice may be legal or illegal. Unless the
- methods or medications are scientifically validated as safe and
- effective, however, they are not proven methods. Some may be
- safe but not effective. Some may be so dilute as to have no
- effect, as in homeopathy, where minute doses of substances
- considered harmful are administered in large amounts of water.
-
- Included in the arena of Cheap Parlor Tricks, Bob illustrated
- the power of mental suggestion, inquiring if anyone had an itch.
- Using only verbal encouragement, he was able to get 50% to admit
- feeling itchy . . . and an unknown number who did not admit it.
- Another trick is muscle resistance testing, where an offending
- substance, such as tobacco, is held in one hand, causing
- "weakness" in the other, outstretched arm. The weakness is
- exhibited by the force necessary to push the arm down.
- Presumably, if the subject is adversely affected by the
- substance, there will be weakness in the arm. Because the person
- doing the pushing has total control of how difficult this
- appears, that person also has total control of the outcome.
- Because of mechanical advantage involving leverage, even the
- strongest person's resistance can be easily overwhelmed.
-
- Most impressive of Bob's cheap parlor tricks was his ability to
- stop his radial pulse. Although other audiences were ready to
- "start a church" for him, Bob noted that "there is a small
- disadvantage to speaking to skeptics" when everyone asked Bob to
- divulge his trick. He assured us that "my pulse doesn't stop
- because I'm a magician . . . unless I know how." He knows how.
-
- Bob next discussed reflexology. Taber's _Cyclopedic Medical
- Dictionary_ defines reflexology as "the study of reflexes", but,
- according to the chart, all organs and body parts are
- represented on the plantar surfaces and can be treated from
- there using pressure. "What about amputees?" you might ask. Not
- to worry; the chart states that even though the exact locations
- cannot be found on the stump, painful spots will be found that
- need attention.
-
- Faith healers occupy a large portion of high-profit fraud
- perpetrated upon the unsuspecting public, and Bob not only had a
- lot to say about it; he has done a lot about it. With his team
- of skeptics, Bob helped to debunk Peter Popoff, who was
- discovered using a microphone into which his wife fed him
- information from questionnaires the audience had filled out. He
- was exposed on Johnny Carson, a few months later. As a result,
- Popoff's TV faithful dropped from 52 channels to 9. However,
- he's still "healing".
-
- Bob then showed a videotape of an "A.M. San Francisco" program
- on which he appeared with a faith healer known as Amazing Grace.
- Before the show, Grace had "healed" a few members of the
- audience, including Don (the mailman) Henvick, who came at Bob's
- request. Don had been healed of fictional maladies eight times by
- Peter Popoff. Bob asked Grace how she made her selections,
- before the film was shown on the air. She answered that God told
- her whom to choose, and never made mistakes. It came as quite a
- surprise to Grace that Don was a plant. She backpedaled
- frantically, claiming to have known she was being tricked. It
- was a bad day for Amazing Grace, who is likely to be up to her
- old tricks with a new audience.
-
- A variety of other faith healers were also discussed. As Bob
- points out, they keep returning, even after being exposed as
- fakes. Slowing their activities may be the most that can be
- done, but we can at least do that. Of course, there would be no
- market if P.T. Barnum had been wrong.
-
-
-
- [Ed. note: This piece previously appeared in _Georgia Skeptic_,
- Vol. 4, No. 2, and originated in a post on the Usenet newsgroup
- sci.skeptic.]
-
- THE HUNDREDTH MONKEY
- by Rick Moen
-
- Have you heard of the "Hundredth-Monkey Phenomenon"? It
- approaches the status of holy writ among some New Agers.
-
- According to Lyall Watson's widely-quoted[1] book _Lifetide_[2],
- around the year 1952, young monkeys on the Japanese island of
- Koshima figured out how to make sweet potatoes (provided by
- primatologists) more edible by washing them. They then taught
- their peers and parents, until, by 1958, this behaviour was
- found among widely-spread members of the troop.
