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- ---------------------------------------------------------
- January 1988 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 7, No. 1
- Editor: Kent Harker
-
-
-
- PSY-COP
- by Laura Hagar
-
- [I think most "BASIS" readers are interested in the personalities
- as well as the accomplishments of BAS board members, modesty
- notwithstanding. Ms. Hagar did a report on out illustrious SHAWN
- CARLSON, which was first published in Express, a Berkeley paper,
- and she has given permission to run it here. -- Ed.]
-
- Shawn Carlson is a maker of miracles.
-
- In the cluttered living room of a run-down apartment in West
- Berkeley, he sits in a battered chair looking proudly at an old
- print of the "Mona Lisa." It's not a particularly good
- reproduction, too dark and a bit blurry, but it has a mystery all
- its own, a mystery that has nothing to do with the secret smile or
- the identity of the model. As I watch, tears well up in the
- painting's eyes and spill down the canvas.
-
- Carlson, who is working on his PhD in particle physics at UC
- Berkeley, sits back and crosses his arms, smiling broadly at his
- creation. At 27, he is one of the most active and controversial
- members of BAS, a group dedicated to the scientific investigation
- of paranormal claims. The weeping "Mona Lisa" is Carlson's attempt
- to duplicate the supposedly miraculous phenomenon known as crying
- icons.
-
- "Crying icons," he explains, "are paintings or statues of saints
- or Madonnas that seem to weep human tears or blood. I first learned
- about the phenomenon years ago from a friend who was a Russian
- Orthodox seminarian. He said there was no rational explanation for
- them and that it was a miraculous sign from God. I thought to
- myself, well, it could be a miracle, but it could be also very well
- be something else. I decided to find out what.
-
- "It took me only ten minutes to figure out how to duplicate the
- icon. I made a rough model, then pretty much forgot about it until
- last December, when I heard a report on television about a supposed
- religious miracle in Chicago. Three hundred thousand people flocked
- to this small Albanian Greek Orthodox Church to witness a picture
- of the Virgin Mary weeping. When I saw how seriously all these
- people were taking it, I was stunned. They thought they were
- witnessing a REAL miracle."
-
- The church didn't acknowledge his letter or the letters of several
- other scientific groups that made similar requests. "So," Carlson
- Says, "I set out to make a demonstration to prove that their icon
- might indeed not be a miracle. I used the method I'd come up with
- years before to make a picture of the `Mona Lisa' cry."
-
- Carlson in now attempting to patent his icon, and won't reveal the
- details of the process, but he says the procedure is a simple one,
- using natural ingredients and technologies that have been available
- for hundreds of years. He is already dreaming of its commercial
- applications.
-
- "I'm thinking of it mostly as a novelty item. You know, tacky
- living room paintings with running waterfalls or portraits of a
- weeping Tammy Faye Bakker with running mascara...."
-
- Commercial applications for the work of a Bay Area Skeptic are
- rare, however. For the most part, the skeptics are involved in a
- serious hobby; theirs is a singular passion. In the past they have
- investigated such mysteries as UFOs, psychic phenomena, faith
- healing, and reincarnation.
-
- "Contrary to what a lot of people think," Carlson explains, "the
- Bay Area Skeptics is not an organization hell bent on debunking.
- Real skeptics are not cynics. We have some cynics in our group, of
- course (people who wouldn't believe in a UFO if it landed in their
- back yard, who wouldn't believe in Bigfoot if it walked up to them
- in broad daylight and ate their lunch) but they're not the
- majority.
-
- "A real skeptic is open-minded. A skeptics says, `I'm willing to
- believe absolutely anything, but you've got to give me good reason.
- Not anecdotal evidence, but a good reason, hard evidence. The type
- of evidence I would require for anything else.'"
-
- Carlson thinks that the reason most people believe in paranormal
- phenomena is that they have had some kind of personal experience
- that they can't explain. "The problem is most people are not
- sufficiently trained in the methods of skeptical inquiry. They
- don't know how to evaluate these experiences. Human beings are
- basically lousy observers. We don't observe or we `mis-remember'
- critical facts, and we tend not to see things that are inconsistent
- with our world view. This is the same reason, I think, why the
- claims of psychics and astrologers are accepted uncritically by so
- many millions of people."
-
- "I didn't make the icon to insult any one's religious faith," he
- adds. "I just wanted to show that you can't just accept these
- events as miraculous because many times what appears to be a
- miracle at first glance has a perfectly rational explanation. The
- only way you can tell whether or not a miracle is real is to
- investigate it, and rule out all the known natural explanations.
