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- ---------------------------------------------------------
- January 1991 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 10, No. 1
- Editor: Yves Barbero
-
-
-
- DENTON'S STRANGE MISTAKE
- by Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D.
-
- The book "Evolution: A Theory in Crisis", by Michael Denton (Adler
- and Adler, eds., Bethesda, MD 1985, 368 pages) is much quoted by
- creationists, and there is even a creationist book, "Of Pandas and
- People", by P. Davis and D. H. Kenyon that uses its content freely.
- Denton writes glibly, and quotes liberally, out of context, from
- the scientific literature on molecular evolution.
-
- Cytochrome c is a small protein that is found in many organisms:
- molds, yeasts, green plants, insects, vertebrates and even some
- bacteria. Its function is to transport electrons during the use of
- oxygen in respiration of cells. It contains about 100 amino acids,
- so it is easy to analyze. It has long been an evolutionary
- showpiece because it changes so slowly and is found in so many
- species, that an evolutionary phylogenetic tree can be constructed
- that extends from the bacterium Rhodospirillum rubrum to mammals.
- This is shown in Fig. 1, from Dayhoff's "Atlas of Protein Sequence
- and Structure", vol. 5 (1972) and elsewhere.
-
- [Note for the electronic edition: Obviously, the illustrations have
- had to be omitted.]
-
- Denton addresses himself (p. 279) to cytochrome c with the aid of
- a matrix table lifted from Dayhoff's atlas [Fig 2]. From this, he
- constructs (p. 281) a diagram showing descent from bacterial
- cytochrome (Fig. 3).
-
- He then discourses as follows:
-
- It means that no eucaryotic cytochrome is intermediate
- between bacterial cytochrome and other eucaryotic
- cytochromes. As far as the bacterium is concerned, all
- eucaryotes are equally distant. All the eucaryotic
- cytochromes are as a class isolated and unique. No
- intermediate type of cytochrome exists to bridge the
- discontinuity which divides the living kingdom into these
- two fundamental types. The bacterial kingdom has no
- neighbour [sic] in any of the fantastically diverse
- eucaryotic types. The "missing links" are well and truly
- missing.
-
- Unfortunately for Denton, this is all wrong. Dayhoff's
- data are for existing species. No cytochrome c sequences
- are available for extinct organisms. Denton confuses the
- existing Rhodospirillum rubrum with an ancestor that
- lived about two billion years ago. This is explained in
- Fig. 2-8 of Dayhoff's atlas (Fig. 1).
-
- The existing species have not descended independently and directly
- from a single ancestor, as shown in Denton's diagram [Fig. 3]. They
- have come from a series of ancestors through a branching process.
- The molecular evolutionary clock says that amino acid replacements
- take place at a fairly uniform rate for a given protein, which is
- about one replacement per 40 million years for cytochromes c so
- that the distances are all about the same, average 66; from the
- common ancestor to Rhodospirillum and the other organisms.
-
- Denton repeats the same mistake on pp. 282, 284 (with globins), p.
- 285 with cytochrome c which he calls cyclostome c (a cyclostome is
- a lamprey), p. 286 with globins and p. 294 (where his distances are
- erroneous). On p. 296, he says that the molecular clock hypothesis
- can account for "the observed equal divergence of, say, all
- vertebrate cytochromes from those of insects" but "no one has been
- able to explain in precise terms exactly how such a time constant
- process could work. Rather than being a true explanation, the
- hypothesis of the molecular clock is really a tautology..."
-
- He is wrong about this, too. His statement that the molecular
- evolutionary clock is a "tautology" rather than a true explanation,
- is incorrect. Many scientific articles have been written to supply
- experimental information for the clock. An entire issue of "J. Mol.
- Evol.", 164 pages, 14 articles was published on the subject of the
- clock, vol. 26, November 1987.
-
- The clock depends on two observations. First, DNA replicates ALMOST
- perfectly, but the few imperfections in its replication are a major
- driving force in evolution. These imperfections become point
- mutations, which are substitutions of one base or another, such as
- T by C. These substitutions occur essentially at random, and
- accumulate in DNA at a rate of about two to five per billion
- nucleotide sites per year. The effect of these substitutions on the
- genetic code in genes is to bombard proteins with amino acid
- changes. This takes place at a steady rate.