-
- So far, so good. Then, in that year, a sort of group
- consciousness developed among the monkeys, when, say, the
- _hundredth_ monkey began washing potatoes. Suddenly, almost _all_
- the monkeys began doing so. Further, "the habit seems to have
- jumped natural barriers and to have appeared spontaneously . . .
- in colonies on other islands and on the mainland in a troop at
- Takasakiyama."
-
- This anecdote has been used to provide ideological support to
- such diverse notions as telepathy and nuclear disarmament --
- you, the reader, could be the "hundredth monkey" necessary for
- global transformation. What gets lost in the shuffle is the
- evidence for Watson's factual claim. Like many New Agers, Watson
- voices the sentiment that "when a myth is shared by large
- numbers of people, it becomes a reality". Ron Amundson of the
- Hawaii Skeptics, who investigated Watson's claim[3], suggested
- that this latter statement could be rephrased as "Convince
- enough people of a lie, and it becomes the truth". (Amundson
- found that _all_ of Watson's claimed documentation was grossly
- misrepresented, and in fact contradicted the -- now famous --
- claim.)
-
- Whether one buys this philosophical stance or not, the notion
- that this alleged mass consciousness is somehow politically
- progressive is a curious one. Per Watson's vision, "Peace, love,
- and a taste for brown rice and tofu", as commentator Tim
- Farrington[4] put it, "will at a given point instantly envelope
- the planet, and humanity will live happily ever after . . . .
- Neuroses, bad habits, ignorance will all be dissolved in a
- flash, without effort on the part of the rest of us." Let's
- savour, for a moment, this balmy image, before allowing
- ourselves to think about it.
-
- Back in 1933, there must have been some hundredth German monkey
- who joined the Nazi party, mustn't there? The mass consciousness
- of the society was transformed. As the "Herrenrace" myth became
- shared by large numbers of people, it transformed the reality of
- Europe.
-
- Farrington continues: "There is no guarantee that the hundredth
- monkey will be any wiser than the first, and no assurance that
- the first will be wise at all. The myth of critical mass, and
- its magic, is double-edged."
-
- Farrington suggests that, rather than admire the hundredth
- monkey, brainlessly falling in tune with the mass consciousness
- of the other 99, we instead take our hats off to the
- one-hundred-first monkey's "individual acts of conscience and
- reason, acts not effortless, nor particularly inspired, acts not
- necessarily validated by the herd nor telepathically obvious;
- but acts simply that are steps, one by one, on the difficult,
- intricate, sometimes ambiguous, rewarding path of a single human
- life."
-
- [1] _The Hundredth Monkey_, by Ken Keyes, Jr., 1982, Vision Books,
- Coos Bay, Oregon; Article: "The Hundredth Monkey" in "Updated
- Special Issue: 'A New Science of Life'" of _Brain/Mind Bulletin_,
- 1982; Film and videotape: "The Hundredth Monkey", Elda Hartley,
- producer, 1982, Hartley Film Foundation, Inc., Cos Cob, Conn.
-
- [2] _Lifetide_, by Lyall Watson, 1979. Simon and Schuster, NY.
-
- [3] Article: "The Hundredth Monkey Phenomenon" by Ron Amundson, in
- Skeptical Inquirer, Summer 1985, pp. 348-56. Follow-up in Spring
- 1987 issue, pp. 303-4. Watson had alleged, in _Whole Earth
- Review_, Fall 1986 (the "Fringes of Reason" issue) that his
- citations weren't really citations, and that the whole story,
- although contradicted by his supposed evidence, is nonetheless
- true. See also article "Spud-Dunking Monkey Theory Debunked" by
- Boyce Rensberger, _Washington Post_, July 6, 1989).
-
- [4] Article "The 101st Monkey" by Tim Farrington, in _The Node_
- magazine, Winter 1987, San Francisco.