- But the Orthodox Church claims that to even question a miracle is
- to blaspheme Christ."
-
- "According to the Bible," Carlson adds tersely, "it is blasphemy
- to believe in a FALSE miracle."
-
- Carlson is not religious in any conventional sense. Though he knows
- his Bible tolerably well, he seems to have learned it for the
- purpose of argument rather than faith. Ironically, he looks much
- like a portrait of a medieval saint. He is slender, blond, and
- pale, with fine chiseled features and a thin ascetic mouth. Like
- the saints, Carlson's eyes burn with fervor, but like the
- enlightened philosophers he admires, his passion is for reason, not
- for God.
-
- "I don't like to talk about science with a capitol `S'," he says,
- going on to talk about it that way nonetheless. He is a Scientist
- the way some people are Artists, and he talks about science as I
- imagine 19th century historians talked about Manifest Destiny as
- if it were an invisible force moving through history, massive,
- unyielding, and inevitable.
-
- Yet in spite of his love for reason and science, or perhaps because
- of it, Carl son has always felt drawn towards the supernatural and
- mysterious. "When I was younger, I read a lot about the occult and
- did psychic experiments with my friends. I was interested in it in
- a very experimental way. I wanted to know, for instance, if
- paranormal abilities existed, how could you test for them?" Carlson
- began studying stage magic at the age of twelve and at sixteen left
- home to work as a street magician on the streets of Venice,
- California. He still studies stage magic on the side, and
- sometimes, as he talks, a coin flashes between his fingers,
- disappearing and reappearing in his expert palm.
-
- The weeping "Mona Lisa" is not Carlson's first foray into skeptical
- inquiry. He received worldwide attention in 1985 for his
- experimental test of astrology. The results of that test, published
- in "Nature" (Dec. 1985), proved what the scientific community
- suspected all along: Astrology does not work.
-
- Surprisingly, Carlson began his astrology experiment almost by
- accident, as the result of a dare made by one of his professors.
-
- "We were discussing the problems of testing psychic phenomena, when
- he said that the problem with this stuff was that it couldn't be
- tested. Astrology, for instance, he said, couldn't be tested. Now,
- that seemed to me to be really absurd. After all astrologers make
- definite claims about what their abilities are. You ought to be
- able to test those. So my professor challenged me to go home and
- create a test of astrology."
-
- "[After the test that debunked astrology] the astrologers were not
- happy. After all, astrology is a very big business. It's estimated
- that money spent for counseling alone is a hundred million dollars
- a year. After I published my results, I was immediately libeled by
- several astrological publications, I was accused of all sorts of
- professional and personal improprieties, all of which were
- completely without foundation. They accused me of lying about my
- data, of altering the results after I'd gotten them so as to make
- the astrologers look bad. They now refer to me by putting quotes
- around the word `scientist,' as if I don't qualify.
-
- "The question is really one of consumer advocacy: Can the
- astrologers provide the services they're charging for? The answer,
- I think, is obviously not. This is especially important because so
- many people take astrologers' advice so seriously. They alter their
- life's course based on the advice of astrologers: People decide to
- get married or not; they decide to move; they decide what career
- to take; how many children to have and when they should have them.
- All sorts of things of fundamental importance. All we demanded was
- evidence that astrologers could do what they claimed, but the fact
- is astrologers have never been able to show anyone that they can
- do what they claim. This is essentially my message. They can't do
- it. Stay away from them."
-
- There is a fervor in Carlson's voice as he says this. He leans
- forward in his chair, his words clipped and forceful. Though we are
- alone in the room, he speaks as if he is talking to an audience.
- His tone is commanding; his voice resonates with paternal concern.
-
- Carlson says, "I don't feel any kind of disdain for people who
- believe in astrology or faith healers or trance channelers. I just
- think the whole thing is very sad, because most of these people are
- very sincere. They are, in their own way, seeking for truth. I
- think they're misguided, of course. Maybe, in the heat of passion,
- I say, `Argh, these idiots!' but when I calm down, what I really
- feel is sorrow."
-
- Like all skeptics, Carlson wishes that the public would learn to
- be more skeptical. He hopes his efforts will inspire people to be
- more critical of claims of the paranormal.
-
- "It is part of our job as skeptics to educate the public, and to
- alert them to fraud, especially when it involves the public health.