-
- Many replacements are lethal, and so do not persist. Others are
- neutral or near neutral so that the protein can continue
- functioning. Because the changes are randomly scattered along DNA
- molecules, they occur at different sites in different species. As
- soon as divergence from a common ancestor starts, this
- differentiation between the two species is initiated. The
- consequence is the molecular evolutionary clock, which is a real
- and measurable process of evolution. The rate of the clock is
- fairly constant, for a given protein, especially when measured over
- long time intervals.
-
- Denton's mistake is that he does not understand that his table, but
- NOT his diagram, is an excellent illustration of the branching
- process in evolution. Instead of reproducing Dayhoff's diagram, he
- has made up a completely erroneous one of his own.
-
- [THOMAS H. JUKES is professor of Biophysics at UC BERKELEY and has
- done extensive research in molecular evolution. He is a long time
- advisor to BAY AREA SKEPTICS.]
-
-
-
- EXCITING *NEW* PSYCHIC PREDICTIONS! See Page 9
- [Note for the electronic edition: The issue ended on page 8.]
-
-
-
- PORTRAIT OF AN INTELLECTUAL ABUSER
- by Yves Barbero
-
- Some people are gracious enough to only abuse alcohol or drugs.
- Their only victims are themselves, their families and those they
- mug to obtain the funds necessary to perpetuate their habits.
-
- On the other hand, there is a more sinister class of people who
- build little empires (some, not so little as in the case of
- Scientology or some of the Creationist outfits) based on an odd
- notion of the universe. Most of these people are dishonest and do
- it only for the power and money their hoaxes bring in. The smarter
- of these keep straight with the IRS and avoid obvious bouts with
- the law. These thieves are largely home free. The wide skirts of
- the First Amendment protect them. After all, no sane person wants
- to re-tailor the Constitution just to catch a confidence schemer.
- The occasional skeptical attack is rarely a bother. The skeptic
- must rely on truth and long-winded explanations. Few listen. The
- con-man can lie and over-simplify through his teeth.
-
- There is another group which is much harder to quantify. They are
- sincere, occasionally have genuine credentials in science and
- seemingly enjoy no financial benefit from their activities. These
- intellectual abusers are, by and large, loners, having only
- persistence and mailing lists to sustain them. The vast majority
- make only minor waves. As with the substance abuser, it's difficult
- to understand why anyone would take such a course. While their
- psychology is hard to comprehend, their activities can be
- described.
-
- The ones who really make an impact usually have some personal
- talent (perhaps they are great debaters or have excellent TV
- presence) and an advantage over the rational opposition (time on
- their hands due to personal wealth or an income from retirement)
- whereas the voice of reason is engaged in research or making a
- living.
-
- They take on an issue which most people think is resolved. It is
- often obscure and seemingly of minor importance. Suddenly, an
- individual intellectual abuser is on every talk show. He's pulled
- away from the pack. Organizations promoting science are flooded
- with his literature. At some point, he finds some ally in politics
- and scientists find themselves in front of a board of supervisors
- or a town council trying to recall the arguments they used three to
- four decades before when the issue was first resolved.
-
- The scientists have their attention divided. They are worried that
- an established public policy designed, for instance, to protect
- children from disease will be undermined. They must suddenly
- re-configure their arguments so a complex issue will be understood
- by a population which is both scientifically under-educated and
- constantly reminded of some very real failures of science. This
- population doesn't read. Everything must fit in the small space
- between a commercial for a foreign car and one for fake Persian
- rugs.
-
- The loner has found an opening. Armed with a righteous cause, as he
- sees it, he has dug out every minority report from way back then.
- He is relaxed. They are nervous. His political ally has been
- thoroughly indoctrinated. He's been fighting the good fight since
- the beginning. He knows everything about it. He's alert to every
- quarrel among the assembled scholars and carefully exploits them.
-
- All his life, they've ignored his warnings and treated him with
- contempt and even laughed at him. Him, a healer and lover of
- humanity. His reasoned arguments had been, years before, shattered
- by Doctor So-and-So of Ivy League University. But that was then.