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERIOUS UFB
- by Bob Steiner
-
- Ian Noyes and the I-Team, of Channel 7 News (KGO-TV), showed up
- at the October 22, 1997, Bay Area Skeptics meeting. I was the
- speaker; the topic was Psychic Surgery, Faith Healing, and Other
- Medical Quackery.
-
- They had a video clip of an alleged UFO, and they wanted . . . .
- However, let us review it the way it appeared on the Eleven
- O'clock News, on November 26, 1997.
-
- Mike McHendry, music video producer, was filming a local rap
- artist, on September 12, 1997. When he viewed the tape back at
- his studio, McHendry saw what he believed to be pictures of a
- UFO streaking across the screen in the distance. It appeared to
- make three passes over Twin Peaks, during the taping.
-
- Dan Noyes and the I-Team conducted an investigation.
-
- The first stop shown on the News was an interview with Steven
- Wingate and Jerry Shifman, UFO Investigators.
-
- Wingate's observation was: "It has a lot of the characteristics
- of a real UFO, or a flying saucer. It is moving very rapidly. It
- appears to be saucer-shaped, and it's relatively clear."
-
- Given the estimated considerable distance of the UFO from the
- camera, they came up with the following calculations:
-
- o The UFO went from the Transamerica Pyramid to Twin Peaks in
- 0.267 seconds (less than a third of a second).
-
- o That is a distance of four miles.
-
- o That works out to a traveling speed of 54,000 miles per hour.
-
- The announcer stated: "No known aircraft, not even the Space
- Shuttle, comes close to matching 54,000 miles an hour."
-
- The next person interviewed was Eric Beckjord, head of San
- Francisco's UFO Museum, who believed that this spaceship
- contained aliens doing a little sightseeing. He called it
- "intergalactic tourism". He elaborated: "There are others that
- may actually be running us: We may be their test subjects."
-
- Thence, the I-Team showed up at the October 22, 1997, Bay Area
- Skeptics meeting. The News told a bit about BAS, and showed a
- bit of my psychic surgery being performed on Arnold Knepfer,
- M.D.
-
- Kate Talbot's reaction to the UFO video tape was "It's just so
- utterly ludicrous that I can't imagine anybody buying it."
-
- Another audience member said "Up until now, I never believed in
- flying saucers, but, now, I wouldn't travel any other way."
-
- Then, the I-Team took the video tape to a television commercial
- production house, Varitel, in San Francisco. Michael Hogan and
- the engineers at Varitel knew what to do: On the screen was a
- clearer image. The "UFO" was not far off in the distance.
- Rather, it was between the rapper (the subject of the video) and
- the lens.
-
- It is not a UFO. It is a bug!
-
- Dan Noyes summed up the piece with the following observations:
-
- _"It's a UFB! - an unidentified flying bug!"_
-
- "This also gives us a very good example of how these things get
- out of control."
-
- He then told us that they have been getting calls from across
- the country about this "UFO" video tape.
-
- Kudos to Dan Noyes and the I-Team for conducting a systematic,
- thorough, scientific investigation, and bravo to Michael Hogan
- and the people at Varitel for the scientific approach to
- analyzing the data presented.
-
-
-
- [Ed. note: This article is reprinted, by kind permission, from
- Rocky Mountain Skeptics's May/June 1997 issue.]
-
- ANNOUNCING: THE SCIENTIFIC REVIEW OF ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
-
- The public, the media, and even some physicians seem enthralled
- by the unexamined promises of "alternative" or unconventional
- treatments. Yet there has been no scientific journal dedicated
- exclusively to carefully scrutinizing the onslaught of dubious
- claims. Until now.
-
- The _Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine_ has just been
- launched to fill the void. It's a peer-reviewed medical journal
- whose aim is to provide objective, scientific assessments of the
- treatments, methods, and hypotheses of unconventional medicine.