- But people should learn to be more skeptical themselves. The Bay
- Area Skeptics are working towards the day when people will no
- longer fall prey to ancient superstition, New Age fads, and
- charlatanism."
-
-
-
- SOMETHING'S FISHY
- by Ronnie Hastings, Ph.D.
-
- [Note: For those unfamiliar with the creation/evolution debate, the
- so-called scientific creationists are ever busy trying to establish
- creationism by finding flaws in evolutionary theory. This seems to
- be easier for them since they have no evidence for creationism, so
- they count evidence against evolution as a case for their notions.
-
- One way to falsify the evolutionary timetable would be to find
- material out of place; e.g., a human bone contemporaneous with
- dinosaur bones. Reverend Carl Baugh is a tireless worker in this
- endeavor, laboring year in and out in the Glenn Rose, Texas area
- in hopes of finding such evidence.
-
- The following article appeared in the "North Texas Skeptic". --Ed.]
-
- In what must be seen as a pleasant surprise, Rev. Carl Baugh, of
- recent "Glen Rose Man" fame, found a "human" tooth and took it to
- the Balcones Lab near Austin for identification in early July,
- 1987. Rarely does Baugh behave so scientifically, so this action
- alone is to his credit. But his trip probably is indicative of his
- supreme confidence that he has a genuine human tooth from
- Cretaceous deposits, a piece of evidence that would at last topple
- evolution as his man-tracks so miserably failed to do by turning
- out not to be man-tracks at all. Unfortunately for Baugh, once
- again, his evidence does not seem to merit such confidence.
-
- Communication from paleontologist Wann Langston, Jr. states that
- the other fossilized teeth Baugh brought in addition to the "human"
- tooth were clearly grinding teeth of pycnodonts, Mesozoic bony
- fishes related to modern gars and bowfins. Worn-down incisors of
- pycnodonts, having a couple of cusps, would indeed have a
- superficial resemblance to human dentition in the eyes of the
- zealous and uninformed; his "human" tooth is most likely such an
- incisor.
-
- Remains of the pycnodonts have been found in the lower Cretaceous
- deposits of central Texas and, though long known, have not been
- widely studied. It is also known that Cretaceous precursors of the
- modern sheepshead fish had broad incisors. Such remains in the Glen
- Rose limestone are compatible with the well-known lower Cretaceous
- ecology of a large, flat marine tidal basin upon which the
- dinosaurs trod at low tide. Baugh's new teeth were allegedly found
- in a marl layer covering a limestone deposit preserving
- unmistakable dinosaur prints (the same layer in which Baugh claims
- man-tracks, rather featureless isolated depressions alongside
- dinosaur trails, some of which were probably made by the dinosaur's
- tail or other appendage).
-
- As the Nebraska Man tooth turned out to be a pig's tooth, it looks
- as if "Glen Rose Man" will turn out to be a fish's tooth.
-
- Apparently Baugh had other "out-of-order" fossil samples allegedly
- from the same marl layer, but there is no indication that he left
- them at the laboratory to be identified.
-
-
-
- THE GELLER DEFECT
-
- Uri Geller is thoroughly entrenched in the fabric of society. This
- shock was brought about by an article that appeared in a
- professional journal, "International Mining".
-
- Uri formed a mineral exploration group known as Uri Geller
- Associates (UGA) in London comprised of professional engineers and
- geologists from around the world. (A little enlightenment about
- this later.)
-
- In what can only be described as stark naivete, the author gushes,
- "What is certain is that he possesses powers that can only be
- described as amazing, that volumes of learned scientific papers
- have been written about him and his talents, and that no one,
- including Geller himself, really understands how or why the things
- that happen in his presence do so."
-
- Apparently things got under way when Geller visited the offices of
- Clive Menell, chairman of the board of a mining consortium, and
- they rolled out a huge map (of Africa) on a table. Geller "spread
- out [his] hands and moved them around in the air above the map
- until [he] felt magnetic sensation on one of [his] palms. [He] then
- scanned the area directly underneath with a fingertip and pointed
- to a specific location, which the geologists marked."
-
- Naturally, minerals were found there, so the Jan. 28, 1980 issue
- of "Newsweek" reported that Geller had found coal. On the strength
- of that validation, a Japanese corporation contracted with Geller
- to the tune of $2 million over a six-year period. Uri claims that
- his contract with them precludes him from divulging its name.