- People worshipped science then. It had bought an end to a war. It
- promised a bright future. Since then, scientists have been exposed
- as faking research. There have been melt-downs and everyone had
- seen "Dr. Strangelove." The Sputniks have been forgotten. The Salk
- vaccine sits quietly on the shelf next to the aspirin.
-
- Like everyone in the last four centuries who's had a unique
- scientific claim laughed at by the establishment, the intellectual
- abuser goes directly to the political power base to find
- vindication. He has a complete list of the few oddballs who where
- right in defying the scientific establishment and is happy to make
- it generally available. There is no mention of the fact that this
- establishment has cleaned up the procedures and opened up the
- debate so real developments are less likely to be ignored.
-
- In going to the power base, he's learned to use the media and even
- to trick normally upright public policy scientific groups into
- amplifying his claims. He's no longer the forgotten voice in the
- wilderness. He's arrived. There's no stopping him so long as the
- media needs something to feed on or the obscure politician finds
- his coat tails handy. His only real danger is of a rival using the
- same technique who's better at it than he is. But its a small
- danger. There are plenty of talk shows and even more office
- holders.
-
- He'll often ally himself to the willing and unwilling. He'll call
- himself a skeptic challenging the overfed establishment unwilling
- to look at new evidence. Maybe, he'll become a religious individual
- defying godless scientists or he'll become a humble citizen who's
- accidently stumbled onto the truth while checking out the academic
- bureaucrats. He knows how to get the goat of the true believers who
- hang around skeptics groups. These individuals, he recognizes, are
- ready to step into the breach to mindlessly defend sacred science.
- He's learned which buttons to press to get himself attacked by them
- so as to bring his cause public sympathy.
-
- Challenged, he becomes enraged, ready to sue at the drop of a hat
- while crying to the media that the giants of the establishment are
- unfairly picking on him. Whenever attacked, it's always personal,
- not at all the issue. It's difficult for him to lose since the
- scientist cannot call himself a skeptic without explaining what it
- really means.
-
- If the scientist is an atheist, he prefers to keep it to himself.
- After all, his research grants come from the public treasury. If he
- has religion, he is careful to compartmentalize his life least his
- beliefs interfere with his research. Nor can the scientist adjust
- his arguments to suit the audience. And all his statements are
- trimmed by a series of procedures developed to make language truly
- well defined so other scientists understand him with precision.
- Precise language is not necessarily colorful or powerful. On top of
- all this, the scientist does not know how to handle personal
- attacks, either aimed at him or attributed to the scientist by the
- intellectual abuser.
-
- The intellectual abuser is under no restraints. There is no peer
- review. Illogical connections are valid if they make for powerful
- public pronouncements. He doesn't have to separate his personal
- beliefs from his alleged science. His claims can be absurd. He can
- treat intellectual attacks as personal attacks. His only possible
- problem is that as the novelty wears off, his pronouncements have
- to become stronger to keep in the limelight.
-
- The scientist, meanwhile, has made a decision (perhaps through a
- professional association) to ignore the intellectual abuser,
- figuring that he can't win in such a climate and that the fringe
- element, in one form or another, is here to stay. While this saves
- him valuable time and irritation, it contributes nothing to public
- education on scientific issues.
-
- The real fight, the scientist reasons, is not the occasional loose
- screw but with well-organized groups which pose a threat to
- secondary education by insisting that biology textbooks print
- patent falsehoods. Grudgingly, he'll sign a petition placed in
- front of him by his colleague from the history department to
- prevent a revision of an historical event by a fascist academic.
- But that's as far as he'll step out of his field of interest.
-
- The intellectual abuser wants attention. He's passionate, genuinely
- believes what he says and truly has no financial interest in what
- he does. In fact, it often costs him deep in the purse. He rarely
- tries to create an organization beyond the infrastructure for the
- newsletter he puts out. As an amateur, he intuitively knows how to
- manipulate social communications. He may be well-trained in some
- scientific discipline (and may even hold important prizes in his
- own field) but that is not usually the discipline he challenges.
- And the scientists are correct about one thing. He is here to stay.
-
- The intellectual abuser, like the drug addict, initially gets
- pleasure and is then trapped in the lifestyle. That he is wrong is
- inconsequential. Without checks and balances, the social process
- becomes primary.