- The editor is CSICOP fellow Wallace Sampson, M.D., clinical
- professor of medicine at Stanford University, and the executive
- editor is Lewis Vaughn, co-author (with Theodore Schick) of the
- critical thinking text _How To Think About Weird Things_.
- Prometheus Books publishes the journal, and it has been endorsed
- by the Council for Scientific Medicine, a group of physicians,
- scientists, and others concerned about the lack of critical
- scrutiny of "alternative" medicine.
-
- The journal is issued twice a year, but frequency may increase
- later. A subscription is $50 for individuals and $90 for
- institutions.
-
- To affirm its support for scientific medicine and this new
- journal, the Council issued the statement below. (To subscribe,
- call 800-421-0351; or fax your credit card number to
- 716-691-0137; or write SRAM, Prometheus Books, 59 John Glenn
- Dr., Amherst NY 14228-9826; or e-mail PBooks6205@aol.com.}
-
- In recent years, a wide range of unconventional therapies have
- appeared on the public scene. These are offered as "alternative"
- or "complementary" to mainstream medicine, and include
- everything from herbal medicines, homeopathy, and aromatherapy
- to the use of acupuncture, therapeutic touch, prayer at a
- distance, faith healing, chelation therapy, and miraculous cures.
-
- We, the undersigned, believe that the need for objective,
- scientific critiques of the claims of "alternative" or
- non-conventional medicine has never been greater. This
- conclusion seems inescapable because . . .
-
- o There is a general lack of readily available, reliable
- information about the efficacy of such treatments. This impairs
- people's free choice and increases risks to their health. The
- potential harm is incalculable but appears to be growing. The
- trend is abetted by those who promote unproven treatments,
- especially those who are naive, greedy, or unscrupulous.
-
- o The media all too often dote on controversial and false claims
- but unfortunately provide few careful, critical examinations of
- them, usually preferring to titillate, pander, or entertain.
- Often, what the public hears is anecdotal testimony of people
- allegedly cured, not the results of scientific research. Many
- best-selling books promote the power of such alleged healing,
- but they hardly pass the scrutiny of peer review.
-
- o Several new journals devoted exclusively to "alternative"
- medicine have appeared recently, but they merely advocate
- unconventional treatments, and rarely assess them objectively.
-
- o Both the public and some medical professionals seem unaware
- that credible, scientific assessments of many "alternative"
- medicine claims already exist -- that new evaluations based on
- available information are possible.
-
- o There is a critical need to test new claims before they are
- marketed to the public.
-
- We therefore welcome the founding of the _Scientific Review of
- Alternative Medicine_, the first peer-reviewed journal dedicated
- entirely to the scientific, rational evaluation of
- unconventional health claims.
-
- Its purpose is to apply the best tools of science and reason to
- determine the validity of hypotheses and the effectiveness of
- treatments. It will dismiss no claim a priori, but consider it
- on its merits. It will reject no claim because it fits, or fails
- to fit, some paradigm. It will, using scientific methods and
- reasonable criteria, seek justified answers to two questions:
- "Is it true? and "Does this treatment work?" It will call for
- double-blind, controlled trials of alternative therapies.
-
- We believe that the launching of the _Scientific Review of
- Alternative Medicine_ is now imperative. We therefore call for
- physicians, scientists, health practitioners, and citizens
- everywhere to join us in supporting this important venture to
- advance scientific medicine, and to expand the benefits of
- people's free and informed choice.
-
-
-
- September, 1997 Bay Area Skeptics Lecture
- PSEUDOSCIENCE AND PSYCHOLOGY
- by Patrick O'Reilly
-
- The September guest speaker for Bay Area Skeptics was Clinical
- Psychologist Dr. Terry Sandbek, and the title of his talk was
- "Is Psychology a Science?" Dr. Sandbek is the Founder and
- Director of California Clinic in Sacramento, an outpatient
- treatment facility for eating disorders. He is on the staff of
- Sierra Vista Hospital, and is the author of the text _The Deadly
- Diet_. Among his many other accomplishments, Dr. Sandbek is also
- one of the six founders of Bay Area Skeptics.