-
- Uri described the methods he uses to find the minerals for the
- Japanese. He "map dowses" with his hands (he says he is more
- sensitive that way than with some other device) to find a general
- area, memorizes the geomorphology when he has strong impressions,
- and then flies over the area for closer sensations, and finishes
- by hoofing it out to fine tune.
-
- The results? "The corporation eventually examined several of the
- areas I marked on the maps they gave me, and a number of these are,
- I hope, now producing gold," said Geller.
-
- That's a big hope for $2 million.
-
- Another mining company hired Uri to dowse diamonds, and, at last
- report geologists said that "the sample indicated a high
- prospectivity of the rocks from that area for diamond bearing host
- rocks."
-
- Geller said he advised one company not to mine in a particular
- area, that they would be wasting exploration money. They did not
- heed his warning and allegedly lost $50 million.
-
- It would be interesting to have that confirmed. It is very easy to
- make a blank statement like that for which it is nearly impossible
- to verify.
-
- How did Uri convince the "IM" staff of his powers, you ask?
-
- "Geller demonstrated his technique by finding a gold ring secreted
- in the top of a foolscap envelope under a pile of papers, on a desk
- covered in papers. `I close my eyes and I do this (stretches out
- his left arm), I believe that my hand is only a tool, it's nothing
- to do with my hand, I can also probably go like that (folds his
- arms), but I'm not used to doing it that way, I'm just used to
- doing it with stretched hands."
-
- Uri's other two members of UGA are an amateur dowser and a managing
- director of "Hunter Personnel" in the UK.
-
- One of the references "for further reading" at the end of the
- article is Charles Panati's, "The Geller Papers". That book is so
- preposterous that reading only a few pages would turn anyone even
- mildly skeptical inside-out. Surely, the editors of "MI" did not
- even scan it.
-
-
-
- HELP?
-
- MICHAEL SORENS is looking for a few good skeptics to appear on a
- panel with the tentative theme, "What harm can it do to believe in
- UFOs, psychics, faith healers, etc.?" This panel will be held at
- the Bay Area Science Fiction & Fantasy Convention (BayCon) in May
- 1988.
-
- For those who haven't been to SciFi conventions, the participants
- are typically intelligent and articulate. Therefore, one might
- think that they wouldn't need any skeptical enlightenment, but,
- alas, this is not the case. We have seen that intelligence is not
- an insulation from nonsense.
-
- Michael is on the planning committee and wants to put a panel
- together with people from BAS. Since there are as many as 2,200
- people at these gatherings, this is an excellent opportunity. Call
- Michael at (408) 265-2719, or write hem c/o the editor of "BASIS".
-
-
-
- EDITOR'S CORNER
- by Kent Harker
-
- What constitutes proof? At what point does one give his or her
- assent and say he or she believes that such-and-such is correct?
-
- If the question is a scientific one, the scientific method outlines
- the rules of procedure and evidence. If the question is a
- philosophic or religious one, belief is arrived at in a manner that
- may not submit to scientific analysis. This does not diminish the
- value of non-scientific propositions or beliefs -- it just places
- them in another domain. The experience of love, for example, is not
- insignificant just because it cannot be rationally dissected.
-
- On the road to truth one experiences many roadblocks, detours, and
- not a few mirages. A common tactic encountered is that of switching
- the responsibility for proof, which usually results in trying to
- prove a universal negative -- and this may be effectively
- impossible. For example, B tells you humans can fly, to which he
- challenges, "Prove they can't!"
-
- If B offers propositions X and Y, and you accept only X, it remains
- to B to show that his extra belief is warranted. If both you and
- B believe that humans can walk, and B states, additionally, that
- humans can fly by flapping their arms, your natural response should
- be, "That's interesting, please show me the evidence for your
- assertion." You would be amused at least by B's insistence that you
- disprove it. Nor should B's testimonials that he had personally
- witnessed ordinary people flapping their arms and flying move you.
- You might point out that many physical laws would be violated, and
- some rather more convincing evidence must be offered. Personal
- testimony builds faith, but not a scientific case.
-
- Are we obliged to believe what B says until there is evidence to
- the contrary? B would only have to say you have not tested his
- supposition in the right way, or you have failed to use the right
- words, or some other excuse. No matter what is done, B has only to
- offer excuses to brush aside your counter-examples, and there is
- a never-ending supply of excuses. If ones position is that he will
- continue to believe in unicorns until it is conclusively proved
- there is no such thing he is eternally safe in his belief --
- irrational, but safe.