-
-
-
- KLASS TO SPEAK
-
- PHILIP J. KLASS will speak before a meeting of the Eastbay
- Astronomical Society at 8 p.m., Friday, January 4, 1991 at the
- Chabot Observatory, 4917 Mountain Boulevard, Oakland.
-
- Klass' topic will be "UFOs: Fact or Fantasy". Weather permitting,
- free observing through the telescopes follow this program. To
- inquire about dinner with the speaker at a local restaurant the
- same evening, call BETTY NEALL at 415-533-2394 by Thursday morning,
- January 3rd.
-
- Klass is well known to skeptics, having written four books on the
- subject of UFOs. A retired senior avionics editor of "Aviation Week
- and Space Technology" magazine, Klass' most recent book is "UFO
- Abductions: A Dangerous Game". He is a founding fellow of Committee
- for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal
- (CSICOP), a member of its Executive Council and chairs its UFO
- Subcommittee.
-
- This and all EAS meetings are free and open to the public.
-
- To reach Chabot Observatory, take I-580 to the Seminary Avenue
- exit, and follow the little blue signs to the observatory.
-
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- | THE PSYCHIC ADVISOR |
- | by Jean Lorraine |
- | |
- | My girlfriend thinks it's dishonest for me to show a |
- | picture of a thin woman in a turban with eyeballs upwards |
- | and hands hovering over a crystal ball in my newspaper |
- | column, since I'm really a fat, balding man with a beard, |
- | and a cigar hanging from my mouth. WHAT SHOULD I DO? |
- | -- Lost in the Stars |
- | |
- | Dear Lost in the Stars, |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | |
- | ...and if that doesn't change her mind, read my new |
- | book, "The Psychic's Image: It's All in the Mind" for |
- | more tips. |
- -------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- PALM READING
-
- A PSEUDO-SCIENCE/ART FORM FOR AMUSEMENT
- by Dennis R. Burke
-
- About eleven years ago I was at a party in Berkeley and was asked,
- "... and what do you do?" Being evasive, I answered that I read
- fingerprints for a living. This delighted the people with whom I
- was talking and they asked me if I could read their palms? To their
- disappointment I had to admit that the only palms I read where
- those of criminals. (I'm a police officer whose expertise is in
- Latent Print Analysis.)
-
- The subject of palm reading had sparked my curiosity and I decided
- to do some self study on the subject. As a skeptic, I believe that
- palm reading is a fake science and has no basis for predicting
- future events or exposing personality traits. At best, it is an art
- form for amusement; and at worse, a sham to perpetuate fraud.
-
- AN EXPERIMENT: Using willing subjects, I took ink impressions of
- their palms and finger prints, and placed them on a "chart" (see
- photograph). I then applied a set of twelve stock statements to
- "characteristics" that I found in the prints. I had the subject
- rate them and give an overall evaluation of how well the statements
- evaluated them. The first two readings produced a score of 85 and
- 95 percent correct, and I received additional requests to do charts
- for their friends. This caused me to develop additional statements
- because I couldn't use the same chart for the friend. They would
- discover that the statements were the same.
-
- The new set of statements was developed using ideas from HARRY
- BROWN's book, "How I found Freedom in an Unfree World". The
- statements were less successful but had a 75 percent or better
- rating. I knew that some of the statements were not general enough
- and identified them before giving the chart to the subject. When
- the subject stated that some of the statements did not fit, I would
- identify the statement as probably being the pre-identified
- statement and replace it with the stock statement: "You pride
- yourself on being an independent thinker and do not accept other's
- opinions about satisfactory proof." This would validate the
- "reading" and the subject was left with an impression that his or
- her palm held the key to his or her personality.
-
- After having great success as a palm reader, I began to experience
- what RAY HYMAN described in his article for "The Skeptical
- Inquirer", 1977, "Cold Reading: How to Convince Strangers that You
- Know All About Them." Hyman was convinced, for a time, that he had
- a genuine power to read palms, except that he one day said the
- opposite of what he thought to test his powers. To his surprise,
- the subjects believed and validated the mis-information as being
- true. Somehow, he contended, people find more meaning in any
- situation then is actually there. I also found this to be true and
- saw people find more meaning in the statements then is actually
- there. The human mind has a tendency to make sense out of nonsense.