-
- Dr. Sandbek began his lecture with an introduction of the
- psychology profession: He touched briefly on the works of
- Aristotle, Plato, Descartes, Pinel, and Benjamin Rush, and gave
- us a concise overview of the psychology profession in the late
- nineteenth and twentieth century, with particular attention paid
- to Sigmund Freud.
-
- Dr. Sandbek pointed out that, prior to the development of
- psychoanalysis, Freud was a well-respected scientist. With the
- advent of his psychological theories, Freud, who did not subject
- his psychological theories to scientific testing, lost the
- respect of much of the scientific community. At about the same
- time that Freud was formulating his psychoanalytic theories,
- which eschewed scientific methodology, much of European
- psychology was developing along scientific lines that advocated
- the use of scientific methods to study human nature.
-
- Dr. Sandbek talked about the development of psychological
- studies in the United States, and the implementation of
- professional and academic standards set by the American
- Psychological Association (A.P.A.), which was founded by G.
- Stanley Hall, a devotee of Freud's work, in 1892. Of more
- importance to our current understanding of psychology, Lightner
- Witmer in 1896 established the first psychological clinic in the
- world, at the University of Pennsylvania. Witmer believed
- strongly that the scientific study of human behavior could have
- practical benefits for humanity. Shortly after Witmer founded
- his clinic, J.D. Watson, considered by most to be the founder of
- American psychology, became the leader of experimental
- psychology, with emphasis on the study of behavior. B.F. Skinner
- ultimately became the accepted leader of the behaviorialist
- school of psychology, which followed scientific guidelines, and
- furthered the split between practitioners of that time, who
- tended to use the Freudian psychoanalytic model, and academics,
- who advocated a scientific study of human nature.
-
- Dr. Sandbek told us that, in 1942, Carl Rogers developed
- humanistic psychology to counter psychoanalysis and
- behaviorialism, and to emphasize the concept of free will.
- Rogers believed that people could cure themselves if they were
- in a nurturing, therapeutic environment. Although Carl Rogers is
- credited as being a major influence of much current
- non-scientific psychotherapeutic theory, Dr. Sandbek pointed out
- that Rogers was a great believer in basing therapy on empirical
- testing.
-
- In 1949, the American Psychological Association established
- training parameters, called "the scientific practitioner model",
- for psychologists, which emphasized the scientific principles of
- psychological training. Dr. Sandbek pointed out that most
- universities today preach this as a model, although it is not
- necessarily academically emphasized. The field of psychology is
- often seen today, even in academic circles, as composed of the
- distinctly separate schools of non-scientific psychology and
- scientific psychology.
-
- A glaring example of this, Dr. Sandbek said, is the fact that
- academia is turning out more clinicians than researchers. As a
- consequence of this de-emphasis of scientific methods, in the
- 1980s, many academics and researchers split from the A.P.A.,
- which no longer insisted on empirical studies, and formed the
- American Psychological Society, which calls for strict
- scientific standards.
-
- Dr. Sandbek explained why he believes scientific standards are
- faltering in the psychology profession: He expressed concern
- over the current popularity of the Psy.D. (Doctorate of
- Psychology) degree. He told us that the Psy.D. is specifically
- oriented to practice, and, unlike the Ph.D., often does not
- adequately teach the skills needed to properly analyze data. He
- pointed out that too often Psy.D graduates have not mastered
- such professionally basic skills as statistics and research
- analysis, and, as a consequence, are unable to effectively
- understand research or professional journals. He said that
- practitioners who are so trained often do not know how to
- determine the correct approaches to treating psychological
- dysfunctions, because they are unable to understand what studies
- and work have already been done.