-
- Weigh the case of Jim Todd and his arithmetic dog, Sonny (see the
- July issue of "BASIS"). Had the skeptics accepted the burden of
- proof and tried to prove that Sonny could NOT perform mathematical
- miracles, Todd would have only to say that Sonny was tired (which,
- incidentally, is exactly what he DID say.) Todd made a claim that
- he could not support under controlled conditions. That does not
- prove that Sonny could not pass the CPA exam tomorrow. It just
- means that the skeptic is not required to move off his neutral
- position of skepticism.
-
- The demonstration of Sonny's mathematical abilities was such an
- utter failure, In fact, that one is forced to conclude that Sonny's
- talents lie entirely in Mr. Todd's imagination. But a public
- failure does nothing to move the believers from their position. In
- fact, just last week I heard a sharp "yap-yap" on KGO radio. Jim
- and Sonny were the featured guests on a talk show.
-
- Another hazard on the way to determining proof is the false
- dichotomy. This is another way of diverting attention from where
- the burden of proof properly rests. A true dichotomy exists when
- propositions X and Y are mutually exclusive and exhaustive, i.e.,
- they are completely independent and together they cover all
- possibilities. (Only Abbott and Costello may be excused when they
- reason that if today isn't the 4th of July it must be Christmas.)
-
- For example, the scientific creationists assail evolutionary theory
- as a method of establishing their beliefs. They claim on the one
- hand that evolution is not scientific because it is non-
- falsifiable; they then attempt to demonstrate that evolution is
- false. This is followed by the false dichotomy: they proclaim that
- since evolution is false, therefore creationism is established.
- This is accomplished without a shred of positive evidence being
- presented.
-
- The unfortunate side to this is that many scientists pick up the
- gauntlet and start defending evolution! Defense of position T when
- the opposition advances X by attacking T is a mistake. If position
- T is demonstrated to be false means only that T is false, not that
- X is established in the process. The establishment of X requires
- that arguments for X be firmly advanced. Evolutionists need only
- fold their arms and yawn when creationists attack evolution. No
- response is necessary in the absence of proof that creationism is
- a better theory.
-
- The most important fact about a belief based on reason is that it
- can and will be changed in the light of new evidence. Belief based
- on faith or personal experience, however, is not usually shaken by
- any amount of knock-down, staring contradiction. It would seem to
- be just the opposite, in fact. If you have made an idea part of
- your identity, giving it up is very difficult.
-
- If the Bohr model of the atom turns out to be incorrect, what is
- the consequence? Well, Bohr might be pinched about it, but only for
- awhile. Nuclear physicists would be so thrilled with the new
- discovery they might not leave their labs for months! The rest of
- us would be somewhat less excited, even if we had accepted the Bohr
- model and incorporated it into our view of the universe. The true
- spirit of a skeptic is to acquiesce to new theory when the evidence
- is sufficient, and unceremoniously place the rejected idea on the
- trash heap. Of course there is a certain amount of pain or
- embarrassment when one is wrong, but that's as far as it should go.
- To be wrong is not the end of the world. To lose ones sense of
- identity is.
-
- When the earth was displaced from the center of the universe, the
- only ones that suffered for it were the clergy and their catechists
- who had tied their system of faith to it. The intertangling of the
- geocentrism and theology had become so intricate that early
- Christian dogma was threatened to the very core with the Copernican
- revolution. The Bishops refused to look into Galileo's telescope
- because to do so would have been an act of heresy -- they knew what
- they MUST see -- whatever else one might suppose was there would
- be in error if it differed from what they accepted as revealed
- Truth. There was no need to place the eyepiece of the scope to
- their brow.
-
- Logic is a good place to start on a proposition. Most propositions
- will submit themselves to some form of logical analysis. If it
- turns out that the idea violates the basic canons of formal logic
- it may be unnecessary to proceed further.
-
-
-
- THAT 'OL BLACK MAGIC
- by Bill Bennetta
-
- David R. Godine, a Boston Publisher, issued in 1983 a facsimile
- edition of "The American Boy's Handy Book," which had been
- published in 1890 by Scribner's. It was a 430-page manual of
- crafts, games and other diversions, and its range was impressive:
- building boats or snow forts or cabins, staging plays or shadow-
- puppet performances, stuffing birds, training dogs, and
- constructing such devices as mole traps, water telescopes and the
- "paradoxical whirligig." Reading it is a genuine delight.