- This can be seen in the way we dream. We take bits and pieces of
- information and put it together to make a story.
-
- I found that people want to hear things about themselves that they
- would like to be true, or perceived to be true. Most palm readers
- use the fishing approach: They get the subject to tell a little
- about themselves, what they want, and then feed it back to them. A
- psychologist in a family counseling session uses similar techniques
- to get his clients focused on their problems.
-
- M. LAMAR KEENE, who spent thirteen years as a spiritualist medium,
- wrote from first hand knowledge that he believed that virtually all
- spirit readings, seances and medium messages from the dead are
- conscious deceptions by the nedium.
-
- Skepticism is probably as unfashionable today as in any other age.
- The "New Age" exploration of claims that we have a vast, untapped
- powers; or that unseen forces are about to save us from ourselves;
- or that there is an unacknowledged pattern and harmony to the
- Universe; has become for some, a new religion.
-
- If you think you have the power, you may be ready to take up palm
- reading. If so, always give the impression that you know more then
- you are saying, and flatter your subject every chance you get. Body
- language will give you a good clue as to the acceptance or denial
- of what is being presented. Attitude, posture, mannerisms, and tone
- of voice will help you explore the subject, or allow you to decide
- whether to go in another direction. According to one book, the
- purpose of hand reading is for, "people who want to know success,
- money, love, and sex." They [palm readers] refer to themselves as
- disciples of an ancient science and are appealing to basic human
- desires.
-
- WHAT I LEARNED: First, I had fun being a palm reader. People like
- to hear positive things about themselves and this process opened a
- door for self-examination for both the subject and myself. As far
- as it being an ancient science, it is not. It is merely a mirror
- for the mind to see what it wants to see. As an example, I was
- viewing photographs of the planet Venus and noted that the pattern
- formed on the surface was similar to the creases in the worn part
- of the palm, near the area below the thumb. By chance, the pattern
- on the palm chart for this area was labeled -- Venus. Of course
- this was a coincidence and lends no scientific basis for the art of
- palm reading. The human mind unconsciously conspires to produce a
- biased response to this type of coincidence, and tries to make it
- into something that it is not.
-
- [DENNIS R. BURKE is a sergeant with the BERKELEY POLICE DEPARTMENT
- and is a twenty-five year veteran. He holds a degree in Business
- Administration from the State University at Hayward and a Master's
- Degree in Public Administration from John F. Kennedy University.]
-
-
-
- ANOTHER SHAMELESS PLUG
-
- William N. Eschmeyer's "Catalog of the Genera of Recent Fishes",
- ISBN 0-940228-23-8, all 697 pages, has been released after years of
- preparation by our own California Academy of Sciences.
-
- This masterpiece of taxonomy can be gotten for $55.00 plus tax by
- writing:
-
- Scientific Publications
- California Academy of Sciences
- Golden Gate Park
- San Francisco, CA 94118
- Telephone: 415-750-7047
- Fax: 415-750-7346
-
- Why the plug? Your editor had an extremely minuscule role in
- outputting the final drafts using the same computer program that
- puts out this newsletter. So there...
-
-
-
- A HORSE'S HIND QUARTER IN THE TILTED WASTELAND
- by Earl Hautala
-
- In the Vast Tilted Wasteland of TV talk shows, Rick Stack, author
- of "Out-of-Body Adventures" (Contemporary Books, Chicago, Ill.,
- 1988) appeared on People Are Talking, KPIX-TV San Francisco, on
- election day.
-
- Stack offers to teach others how to have out-of-body experiences,
- including the program's groin grabber, astral sex. Appearing with
- him were two other voyagers who journey through not only space, but
- time, and Loyd Auerbach, a Bay Area parapsychologist.
-
- An audience composed mostly of believers and seekers, supplied
- questions designed to fan the flames of imagination. That's
- entertainment! A lone voice for skepticism came from Bob Steiner,
- founder of the Bay Area Skeptics. Steiner may not have gotten equal
- time, but his analysis of the subject more than made up for the
- difference. Steiner quoted from the preface to Stack's book, "This
- book is designed to take the study and practice of out-of-body
- experiences out of the realm of research laboratories and esoteric
- mysticism and into the living rooms and bedrooms of the world where
- they belong."