-
- Dr. Sandbek also pointed out that the postmodernist viewpoint
- has also infiltrated psychology. The postmodernist idea that
- science is "just one of the ways" to understand the world and is
- no more legitimate than anything else has also popularized the
- notion that understanding basic scientific principles is not a
- requirement for successful psychotherapy. Such a postmodernist
- professional stance, though, might well lead to an inability on
- the practitioner's part to determine what psychotherapeutic
- approaches have been statistically shown to be effective.
-
- As examples of shoddy professional standards and sloppy
- professional methodology, Dr. Sandbek brought up such past fad
- therapies as Reichian Therapy, Transactional Analysis, and
- Primal Therapy. In keeping with the theme of his presentation,
- he pointed out that even a cursory scientific analysis of these
- approaches would have raised serious questions about their
- effectiveness. However, the proponents of these therapies did
- not offer scientific studies to validate their claims, and an
- unsuspecting public and poorly trained therapists too often
- assumed that these approaches were reliable without adequately
- examining the claims of the therapies' proponents.
-
- Dr. Sandbek concluded his talk with examples of the ways in
- which current fad psychotherapies thrive. Advocates of suspect
- therapies frequently rely on catchy wording: Pop psychology
- captioning such as "Five Minutes to . . . " or "Ten Reasons Why
- . . ." tend to capture people's attention without the need to
- provide adequate explanations or testing. Providing personal
- testimonials is also a popular approach with non-scientific
- practitioners. Such testimonials, of course, do not validate the
- success claims of the therapies. Dr. Sandbek pointed out,
- though, that the limitations of personal testimonials as proof
- are frequently not known to the public, nor to psychotherapists
- who are not adequately trained in research methodology. He was
- also concerned about non-peer-reviewed psychotherapies, many of
- which are taught only at workshops organized by the therapies'
- proponents.
-
- Dr. Sandbek did a remarkably thorough and entertaining job,
- explaining how science is correctly and incorrectly used in the
- field of psychology. His talk was interspersed with humor, and
- he was particularly entertaining when discussing how the
- development of Freud's theories was heavily influenced by
- Freud's own addiction to cocaine. The fact that psychoanalysis,
- like many psychotherapeutic theories, has been shown to be
- non-effective, has not stopped its use by psychotherapists, and
- Dr. Sandbek admirably explained why this is so.
-
- Dr. Sandbek succinctly pointed out the potential limitations of
- professional schools and poorly designed Psy.D. degrees. He
- emphasized the necessity of psychotherapists having the research
- skills necessary to study data and formulate tests. Of special
- interest to Bay Area Skeptics, Dr. Sandbek explained how the
- split between nonscientists and scientists in psychology
- originated, and the reasons why this division continues.
-
- -----
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS:
- Chair: Patrick O'Reilly
- Vice-Chair: Norman Sperling
- Secretary: Wilma Russell
- Treasurer: Carol Baumgartner
- Directors: David Knapp, Arnold Knepfer, Larry Loebig, Rick Moen,
- Patrick O'Reilly, Wilma Russell, Eugenie Scott, Bob Steiner, and
- Kate Talbot.
-
-
- BASIS STAFF
- Editor: Ken Beseder
- Distribution: Wilma Russell
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-
-
- BAS BOARD OF ADVISORS:
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
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- Andrew Fraknoi, Ph.D., Astronomical Society of the Pacific
- Donald Goldsmith, Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Mark Hodes, Educational Consultant
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
- Lawrence S. Lerner, Ph.D., Cal State University, Long Bearch
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Kit Moser, Science Writer
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., University of California, Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Terry Sandbek, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Author, UFO Expert
- Ray Spangenburg, Science Writer
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Public Speaker, Writer
- Jill C. Tarter, SETI Institute
-
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-
- The above are selected articles from the February, 1998 issue of
- _BASIS_, the publication of Bay Area Skeptics. You can obtain a
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