-
- In one of his expositions on showmanship, the author (D. C. Beard)
- told his young readers how to do fortune-telling. I could not help
- noticing that his concise introduction to that subject is just as
- timely now as it was on the day when he wrote it. It has lost
- nothing, and, I think, might profitably be presented verbatim to
- young people today. Here it is:
-
- "There exists in all countries a class of people who make their
- living out of the proceeds derived from tricks and deceptions
- practiced upon the ignorant, credulous, or superstitious portion
- of the population.
-
- "In the by-streets of almost any large city may be seen signs
- posted up on dingy-looking houses, which, if they were to be
- believed, would lead us to think that the gifted race that live in
- these dwellings can, by the aid of spirits, fairies, or by the
- signs in the heavens, give accurate information of all past or
- future events.
-
- "Some of these so-called mediums make such bungling attempts at
- magic and necromancy that it is a wonder that they are able to
- deceive anyone. Others, however, perform some really wonderful
- tricks.
-
- "With a little trouble and no expense any boy may fit himself out
- as a fortune-teller, and have an unlimited amount of fun with his
- friends, who may be mystified and puzzled by simple contrivances,
- which, if explained to them, would be immediately understood...."
-
- Beard then undertakes his instruction for building two such
- contrivances, which he calls the fortune-teller's box and the magic
- cask. I have not yet essayed to construct either, but I suspect
- that each can produce effects that would put any commercial
- astrologer or palm-reader to shame.
-
-
-
- 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.]
-
- Fresno skeptic MORRIS HUGGINS culled a bit from "Insight", a
- publication from Cal State Fresno journalism dept. about dowsing.
- Don Henvick's November article brought quite a response.
-
- Time was that water-witchers explained that the "underground
- springs" somehow have an effect on the implements -- usually sticks
- or rods of some sort -- they use. The "Insight" feature shows that
- things are changing. Seventy-three-year-old Carter Hoffman,
- president of the Central California Chapter of the American Society
- of Dowsers, reveals, "I use many different instruments, but mostly
- it's me. The instrument doesn't really mean a thing, really. It's
- the man or the woman. We're the instrument."
-
- The paraphernalia are as varied as the imagination: "car keys,
- brass rods, clothes hangers, willow branches and pendulums made of
- crystal, brass or wood." That, and a "positive attitude". You have
- to believe.
-
- "If you say it's not going to work, then it's not going to work",
- declares Hoffman. This same dowser asserts he is 97% accurate.
-
- If the dowser is the instrument, other statements made by Hoffman
- in the article are baffling: "Instead of using a traditional
- divining rod made of wood, Hoffman uses a nylon one. He said the
- wooden one is too dangerous. `It will just tear the hide right out
- of your hand [i.e., when the rod reacts to the presence of
- water].'" That seems to say very clearly that the rod is acting
- independently of the holder.
-
- The article was well-balanced, with a discussion of the science of
- finding water by studying geologic features.
-
- As with all matters of untested faith, disconfirming data only
- elicit excuses, never a turn-around. When a geologist, studying
- dowsing, questioned the dowser who had just witched a dry well to
- find how it happened, he replied, "I finally figured it out. I was
- wearing my boots that day and I insulated myself from the ground."
- Again, this appears that a separate force, independent of the
- individual, is acting from which he or she can be insulated. And
- then why did his device indicate the water was there in the first
- place?
-
- Surely, there is another excuse to cover that.
-
-
- The University of Hawaii campus center was packed to the walls to
- hear Michael and Aurora El-Legion, "International Directors of the
- Extra-Terrestrial Communications Network."
-
- The El-Legions gave a film and slide presentation in which their
- UFO pictures "...had been authenticated by top NASA equipment."
-
- Aurora had an experience with the ETs "where they actually
- teleported her and her car through aa time-space warp during 5 p.m.
- rush-hour traffic." She says that many of the space folk are acting
- as out "Guardian Angels".
-
- Michael gave his "Akashic Life Readings, which are designed to
- attune a person more closely to who they are and what their mission
- is for incarnation on earth at this time". He accomplishes these
- readings by channeling information from the "Ascended Master level,
- beings on the Christed-Buddhic plane who are also members of the
- Intergalactic Confederation".
-
- These people are very much concerned about our earth. What
- marvelous fortune we have by living in an era when the great
- channelers are in tune with beings who can explain why Aunt Jessie
- broods about her lost cat.