-
- With no rebuttal from the author, it would appear that Mr. Stack
- makes no scientific claims. He sells books! All you have to do is
- believe, right? WRONG! Steiner quoted from Stack's book (page 31).
- "Nothing accidental ever happens .... If you have ever been robbed
- or otherwise `victimized,' it is your own fears, feelings of
- worthlessness, or negative imaginings that have brought these
- unpleasant experiences into your life."
-
- Steiner pointed out that Rick Stack was "Just one more in a long
- list of misguided philosophers who blame the rape victim for the
- rape." Steiner's logic failed to stir the faithful. Questions about
- out-of-body experiences continued as if no one had said anything
- contrary to the author's words. Even the promised titillation
- passed without comment when Mr. Stack allowed that "astral orgasm"
- was five to ten times better than the ordinary kind. There you have
- it, straight from some part of the horse. This slice of life drama
- suggests additional food for thought.
-
- This audience of adults represented some portion of the gullible
- public. They would rather spend their time trying to escape
- astrally, than attempt to sort out their problems rationally. If we
- have some problems in this society, we need to bear in mind that
- most adults have the right to vote. Part of our collective future
- will be determined by people who have no interest in hearing, let
- alone examining, evidence of any kind.
-
-
-
- TALBOT NAMED TO BOARD
-
- Kate Talbot, a long-time supporter of BAY AREA SKEPTICS, has been
- named to the board of directors. She first involved herself by
- folding, stapling, and mailing this newsletter, but was soon
- promoted to meeting coordinator, and will continue in that
- position.
-
- She replaces astronomer John Lattanzio, PhD, who is returning to
- Australia to teach mathematics at the university level.
-
- Bob Steiner, a founder of BAY AREA SKEPTICS, said, "We appreciate
- Dr. Lattanzio's interest in and contributions to the group, and
- wish Kate much luck and success. We all know she'll do a fine job."
-
-
-
- THE SKEPTIC'S ELECTRONIC BULLETIN BOARD
- => 2400 Baud, 415-648-8944
- => 24 hours, 7 days a week
- => Rick Moen, Sysop
-
-
-
- ANTI-FLUORIDATION -- A LITMUS TEST FOR SKEPTICS
- by Bob Steiner
-
- JOHN R. LEE, MD, will address the BAY AREA SKEPTICS meeting this
- month on the topic "The Role of Skepticism in Science and in
- Understanding the Fluoride Problem." Dr. Lee's position is that
- fluoridation of our water supply does not help our teeth, and is
- otherwise dangerous to our health.
-
- Please see flier describing the talk, as well as information about
- date, time, and location elsewhere in this issue of "BASIS".
-
- I have taken more heat on this speaker and topic than on any
- speaker and topic in the nine year history of BAY AREA SKEPTICS.
-
- At the suggestion of many people, and with the able assistance of
- EARL HAUTALA, we attempted to locate a knowledgeable
- pro-fluoridation health professional to appear on the platform with
- Dr. Lee. Our quest included contacting The Centers for Disease
- Control, the American Dental Association, and the University of
- California at San Francisco Dental School. These sources, as well
- as others, would not or could not field someone to appear with Dr.
- Lee to oppose his views.
-
- Many of the people contacted strongly urged that we not allow Dr.
- Lee to address our group at all. We replied that BAY AREA SKEPTICS
- provides an open forum for many points of view on many topics.
-
- Some skeptics felt it was critical that we have an opposing speaker
- on the platform with Dr. Lee. When I explained that we could not
- obtain one, some of these people, otherwise intelligent and
- open-minded skeptics, implored me not to allow Dr. Lee to address
- our organization.
-
- Upon my reply that Dr. Lee was indeed going to address BAS, one
- person urged that we set ground rules for him. I inquired, "What
- kind of ground rules?" The answer was that we must restrict Dr.
- Lee's talk to the scientific aspects of the fluoridation question;
- we must not allow him to address the personalities involved in
- getting fluoride into our water, and he must not address the
- political aspects of this subject.