-
- Well, about two weeks after the Hawaii stint, the El-Legions were
- indicted in a phone credit-card scam that cost U.S. Sprint
- $500,000. The federal grand jury charges specified that the pair
- sold about 50 unauthorized credit cards for a fee ranging from
- about $65 to $125 per month. That, coupled with their seance fees
- (all tax free, of course) is a tidy fund.
-
- Of course their alleged credit-card fraud is no indication that
- their channeling stuff is anything but squeaky clean. After all,
- that top NASA equipment checked it out.
-
-
- The "Chron." thought the following deserved a headline: "An Oakland
- woman who drove to Reno because she was feeling lucky hit a $1
- million slot machine jackpot".
-
- The reader was to go to page 3 for the story.
-
- MS. WERBY, who sent the clip to us, appropriately notes, "How many
- people drive to Reno because they're sure they are going to crap
- out that day?"
-
-
-
- THE REAL MCCOY
-
- Head of the Minnesota Skeptics, Robert McCoy has moved the press
- to look at some of his efforts in a laudatory article citing the
- work of CSICOP and the Minnesota group.
-
- McCoy is something of a rascal himself. He delights in the unusual,
- but approaches it with careful skepticism, making light of the
- stream of baloney that parades for reality. He was successful in
- persuading a Morristown man to confess to a 1979 UFO hoax that
- really got out of hand.
-
- "On a September night that year, David Olson, an admitted practical
- joker, went into cousin Curtis Olson's farm field and commenced to
- mess it up."
-
- "The prankster tied gunnysacks over his shoes to avoid leaving
- footprints. He trampled cornstalks and singed the perimeter with
- a butane torch to simulate an alien spaceship landing."
-
- "The prank was perfect. Too perfect. Within days, out-of-state UFO
- investigators and the media converged on the field like so many
- locusts, and Olson, fearing family reaction and maybe even arrest,
- kept the joke to himself."
-
- "It was only when he saw McCoy's letter to the editor in a
- Minneapolis newspaper, in which the hoaxbuster debunked the
- newspaper's publishing of a UFO photograph, that he contacted McCoy
- and decided to tell it all."
-
- "`He never told until nine years later, but even after he
- confessed, some people didn't believe it', McCoy says."
-
- "Olson says his cousin still maintains that something unexplainable
- happened that night in his cornfield. Olson, a 44-year-old chemist,
- says he can understand his cousin's disbelief, if not his logic."
-
- "`There may be intelligent life out there, but I don't think it's
- going to manifest itself in somebody's cornfield', says Olson, who
- believes people's growing capacity for gullibility has been
- misguidedly linked to rapid advances in high technology."
-
- "`People see that we've put a man on the moon, they see all these
- other high-tech things being done, so they've come to believe that
- ANYTHING can happen.'"
-
- McCoy has appeared on the David Letterman Show displaying his
- "collection of vintage quackery devices."
-
-
-
- "If the conclusion determines the reasoning, the reasoning is
- sham." -- Peirce
-
-
-
- NOVEMBER MEETING
- by Norman Sperling
-
- The task of science is to figure out how nature works. As suspected
- since ancient times, nature appears to work in patterns -- most
- notably, in the characteristics that can be expressed
- mathematically -- frequently expressed as paradigms. Symmetries and
- patterns illustrated in aspects of nature also point to
- generalizations about "how nature works".
-
- The development of science involves interplay between observing
- (acquiring data) and theorizing (proposing candidate paradigms to
- fit existing data and predict further data). New data acquired,
- whether or not intended for the current problem, may point the way
- to revise or extend the current candidate paradigm.
-
- A paradigm may be proposed even when there is no known cause for
- it (Kepler's Laws); or an insight into the reasons things work a
- certain way may suggest greatly extended paradigms (plate
- tectonics). Theoreticians who perceive the grandest paradigms from
- the earliest data make the most celebrated leaps (Darwin's
- evolution, Newton's mechanics and Einstein's relativity). When the
- grand paradigm develops collectively and gradually (as with quantum
- mechanics) rather than quickly by an individual, science advances
- just as much, but there is less popular attention.
-
- To be acceptable, a candidate paradigm must fit current data. (The
- unfortunate expression "scientists believe that..." is more
- appropriately "current evidence indicates that..."). But science
- has so far found out only a little about nature's workings,
- compared to the vast fields that remain unexplored. Claude Gregory,
- who edited the French science series "Encyclopedia Universalis",
- concluded "that we don't know anything" yet about the true workings
- of nature. Greater understanding of biochemistry would result, for
- example, in eliminating screening tests and in designing, by
- computer, chemicals that react predictably.
-
- On the leading edges lie topics where a few outlying data points
- can barely be perceived, and candidate paradigms suggested to
- relate to them may be held very tentatively indeed. An analogy
- might be to the way fog obscures things.
-
- From time to time, an elegant theory (a particularly simple and
- powerful formulation) is demolished by discovery of an "ugly fact".
- This happened with an exciting candidate paradigm that tied
- together several data on the frontier: Lockyer's "meteoritic
- hypothesis" of solar energy and spiral nebulae, circa 1890.
- Individuals who regard a theory as so compelling that they
- "believed" it may react by contesting the new data (successfully
- in the polywater scandal), or by adjusting the theory to
- accommodate the new data (Hoyle's steady-state cosmologies), or -
- - if human attitudes overcome scientific discipline -- by
- psychologically rejecting anything contrary to their adopted
- paradigm (phlogiston). Thus advocates may cling to a paradigm after
- mainstream science passes it by (Arp's non-cosmological quasars).
- Failed candidate paradigms are, fortunately, not utterly forgotten.
- Many make fascinating case studies, many bear lessons for the
- present and the future, and a few turn out to be valid for cases
- not known at the time they were proposed (Hadley vortex, moon
- volcanoes).
-
- Can we regard acceptance of pseudoscience -- astrology,
- creationism, UFOs, faith healing, Velikovsky, parapsychology -- as
- adoption of candidate paradigms, accompanied by ignorance or denial
- of contrary evidence? Is the distinction between science and
- pseudoscience a matter of the criteria of evidence?
-
- [Norman Sperling teaches astronomy and space science at Cal State
- U. Hayward, lectures at Morrison Planetarium in San Francisco, and
- is completing his MA in History of Science at UC Berkeley. The
- latest of his 75 published articles, "Of Asteroids and Quasars",
- appears in the fall issue of "Pacific Discovery". He has been a
- planetarium director and an editor of "Sky and Telescope" magazine.
- -- Ed.]
-
-
-
- WHY THE IRRATIONAL?
-
- In an attempt to bring understanding to the question of why so many
- of us cling to such clearly irrational nonsense, Mankato State
- University psychology professor Mary Jo Meadow, an authority on the
- psychology of religion, says belief in the bizarre and
- unexplainable is closely tied to religious belief systems.
-
- "These things (UFOs, psychics, shamanism, astral projection, etc.)
- function as religious beliefs in that they're explaining the
- unexplainable in the cosmos", Meadow says. "To take on a belief can
- give you a lot of security and satisfaction."
-
- The problem is that when the belief is dispelled, the truth makes
- a poor substitute. "Once a person invests in a belief, it becomes
- much harder to give it up, and he or she starts distorting reality
- in order to hold on to the beliefs."
-
- Sobering thoughts for the dangers of walking into the unknown or
- ill-understood without a skeptical shield.
-
-
-
- UFO CONTACTS
-
- Dr. James Harder, professor of Engineering at UC Berkeley, will be
- the featured speaker at the January BAS meeting.
-
- Dr. Harder is a long-time advocate of the extra-terrestrial
- explanation for UFOs. Specifically, the "nuts-and-bolts" variety
- of UFOs as opposed to "interdimensional" hypotheses advanced by
- some enthusiasts to explain why some UFOs are witnessed by human
- observers but not traced on radar screens when the sightings occur
- in areas covered by radar detection systems.
-
- Harder is expected to discuss what he calls "the overwhelming
- evidence for an alien presence". In addition, Dr. Harder has long
- been an outspoken protagonist of various conspiracy theories. On
- a local TV program in which he appeared with Robert Sheaffer,
- Harder intimated that Sheaffer was a party to the government cover-
- up, probably receiving money to "keep quiet".
-
- This should be a fascinating evening to spend with a knowledgeable
- and reputable UFOlogist. Get your best questions ready and be
- prepared for a lively discussion!
-
-
-
- "Faith, fanatic faith, once wedded fast to some dear falsehood,
- hugs it to the last." -- Sir Thomas Moore
-
-
- -----
-
- 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 January, 1988 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) 1988 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-
-