-
- I replied that, in the nine-year history of BAS, we have NEVER set
- ground rules for our speakers. I assured this person that, if Dr.
- Lee were to enter the audience for the purpose of punching someone
- in the nose, I would most assuredly step in. Short of that, there
- will be no ground rules.
-
- Are you a skeptic? Do you have an open mind? Do you believe that
- a speaker who opposes fluoridation of the public water supply must
- be censored? Do you believe that it is the proper function of BAY
- AREA SKEPTICS to protect the public from hearing ideas that differ
- from the prevailing bureaucratic opinion in this country? Are you
- REALLY a skeptic?
- [BOB STEINER is a founder of BAY AREA SKEPTICS and knows how to
- take and dish out the heat.]
-
-
-
- CREATIONISTS TO HOLD CONFERENCE
-
- Billed as a Christian Conference, "Back to Genesis", the Redwood
- Chapel Community Church will host the heavy hitters of Scientific
- Creationism, DUANE GISH, KEN HERN and JOHN D. MORRIS in Castro
- Valley January 11th and 12th.
-
- The church is located at 19300 Redwood Road, Castro Valley, CA
- 94546 and the registration fee is $20.
-
- => FRIDAY'S session will be between 7-9:15 p.m.
- => SATURDAY'S session will be between 9-11:45 a.m. and 1:30-5:30
- p.m.
-
-
-
- STANFORD COURSE IN MEDICAL FADS
-
- Wallace Sampson, M.D., a founder and long-time advisor to BAY AREA
- SKEPTICS, has announced the first four lectures of the annual
- course in medical fads.
-
- => Jan. 8: Analysis of Anomalous Claims -- Wallace Sampson, M.D.
- => Jan. 15: Visual Foolery and Magic -- Richard Goode, M.D. (and
- magician)
- => Jan. 22: The Physics of Firewalking and other Miracles --
- Bernard Leikind, Ph.D.
- => Jan. 29: Perseverance of Beliefs -- Lee Ross, M.D.
-
- For information regarding the exact location and possible course
- changes, call Dr. Sampson at 415-961-5548, or The Skeptic's Board
- BBS at 415-648-8944. Future classes will be announced in these
- pages.
-
-
-
- A VOICE IN THE WILDERNESS?
-
- Is it an example of the "Lone Crusader" taking on an unwilling or
- unwieldy scientific establishment? Is it a crackpot theory making
- a comeback after decades of sleeping quietly as a footnote to the
- history of public health?
-
- A sigh of exasperation has escaped the lips of the scientific
- community as JOHN R. LEE, M.D. single-handedly (nearly) takes up
- the cause of anti-fluoridation. Armed with reams of studies and
- minority reports, he will address the BAS January meeting,
- insisting that the debate, which everyone else thought long closed,
- be reopened!
-
- Does fluoridation cause cancer? The mainstream scientific community
- doesn't think so, but Dr. Lee does.
-
- Come and hear JOHN R. LEE speak on his challenge to the "scientific
- establishment." Dr. Lee had a family practice in Mill Valley for
- thirty years and chaired the Marin Medical Society Committee on
- Environmental Health in 1972 which was charged with reviewing the
- pros and cons of fluoridation.
-
-
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
-
- Chair: Larry Loebig
- Vice Chair: Yves Barbero
- Secretary: Rick Moen
- Treasurer: Kent Harker
- Shawn Carlson
- Andrew Fraknoi
- Mark Hodes
- Lawrence Jerome
- Eugenie Scott
- Norman Sperling
- Kate Talbot
-
-
-
- "BASIS" STAFF:
-
- Yves Barbero, editor; Sharon Crawford, assoc. editor;
- Wilma Russell, distribution; Rick Moen, circulation
- Kate Talbot, meeting coordinator; John Taube, media watch
-
-
-
- BAS ADVISORS
-
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
- Dean Edell, M.D., ABC Medical Reporter
- Donald Goldsmith, Ph.D., Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Diane Moser, Science writer
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D.,U. C. Berkeley
- Bernard Oliver, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Technical Writer, UFO expert
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Lecturer, Writer
- Ray Spangenburg, Science writer
- Jill C. Tarter, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
-
-
- -----
-
- 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, 1991 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) 1991 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-